This week’s prompt deals with a particular memory and how you write that memory into a poem. There are three main components: when the event occurred (time), who the key player other than yourself was (person), and where the event happened (place).
Guidelines:
1. First, think of a person who has been important in your
life. This may be someone with whom you’re still in contact or someone who is
no longer part of your life. Select only one person.
2. Then, spend time thinking about that person and one
special occasion or event related to him or her.
3. Next, think about the time the event happened (season,
month, date, time of day—you don’t have to include all of these, just enough to provide a sense of “when”).
4. Now, identify the place where the event occurred.
5. Move forward to jotting down some images that connect you
back to your person and time. You may want to free write for a bit or perhaps
just begin with a list of memories.
6. Work from step 5 to focus on specific details (remember
not to overload your poem with too many), and let your poem begin to take
shape.
Tips:
1. Decide what type of poem you want to write: narrative,
lyric, prose, etc.
2. After you’ve gotten your first draft ready for
editing, look for overuse of adjectives, prepositional phrases you can delete,
“ing” endings, and too many articles and conjunctions.
3. Decide whether you want to write in the first person or
possibly the third. Which will give the poem greater power?
4. Decide on stanzas—do you want to divide the lines into
stanzas, or would you prefer to use stichic format.
5. As you near your finished poem, consider how your memory,
your, person, and your event might move beyond the personal into the universal.
How will potential readers relate to your poem?
6. How does your poem reveal, connect, and surprise?