Thursday, April 8, 2010

# 26... Writing and effective Prose poem

Just as the article suggests below, there is a "thin line between poetry and prose." While reading some of the submissions for this form I found that some of them were leaning more toward the prose side and did not utilize the rhyme and sometimes language that poetry contains.

I could be wrong, but I wanted to share this with you, just in case some of you found it hard to master this form.


How to Write a Prose Poem


The prose poem walks a thin line between poetry and prose. It became popular with poets like Charles Baudelaire, Oscar Wilde and Robert Bly because it offered freedom from structure and form. Prose poetry does not use poetic meter, rhyme, line breaks or stanzas. But it does retain the repetition, language and imagery of poetry. Unlike prose, the prose poem is not as concerned with plot or narrative and its point of view is more reflective and turned inward. The prose poem can be a paragraph, three paragraphs, a page or many pages.
Difficulty: Moderate

Instructions


Step 1

Know that you won't have to worry about rules of form. Rhyme schemes, meter, stanza and line breaks don't apply.

Step 2

Consider the structure of prose. Prose poems take the shape of paragraphs and contain sentences and sentences fragments.

Step 3

Think about a time where you were struck by a particular image, how you came upon that image, how that image made you feel and what went through your mind when you saw it.

Step 4

Write about that experience. Pay particular attention to describing the image and your emotions in detail. Use poetic devices like consonance, assonance, simile, metaphor, repetition and symbol. You can tell a story in your poem, but it comes second to the language (or how you tell the story).

Step 5

Don't worry about correct punctuation right now. You may be writing a prose poem, but you still want to keep the effects of poetry. Sometimes correct punctuation can hurt the rhythm you've established. Your prose poem can contain sentence fragments and very long sentences.

Step 6

Read over your prose poem. Take note of the language you've used. See if you can add more detail. Take note of the story or the thoughts you've expressed. See if anything needs to be added or revised.

Step 7

See if you have an epiphany. Not all poems need epiphanies, but some really benefit from them. See if the poem's train of thought naturally leads to an epiphany or a closing thought or image to leave with the reader.

Courtesy: ehow.com

1 comment:

  1. Once again, I find this ehow stuff so ridiculous. These really aren't step-by-step instructions (because you can't construct a poem via instructions), but moreso guidelines.

    That last one really irks me. "Have an epiphany." Oh, okay... let me get right on that!

    ReplyDelete