Showing posts with label National Poetry Writing Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Poetry Writing Month. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 April 2020

Together

It's National Poetry Writing Month. I don't often do this annual writing marathon of attempting to write a poem every day for a whole month, but hey, were in lockdown, and this could be a good way to cultivate, (recultivate!) the discipline of writing daily.

To get me started, I did some work on this little one I began on our last holiday -- a few days spent in and around Cambridge in February. Who knows when we will go away again?


Together

Flanked by ochre stone
of ancient college walls
sun spotlights a Cambridge square
where small pink blossom
etches sketchy trees.

To catch the last rays of 
the late winter afternoon
we take one end each of an old bench,
carry it to a corner
where we sit, and rest.

Thursday, 18 April 2013

haiku

A Poem a Day, April 2013, 30 poems in 30 days
Day 18




Gales keep sleep awake,

bangs and whistles in your head; 

dreams are quiet space





(When it gets tough, there is always a mediochre haiku in there somewhere. Having come this far, don't want to miss a day!)


Sunday, 31 March 2013

Slightly sideways







 
In my slightly sideways imagination my ‘bucket’ of creative ideas is a large stone jar, the kind my grandmother used for preserving fruit, or more often vegetables.

When I think of a new idea for a poem or story I mentally drop it in the jar, so it doesn’t get lost or forgotten and it is always there when I go back to it.

I have been ensuring that I chuck many new ideas into that jar for the last couple of weeks – ever since I signed up to write a poem a day through April, which is National Poetry Writing Month.

There is so much to write! Running out of ideas will not be a problem. Keeping up with the new ones could be. I may start a poem each day, but almost none of them will be finished this month.

The ones that do get somewhere close to the end of the process, and may get posted here, will be those I pull from the drawer – that’s the place where the first, second, third and, oh, numberless drafts live until they move into the rewriting, cleaning up, cut, cut, cutting phase and maybe finally I will let them go out into the world.

Ideas on the go include some new work on ‘place’. I am not that interested in things to do with time, the present moment is the thing; it is always now, after all. But my work is often rooted in a place. The coast and country of west Wales and Somerset are big ones for me. I have it in mind to add something from Cwm Du during this month, and from Mwnt. They will join Llangrannog, Poppit, Patch, Penbryn (many), Wells, Glastonbury, the Somerset Levels and others in the folder called ‘Places’. They are not directly about those places, of course, rather about the feelings brought to mind while there.

There is some more politics to come too – no shortage of stuff to get angry about is there.

And more ‘painting poetry’ is on the way  -- some responses to art on show in some of our local galleries. If I get stuck in this one, I shall write poetry inspired by some of the paintings in my home.

If I am still stuck I shall look out of the window and write from what I see.

Good luck to all my fellow poets who are taking on this challenge. May this be a wonderful creative time. Let the journey begin.

To see and follow others who have joined, go here:

Friday, 22 March 2013

A poem a day...




One week to go......

I have signed up to write a poem a day throughout April – am I mad?


Possibly, but what a challenge this is going to be!


April is National Poetry Writing Month and other writers who are daft enough to give this a go can check it out here:




It’s all about taking part and many of the participants will be posting their work on their related websites.

In the last couple of days I have been practising and managed to write two poems in two days. They are quite long ones too, so this seems like a good start.


I am thinking about my approach to this challenge in the run-up. Will I stay random and just write what comes into my head each day?


Or will I decide on a theme? I could use the month as a project to concentrate on an area of my poetry writing that needs to develop – like I find it hard to write ‘happy’ stuff. Maybe I need to practice that…


Dreams can be a good source of material and I have never been good at remembering mine. Maybe I could work on that…


And I am not writing as much political poetry as I would like. There is certainly plenty out there to get angry about… So maybe more of that.

And there are gaps in my fledgling collection that I need to fill...


Whatever I decide, by the end of April there should be a load of work in the bucket, ready to edit over the coming months.


I will post updates on here through the month. I hope that I will have some poetry to put up, but sometimes, I may just write (rant?!) about the process and how it is going.


And I’ll be following many of the others who join the journey.


It’s going to be a busy -- and creative -- month.