Writing Strategies
Dorothy Mackellar poetry competition
For two years I judged the Dorothy Mackellar poetry competition and wrote two topic specific strategies for this contest.
A stratgey for writing poems
Patterning a poem
This is often a great technique to both read poems from other poets and also to provide a way into a new poem of your own.
Here is one of my poems:
Drop Tail
Lizard
Drop tail lizard
on the grey leaves
and
grey bark
garden mulch,
swimming like a sardine
like a
tadpole
silver pin with a jeweled eye.
Tells me the day is
warmer,
summer that much closer
until that white cat
running
running with a small under belly and back legs
of
lizard humming
from its hunter's throat.
Drop
it
cat.
© Lorraine Marwood
Idea for writing a
poem
Using a poem as a format or starting point for
writing a class poem or an individual poem is a great idea.
'Drop
tail Lizard' is just such a starting point.
A poem is often a
simple observation of life, a detailed observation. A poet looks and
mulls and captures such a detail in a word picture.
So grab a
word camera and observe.
Look outside.
Watch a car, a
neighbour, a tree, a bird, the clouds, the way the dog chases a
squeaky toy.
Now you have your subject matter – here's a simple
format.
Line 1 Name the object of the poem- use my poem as a
template
Line 2 and 3 Bring in location or setting ' on the
grey leaves/grey bark/garden mulch'
Line 4 and 5 action that
the object is doing
Line 6 and 7 Tells us something about the
world around me
Line 8 and 9 now for the conflict- what
happens to upset this slice of life?
Line 10 and 11- make the
last words of resolution have more impact by sitting one word on one
line, like stepping stones.
(c) Lorraine Marwood
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