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~M~
Board Administrator
Username: mjm

Post Number: 31266
Registered: 11-1998
Posted on Saturday, September 06, 2008 - 7:17 am:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post

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Dearest Membership -- Here is the fourteenth in The Poet's Note Card series.

These Note Cards come from a book entitled The Mind's Eye: A Guide to Writing Poetry, by Kevin Clark. Mr. Clark is a winner of the Distinguished Teaching Award, is a university professor at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, and a widely published poet. This book on the teaching of poetry writing is concise, practical, and has been designed specifically for a college-level term. It includes a progression of lessons, example poems, and stimulating exercises.

While most advanced poets already know these things, it doesn't hurt to review them. Or to learn them if you are a beginner to the craft of poetry making.

I'll try to bring you a Poet's Note Card every so often. While you might not agree with every point Mr. Clark makes, I do hope these note cards serve to help those who are new to poetry by providing some basic foundation of information on which to build. Oh, and I do recommend that you acquire the book. It's an excellent textbook, especially if you would like to attend a college-level poetry writing course, but cannot for whatever reason. The link above (click on the book's title) will take you to the WPF BookShop and the Amazon description of the book.

Thanks for reading!

Love,
M (Administrator)

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The Poet's Note Card -- #14
from The Mind's Eye: A Guide to Writing Poetry by Kevin Clark


Poems Against Injustice

1. Because of preconceived ideas and/or clichéd language, the most difficult subjects to write about are politics, religion, sexual love, and sports.

2. All poems, including those about those topics, succeed best when held to an aesthetic standard, not a standard based on point of view.

3. Sometimes the best political poems are those that find a way to make the reader experience injustice. Such verse is sometimes called “the poetry of witness.”

4. In order to be convincing, it’s usually best to make sure your poem is validated by actual historical detail.

5. Another effective way to write the political poem is to make the reader feel culpability for the injustice.

6. Even – or especially – in political poems, it is best to discover the poem’s “idea” while in the act of writing the poem.

7. Try to stay off the soapbox. A political poem rarely works as a diatribe or a rant.

8. If you are employ abstract language in a poem, it’s often best to validate the use of abstraction by establishing a base of vivid images.


The Poet's Note Card -- #1
The Poet's Note Card -- #2
The Poet’s Note Card -- #3
The Poet’s Note Card -- #4
The Poet’s Note Card -- #5
The Poet’s Note Card -- #6
The Poet’s Note Card -- #7
The Poet’s Note Card -- #8
The Poet’s Note Card -- #9
The Poet’s Note Card -- #10
The Poet’s Note Card-- #11
The Poet’s Note Card -- #12
The Poet’s Note Card -- #13

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Rania S. Watts
Advanced Member
Username: cementcoveredcherries

Post Number: 1813
Registered: 04-2008
Posted on Saturday, September 06, 2008 - 7:56 am:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post

Dear M,
Thank you so much, as you know this is one Poet's Note card I will definitely benefit from. I have really enjoyed this series, Clark is so thorough to address a number of topics with such a small summary.
Cheers,
Rania
"I was working on the proof of one of my poems all the morning, and took out a comma. In the afternoon I put it back again." ~ Oscar Wilde

"You will hardly know who I am or what I mean" ~ Walt Whitman

Cement Covered Cherry
Ingrid Ringel
Valued Member
Username: adelphi

Post Number: 264
Registered: 09-2007
Posted on Monday, September 08, 2008 - 10:37 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post

Thank you for posting this. Good timing.It teaches me what I need to know for the revision of my holocaust poem.
Ingrid