"I had many things to write, but I will not with ink and pen write unto thee..."
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Diamonds International

VAL MAGNUSON
Leaves			
Autumn, do not leave For your chambers fill With feathered gentlemen Their raiment pommeling the hills The gingery banks are splashed In paprika and nutmeg tones Autumn, do not leave I would only have alone Your magical woods work Slips far too fast Through my very fingers Envelop me within your imposing cloak Stay awhile- linger The Guardians of the South Like some Greenwich clock Promise warmer beds To every passing flock How they fly! How they fly! From the radiance of your store Autumn, wonderous Autumn Sing a little more- Autumn, splendid Autumn To your every essence I could cleave But all you do All that you can only do Is to forever Leave-

©2006 VAL MAGNUSON

poet: VAL MAGNUSON STEVE GILLMAN poet: JANET I. BUCK PoetryRepairShop navigation
"Poetry endangers the established order in the soul."
poetryrePAIRshop v06.11:124
STEVE GILLMAN
has been playing with poetry for thirty years. He and his wife Ana created the game "Deal-A-Poem."

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STEVE GILLMAN
New Types of Poetry


There are many different types of poetry. 
	
I counted 50 on a quick search of the internet. You may have heard 
of Haiku and Limericks. There are the more obscure types too, like 
Terzanelle and Sestina. Learning different types of poetry though, isn't 
nearly as much fun as inventing your own, so here are some ideas about 
that.

Types Of Poetry - Playing With Stanzas 

What is a stanza? A division of a poem consisting of two or more lines. 
How many ways can you structure a stanza? As many as you want. 
Look at this stanza from the poem, "Gratitude:" 

So there is nothing to say 
There is nothing to say 
There is nothing 
Nothing... 
But gratitude 

Each line is a smaller part of the previous line. In this case, it quiets 
the mind in order to emphasize the last word: gratitude. However, 
this idea could be used in many ways. You could start with a line like, 
"She watched the birds come in from the sea," and it can reduce to,
 "Come in from the sea;" "From the sea:" "Where Michael was left 
alone in the storm." Each stanza could have lengthening lines. Lines 
could be varied in length to create a picture on the page. Playing with 
stanzas is a fun way to create new types of poetry. 

Ideas For New Types Of Poetry 

In the poem "Do Not Believe In God," each stanza starts 
with one of our senses: "See God... in stars and sunlight... 
and the face of your lover;" Hear God... in wind and waves... 
and the music of the birds." All the senses are covered. How 
could we use this general idea? By starting each stanza with 
a different verb or adjective? By starting each stanza with a 
different person's name? By having each stanza get smaller 
or larger as the poem progresses?
 
How many ways can you play with poems? "Dream poems," 
could be a type of poetry that puts actual dreams into verse. 
"Dialog poems" could have stanzas or lines answering each 
other back and forth. A series of poems could use all the exact 
same words, rearranged, with an entirely different outcome 
in each. There are endless types of poetry you can create.
 			

©2006 STEVE GILLMAN

poet: VAL MAGNUSON STEVE GILLMAN poet: JANET I. BUCK PoetryRepairShop navigation
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JANET I. BUCK
Spinach & Seaweed
History's bulk is an argument ad hominem for all the ways we battle love--tie its hands behind our backs. Black licorice ropes of moral stretch until our wax conforms to prayers. We conclude we made a dent-- baked cookies for a homeless shelter needing toilets and a roof. Seaweed money. Spinach leaves. Start so bright and end so wrong. They rot alone in selfish bins-- gather rust like safety pins that will not close when judgment turns. Share the wilt. Add fiber to the pilrimage. Feed the elves of poverty with more than ipecac of politics and promises too big to keep. They are the roots of green, green grass that need our water to survive. Our sleeping cheeks store so much more than wet tobacco helplessness.

©2006 JANET I. BUCK

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