I.

“I’ve done nothing but cry all day. All day I’ve cried.” “It looks pretty gloomy for the first day of Spring.” “Then he took my cat outside.” “It’s perfect for a bachelor.” Random words. Anonymous opinions. Sad truths. Humorous observations. Snippets of other people’s conversation can serve as great inspiration for your writing. Actually, writing prompts are all around you if you just listen. Oh, I know it’s not polite. Your mother probably told you not to do it. But, this week you have permission to eavesdrop!

That’s part one of your assignment. Eavesdrop on other people’s conversations. Record some choice sentences, words, turns of phrase. Then, choose your favorite and use it as a prompt to begin a poem.

You don’t need much. One sentence, simply uttered, could send you off on a wonderful poem tangent. Maybe you’ll be inspired to complete someone’s thought. Maybe you will imagine a confession. Maybe the words will spark a memory of your own. Let other people’s words take you away.

II.

Part 2 of your assignment, if you choose to accept it, is to craft your piece in the form of a prose poem. Prose poems break the traditional rules of poetry. They read left to right across the page. The whole page. Poets.org provides a pretty good explanation, as well as some examples, here.

So. There you go. Break the rules. Eavesdrop. Steal some words. Then write a long poem that doesn’t look like a poem, but really is. Have fun!

~Jill.

* * *

Come back starting next Monday after midnight (CST) to share anything you might have heard lately, or any poem at all.


6 Responses to “read write prompt: #20 overheard at the ________ (insert location here); a writing prompt in two parts”

  1. 1 Noah

    You sounded like Mad for a second!

  2. 2 Dave

    Great prompt, but I wasn’t planning on going into town anytime soon. Maybe I can lurk in an online chat room or something. Hmm…

  3. 3 ...deb

    I dunno, Dave, you have some pretty interesting eavesdropping moments with the more-than-humans in Plummer’s Hollow.

    But then, the other idea is intriguing, too.

  4. 4 Christine

    Jill, this is a fun idea, especially since I’m inherently nosey. I hear some great lines from my kids, but even better are the conversations among the retired folks at the local Y. They hold back very little.

  5. 5 pepektheassassin

    I don’t get out much. BUt I watch a lot of TV. So….

  6. 6 Jo

    Love this prompt, right up my street eavesdropping and I’m about to get no a train and go see a play…….I will take my wee notebook with me.


WEEKLY READ WRITE PROMPT

Aug. 4, 2008 — The current Get Your Poem On post is here. This is where you leave us a link to your blog, this week in response to Blythe's collaborative prompt about smell.

POLL DANCE

Aug. 3, 2008 —There's a new poll up on the sidebar.

But you still have time to join the conversation about the last poll. It asks what you write poems about.


RANDOM PROMPTS

A different word or phrase will appear here each time you visit the site or refresh the page. Your current prompt is — cloak


RANDOM WRITING TIP

Think of something that annoys you — a pet peeve — and write a poem painting that thing in a positive light.


RANDOM READING TIP

Even though free verse is the dominant style now, formal poetry was popular for hundreds of years. Alternate some of the modern or classical masters of formal verse with modern writers of free verse. Don’t know where to start? Try Shakespeare, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Marilyn Hacker, Agha Shahid Ali, Maxine Kumin and many others.


RANDOM COLLABORATING TIP

Send an interesting news item to a collaborator, and each of you write a poem based on the same story.

SUBSCRIBE

Read Write Poem RSS Feeds