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How to Write >Poems: How to Write #2
| How to Evoke Imagery, Emotions and Ideas
in Writing Poetry That Captures Your Readers Imagination |  |
| By Larry M. Lynch | |
In the previous article, "How to Write Poems That Capture the Heart and
Imagination of Your Readers", we said that poems express ideas, experiences
or emotions in a more concentrated form than ordinary articles, prose or speech.
They can rhyme or be in a rhythmical composition of words. They are one of language's
most powerful forms of expression. So how can you write a poem that truly expounds
what you want to say? Here are some key elements in composing and developing the
poetic form. Follow these key steps to write a poem that will captures your emotions,
ideas and experiences as heart-stirring word imagery. Capture Imagery
Ideas in Writing Poems are about creating images in the mind of the
reader. Use a variety of imagery ideas to like the following, to help you to accomplish
this. o Allusion - a form of indirect reference usually done in different
phrases, lines or sentences o Simile - is used to compare two or more things
which are not alike by using the word "like" ((her hair is like a sparkling
flow of coffee in the mountain sunlight) o Symbolism or Metaphor - is used
to compare two or more things which are dissimilar using "as" or "is"
such as "all the world's a stage", "red as a rose", "black
as midnight down in a Cypress swamp", etc. Establish a Logical Progression
of Thought to be used in the Poem The lines, thoughts, and ideas expressed
in your poem should flow smoothly from one to the next. Don't jump around illogically.
Let your poem flow rhythmically like a gentle stream tu8mbling through the smooth
stones of a softly babbling brook in a grassy meadow. State the Poem's
Theme in One Verse Create a "theme verse" which can be used
repeatedly in your poem to help unify its stanzas. Your poem will flow and sound
much better as it is read using this key aspect. A love poem theme verse might
be one which begins or ends with something like: o Have I told you that
o As always, thoughts of you
o Any key word or phrase
used repeatedly to begin or end a verse or stanza Other Highly Useful Aids To
help you write your poem, try using these dynamic aids: o A rhyming
dictionary - invaluable for finding rhymes for low-frequency or difficult to rhyme
words o A Thesaurus - an indispensable tool to aid you in broadening the
vocabulary used in your poem (personally, I like the Rodale's far better than
Roget's) o Alliteration - repetition of a consonant sound in two or more
words in a phrase or line such as: beautiful bubbling brown sugar or shafts of
shimmering sunshine o Assonance - similar sounds, like alliteration, but
used in the internal syllables of a string of words (birthday weather, father's
brother, further mathematics, etc. to give you an idea) o Consonance - repetition
of certain stressed syllables in a pair, group or string of words (taker, baker,
maker, shaker, Quaker but not quicker) o Onomatopoeia - words which by their
pronunciation imitate sounds. Words like whistle, tweet, boom, bag, pow, crash,
crunch, slam, zoom, snap, crackle, pop, and zing among many others, fit into this
category These steps will help you along in writing poetry that stirs the
feelings and emotions of your readers and can help your poetry writing to excel.
For other tips and techniques on composing this most-elusive form of language
in context, see the companion article, "How to Write Poems That Capture the
Heart and Imagination of Your Readers".
Prof. Larry M. Lynch is
an expert author and photographer offering Web Content Writing Services for top-quality
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His work has
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