Decided to experiment this morning by combining the Poetic Asides prompt calling for a “temptation” poem, with the NaPoWriMo.net call for a reverse, line-by-line response to a published poem. Sounds a bit more complicated than it is, but here are the rules:
- Find a poem in a book or magazine (ideally one you are not familiar with).
- Use a piece of paper to cover over everything but the last line. Now write a line of your own that completes the thought of that single line you can see, or otherwise responds to it.
- Now move your piece of paper up to uncover the second-to-last line of your source poem, and write the second line of your new poem to complete/respond to this second-to-last line.
- Keep going, uncovering and writing, until you get to the first line of your source poem, which you will complete/respond to as the last line of your new poem. It might not be a finished draft, but hopefully it at least contains the seeds of one.
I am not sure mine really meets the “response” instruction, but I just went where my mind took me. I suppose I’ve been influenced by news of the Kinder Morgan pipeline, and other daily news about the threats to water. I’ve posted my poem first, and the source poem below.
Hands in the Well
Tempted by still, blue water
how long do we cup it in our hands
before bringing it to our greedy mouths?
Our solar system, even beyond
awash in water they say,
liquid planets.
Life could be teeming
in the smallest drop.
Here it is not a maybe.
What makes this home
a home, welcoming water smile.
When did we start
to take it for granted?
So humdrum it even falls from the sky.
Pour in the dirt. Bottle up the clean.
It doesn’t care if we dance
in praise or thanks.
Our eyes clouded by
too much too much too much,
we’ve forgotten the word sublime.
Can’t see past the mirrored surface.
Together, our hands panning for gold
what can we get get get.
Minds clogged
like a pipe jammed with
grease and hair.
Future solutions,
gummed up in there somewhere,
if only we can rinse them free.
The poem I reverse responded to was “With My Back to the World” by Saskatchewan poet Judith Krause, from her book Homage to Happiness.
With My Back to the World
by: Judith Krause
I have no ideas of my own.
I empty my mind every day
and wait for inspiration.
Alone, my back to the world,
I seek the sublime.
Nothing in nature
can match the happiness
I find in rectangles —
so much friendlier
and welcoming than squares.
The grid is my door
to the universe.
Bands of colour wash
through me onto the canvas —
green waves of beauty.