Monday, 27 July 2015

KEEPING A NOTE-BOOK TO HAND

Carrying a note-book with you at all times is an invaluable way of preserving any thoughts, phrases or ideas for your work.  If your memory is similar to mine you may find that you have a great idea, a word or a phrase and then it's gone within minutes (even seconds!) despite assuring yourself that you will remember it or will write it down when your home.







A note-book is a great way of preventing this and the ensuing frustration of forgetfulness.  I usually buy a pack of cheap note-books and write on the cover the date I started it.  I record the number of books I've used that month.  In it I scribble and jot down thoughts, reflections, ideas, in fact anything that springs to mind and I think may be of use later when writing. I write down the date I made these notes.   Some of the notes are never used while others form the foundation for a poem.  I can't emphasise the usefulness of carrying a note book.  Oh, and a pen or pencil comes are pretty handy too!





Friday, 24 July 2015

WRITING POETRY: FINALISING WORK

Hi All,

I've been busy over the last months working on a number of poems and 'honing' them so to speak.  I don't know about how you approach writing your poems but I tend to work on several at the same time. 

I get down my initial thoughts- sometimes there's also a concept involved in there but not always, and then work on them.  Sometimes there's an impasse and I leave them for several days (sometimes several weeks) and return to them again and pick up from where I left off.  I find that it is amazing how the break focuses the mind and can solve the problem you've encountered with the poems construction whether its word-choice, or scansion (scan). Some poems demand more time on them than others.  Some poems have been started eight-nine months ago, while others have been written and posted within a couple of days.  There's no magic formula and perhaps some poems demand time to ferment or grow as they are actually mirroring our own thought-processes and emotional responses.

Finalising the poem is also tricky concept.  When is a poem truly finished?  I'm presently working on six poems to differing degrees. When do you feel a poem is actually 'fit for purpose'?  Tricky...

When I used to teach poetry, I used to show my students a copy of the draft manuscript of Wilfred Owen's' Dulce et Decorum est'. They were amazed at the fact that the poem had taken several different forms and versions before becoming the famous poem we recognise today. 





 I hoped that this would help them understand that:

1. poetry rarely is the product of some muse or divine inspiration that allows us to write perfectly formed and finished verse (this equally applies to prose) writ on stone and inviolate like the Ten Commandments

2. poetry is graft and poems (and prose) have to be worked upon and may undergo many revisions and changes until the writer is satisfied that s/he has created a semblance of a poem, a finished version 

3.  even the great poets had to work on their poetry.  This was a great confidence-boost for my students who often thought that great and skilled poets could merely bang out a fantastic poem at whim. I should imagine this rarely happened.  The students always felt more confident about their own creations after this and saw the process of revision as a vital part of the 'craft'.

When I'm writing, I rely on a feeling that it may be good enough to at least be work in progress.  I often post poems that are work in progress and then return to them and revise later. You may have seen revisions in my poems when I've re-posted them on the blog. 

A great way of achieving a degree of quality control is to show your work to a trusted friend or friends whose opinion you respect and you know will give you honest and constructive feedback.  Never be afraid of asking for and acting on advice - it's invaluable and has helped me many times.




TAKING A WALK

Those times when I'm dearly in need of inspiration or at least some space to collect my thoughts, I find a short walk often helps. I don't try and force a thought, they seem to naturally arise from the walk, perhaps, the cadence of our steps naturally match the rhythms of our thoughts - but a short stroll generally works wonders.  Again, I take my notebook and record the idea before I forget!

I'd be really interested to hear if walking works for you or if you've found have any other activities help in the same way.  Please keep your suggestions respectable...  :-) 





APPS



There are also some useful Apps for mobiles that act as recorders for dictation.  These are especially useful if you want to trial some of your work for their sounds (for example assonance and alliteration) and rhythm. Reciting to the machine and then playing it back really does help you work on the sound dimension to your work.

Friday, 10 July 2015

Floral Dress

Floral Dress


That floral dress
You wore last night
On one of those rare occasions
When we make an effort to go out
I saw again today
In a photograph I'd  taken of 
You six years before
That very dress!
Revisiting this other women
Foolishly I thought I'd captured 
Revealed to me from darkness
Your inner-light
The camera seldom shares
Your singular  lack of vanity
The selfless frugality
You wear upon yourself

When it comes to paying the bills and
Catering for the children's needs
Their constant guardian at night
Your floral dress, that photograph
Your life-long love letter to us all
Shames every line I scheme to shape
Or any words 
I could ever hope to write.


© Stephen Evans 2015

A Coffee Moment



A Coffee Moment

Gazing at my coffee cup
Two-thirds empty
While row on row of wooden isles
The other customers 
Of me indifferent, live their lives
Consumed within their separate worlds
While I serve up these lines.


© Stephen Evans 2015

Thursday, 2 July 2015

GREETINGS!

Greetings!.  Three recent poems I've been working on.  Apologies for the silences as I think these blogs are meant to be populated with such revelatory information such as what I ate for breakfast and what really "sucks" - I'm pretty tardy in such matters and can only crave your indulgence and understanding.

 BTW toast and wasps are the answers to the above but not necessarily in the correct order.

Many thanks for your positive comments on the poems I posted fairly recently which is always appreciated.