IMPROMPTU #10: Twenty Little Poetry Projects
IMPROMPTU #10!
This exercise is called "Twenty Little Poetry Projects" and it's by Jim Simmerman.
"Open the poem with the first project and close it with the last. Otherwise, use the projects in whatever order you like, giving each project at least one line. Try to use all twenty projects. Feel free to repeat those you like. Fool around. Enjoy."
- Begin the poem with a metaphor.
- Say something specific but utterly preposterous.
- Use at least one image for each of the five senses, either in succession or scattered randomly throughout the poem.
- Use one example of synaesthesia (mixing the senses).
- Use the proper name of a person and the proper name of a place.
- Contradict something you said earlier in the poem.
- Change direction or digress from the last thing you said.
- Use a word (slang?) you’ve never seen in a poem.
- Use a piece of false cause-and-effect logic.
- Use a piece of “talk” you’ve actually heard (preferably in dialect and/or which you don’t understand).
- Create a metaphor using the following construction: “The (adjective) (concrete noun) of (abstract noun)…”
- Use an image in such a way as to reverse its usual associative qualities.
- Make the persona or character in the poem do something he/she could not do in “real life.”
- Refer to yourself by nickname and in the third person.
- Write in the future tense, such that part of the poem seems to be a prediction.
- Modify a noun with an unlikely adjective.
- Make a declarative assertion that sounds convincing but finally makes no sense.
- Use a phrase from a language other than English.
- Make a nonhuman object say or do something human (personification).
- Close the poem with a vivid image that makes no statement but that “echoes” an image from earlier in the poem.
Here’s a poem by Simmerman that completes the twenty projects in order.
Moon Go Away, I Don’t Love You No More
- Morning comes on like a wink in the dark.
- It’s me it’s winking at.
- Mock light lolls in the boughs of the pines.
Dead air numbs my hands.
A bluejay jabbers like nobody’s business.
Woodsmoke comes spelunking my nostrils
and tastes like burned toast where it rests on my tongue. - Morning tastes the way a rock felt
kissing me on the eye: - a kiss thrown by Randy Shellhourse
on the Jacksonville, Arkansas, Little League field
because we were that bored in 1965. - We weren’t that bored in 1965.
- Dogs ran amuck in the yards of the poor,
and music spilled out of every window
though none of us could dance. - None of us could do the Frug, the Dirty Dog
- because we were small and wore small hats.
- Moon go away, I don’t love you no more
- was the only song we knew by heart.
- The dull crayons of sex and meanness
scribbled all over our thoughts. - We were about as happy as headstones.
- We fell through the sidewalk
and changed colour at night. - Little Darry was there to scuff through it all,
- so that today, tomorrow, the day after that
he will walk backward among the orphaned trees - and toy rocks that lead him
nowhere I could ever track
till he’s so far away, so lost - I’ll have to forget him to know where he’s gone.
- la grave poullet du soir est toujours avec moi—
- even as the sky opens for business,
even as shadows kick off their shoes,
even as this torrent of clean morning light
comes flooding down and over it all.