Tuesday, January 25, 2011

how do you do?

Welcome to this week's edition of "Sarah tries to write a poem" or "What the hell, Ed?" Ed is my professor. He's amazing. And so are his assignments. I never know what he's going to throw at us at the end of class. And I never know what to write until I've written it. Hence the need to blog first, write later.

Last week's assignment was (supposed to be) a landscape or a still life. No people. So I started my poem with "I am not to let you in" and then wrote about an exhibit I saw at the V&A in 2002 and a bronze sculpture a professor once described to me. It was a Very Odd poem. And it worked. I'm not sure how. I kind of know how. But now. . .

The problem with writing a good poem one week, is that it's harder to write anything the next week. At least for me. Maybe there are other writers who just ride the "awesome" wave and keep writing. I freeze up. Hello, Freeze.

Ed assigned us another landscape. This one he wanted us to research the subject, then write it. (see: C.S. Giscombe) I was fine with this idea until. . . well, until I actually started to write the poem. I have a landscape, I have the research, I just don't. . . no poem. Nada. Words words words. I should be writing a Wikipedia entry. Maybe I should just lineate a Wikipedia entry.

This is not helping. Must write poem. Must. . . stop saying must. And using ellipses.

See you on the other side.

5 comments:

Maryn said...

I LIKED this post. Not sure why, but it amused me. Maybe because the title is "how do you do?" and it's funny because that's something I can't really picture you saying seriously. And it makes the rest of the post kind of humorous. Anyways. I LOVE YOU!!!

"In the way . . ." said...

So you going to post the awesome poem you wrote after the post so everyone can see the amazing work you did? I know because I read it.

Come on, let's get it posted.

Aislin said...

So you make Wikipedia your still life (a specific entry? the Luna moth? Justin Bieber? It might be interesting to do a still life about an ENTRY of a person, instead of the person themself...) I'm waving my eg pennant as we speak, however.

Lekili said...

And the brilliance continues...

Leannee said...

Read the finished poem--it rocks. Writer's block must be a necessity to brilliance.

 

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