7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #276-Just So Kipling

Rudyard Kipling wrote many books you might recognize: The Jungle Book, Just-So Stories, Captains Courageous.

His playful, imaginative stories belie his miserable childhood. Kipling was born in Mumbai, India on December 30, 1865. When he was barely six, his parents took him to England and left him at a foster home at Southsea. After five years there, he was shipped off to a boarding school, a rough one, with lousy food, teasing, bullying, beating and other cruelties. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1907.

Kipling also wrote lots of poetry: If, Gunga Din, and Mandalay. His poetry often told a story using rhyming couplets and have been set to music many times over the years showing up in jazz, ragtime, swing, pop, folk, and country music. Frank Sinatra adapted and performed the poem Mandalay.

Poetry Challenge #276

Just So Kipling 

Write a narrative poem—one that tells a story—using rhyming couplets. Think of a famous person, place, or historical event and tell a story about it.

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, WRITE IT!

Below is your reward—a Video of Frank Sinatra singing Mandalay (the version of which was evidently banned in England because Kipling’s relatives objected to it.

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 2500+ days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .


Read More
7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #275-Unfettered and Alive

I want to be free! Free to be! Born Free! or, if you live in New Hampshire, Live Free or Die! And thanks to Gustave Kahn, we can write free…verse!

Gustave Kahn (born Dec. 21, 1859, Metz, France—died Sept. 5, 1936, Paris), was a French poet and literary theorist who claimed to be the inventor of vers libre  “free verse”.

“Vive vers libre!”

French poetry at the time had very rigid rules including the number of syllables on a line and the way the poem needed to rhyme. 

Kahn’s free verse poetry however, used phrases as the basic unit to measure a line which meant the number of words or syllables could be different on each line. Each verse was a complete sentence, and the use of rhyme was optional. Here is one of Gustave Kahn’s poems entitled Three Girls on the Sea-Shore:

Poetry Challenge #275

Unfettered and Alive!

For today’s poem throw off those poetic shackles, because thanks to Gustave Kahn we can, and write freely about . . .

Freedom!

Think back on a time when you were totally and completely free—unfettered and alive a Joni put it in the song I Was a Free Man in Paris. What does that freedom feel like, taste like, smell like?

Write a free verse poem about Freedom.

Each line should contain a phrase or two and use one complete sentence for each verse. You can rhyme or not, as you choose.

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, Write It!

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 2400+ days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .


Read More