I spent the day polishing up a villanelle.
One of my wee ones was home sick so she heard me do my ‘read every line aloud ten thousand times’ thing.
If she thought I was a little off before, it’s now been formally confirmed and set in stone.
I heard her tell her sister, “Mama talked to herself in poems today. Even in the bath!”
Reading aloud is part of my process, to be sure. Good thing I don’t work in a cube where the protocol is to put your phone on vibrate and think to yourself. I really can’t see what works and what doesn’t — I can only hear it.
And it turns out that’s especially true with form poetry.
OK, first of all, I’m a glutton for punishment. I committed to writing an ekphrastic poem (a poem inspired by another piece of art) about a piece in the permanent collection at The Blanton Museum of Art. But it could have been anything! A haiku, for goddsake. A prose poem cut-and-pasted straight from my journal. A list of words that came to mind as I sat there soaking in the image.
But no. Nope. I had to do a villanelle. Which I always encourage people to write because they are so pretty and musical.
Right?
And also, how hard could it be? 19 lines, and a bunch of them are repeats.
Well, the thing is, if you’re going to repeat an entire line it’s got to be, well, good.
And also, there’s a rhyme scheme. So once you pick your first couple of lines, you’re stuck with two particular sounds.
Or I guess ‘blessed’ with two particular sounds if stars are aligned.
And then, to top it off, I received the invitation to write this poem months ago. Not weeks. Months.
But when did I get cracking on it? This week. This week.
It is some crazy dysfunctional relationship I have with deadlines…
Wrap all that up and Mama’s talking to herself in poems. Even in the bath.
two new words
for me today! Villanelle and ekphrastic. I love the word ekphrastic. I might try to sneak it in somewhere.
Will this be a show and a reading at the Blanton? I’d love to go if it is.
Re: two new words
No word on a show yet, but yes — I suspect so. Will you keep you posted!!
I hope it was a bubble bath, too. Bubbles plus reading poetry aloud equals a great bath.
Jules, who, yes, probably does sacrifice sleep for blogging 🙂
Honey — Every bath’s a bubble bath at my house…
I don’t write poetry, much, but I HEAR what is wrong, too. The spot that I’m working on in my current novel sounds all wrong and I can’t write past it until it sounds at least a little less clompy, until the lines sound like they echo one another in some way.
And I read aloud when I revise, too.
I know, right?? I’m always surprised when I meet writers who didn’t read their work aloud. They must have a quicker of more nuanced brain than I do. But you’re quick and nuanced, so go figure. I’m going to take comfort in your recitations, Linda…
Ooh, I love ekphrastic poetry. When I lived elsewhere, I participated in a yearly Art and Words show, where local artists and writers collaborated.
I read out loud to myself, too, but I’m too self-conscious to do it if someone else is around, even my kids.
How fun does that show sound???
(And by the way, maybe I oughta be more self-conscious…)
“Mama talked to herself in poems today. Even in the bath!”
I’ve written one villanelle thus far, and it sucks. In fact, I’ve had better luck with a sestina, and that is saying something. I bow to your awesomeness for going for it.
Re: “Mama talked to herself in poems today. Even in the bath!”
Kelly. I cannot believe it sucked. Try another. I do love sestinas. I’m sensing another group project in the works…
“mama talked to herself in poems…”
You HAVE to use that in a book. Such a great image.
I love reading your blog. Can you write mine? 🙂 I’ll do the visuals and you write it. That would work out much better for me. Ha!
xx,
shannon
http://www.shannonlowry.typepad.com
http://www.roundrobinpress
Re: “mama talked to herself in poems…”
No. That’d spoil the surprise for me when I go visit yours! Sorry…
Cloudscome says:
I do hope you are going to share your villanelle with us one day soon. I always think of Sylvia Plath with this form.
When I muttering to myself while driving my five year old always says, “Is that today’s poem mama?” LOL sometimes it is and sometimes it isn’t.
Re: Cloudscome says:
Love that, Mama.
I don’t know about sharing the villanelle. Maybe if I take a sedative first 🙂