Howdy, Campers and Happy Poetry Friday! (The link to PF is below)
Our topic this round is HOW DO YOU APPROACH ENDINGS?
How do we know the last chapter, last paragraph, last word is the right last piece of a puzzle?
Image of a large red speech bubble with the following quote in white lettering: "One way to end the poem is to turn it back on itself, like a serpent with its tail in its mouth." ~ Maxine Kumin
Here are the first two pages of TO RABBITTOWN by me, with beautiful watercolor illustrations by
Robin Spowart (Scholastic):
I opened her rabbit-y cage
and while she nibbled celery
I asked her:
Where do the rolling hills go?
She said:
Beyond the wheat
to a pine forest
to the edge of it all
to Rabbittown
I snuggled her close
She told me:
Hop there
Ride the green waves
Find the cliffs
past the smell of the sea
There you’ll find
those brown rabbit eyes
And so I went
The child leaves home and joins a world of rabbits, slowly turning into one. The last three pages read:
I said:
I miss them
I want to run back through the hills
to the tops of the cliffs
toward the smell of mown lawns
where I’ll find
those curious human eyes
And off I hopped
through the pine forest
over the rolling wheat hills
past the smell of the sea
back to mown lawns
and my family
To grow legs again
to grow arms again
to hold my pet bunny again
who holds memories
of Rabbittown.
That book was published in 1989. At the time, I knew nothing about serpentine endings or writing. Nothing. I just liked tinkering with words. And that's how I still feel. Every. Single. Day. (Except some days...keep reading.)
How DOES one write (and end) a poem about endings? I began by brainstorming:
ENDINGS
the last cookie
the last episode
the last stop for four hours so you’d better pee now
the last words before the lights go down and the curtain comes up
the end of summer
the end of the year
the end of the meeting
the end of wearing diapers
the end of wearing braces
the end of the song
the end of Uncle Rob
the end of...
the end
============
A week or so after writing that, I threw everything into the pot (including the fact that my son's an ER doc) and messed around with end rhymes, without any organization or story:
HOW TO END...
A fire, a falsehood, a romance? (Swipe right.)
A concert, a friendship, a novel, a flight?
A sentence (that’s spoken), a sentence (for life)?
A shell game, a head trip, a story, a hike?
A hoax at a rally, a ruling, a right?
A swing shift, a bleeding, a day and a night?
A habit, an anthem, a bias, a fight?
A birthday, a luncheon, an obit, a rite?
A card: “may this new year be filled with bright lights”?
Wild rhyme, unhinged rhyme in this labyrinth?
Good night!
========
Clearly it needed some kind of organizing principle. Maybe the words in each line could be related? Or the lines could all march to a satisfying ending? I sent it to my best friend Bruce Balan, asking:
Dear Poem Repair Person, Please take my out-of-tune poem and make it sing in four-part harmony.
=====================
The suggestions he sent were supposed to go here: _________________________________. But I'm not going to tell you his suggestions because he's right and I'm tired and it'll take too much work and I don't wanna.
Well, okay, I will share one question he sent: "My real question is, what are you trying to say?" I had no idea.
Sometimes internal logic, metaphors and a perfect visual shape will emerge from the muck of the marsh. And since none of that happened, I was hoping he would just tell me what I was trying to say. Or just rewrite the whole thing for me. Isn't that what friends are for?
Image of the last piece fitting into a completely white puzzle with these words on the puzzle: "I was hoping that as I moved the puzzle pieces around, they would come together in a satisfying, cohesive click." ~ AHW
Though the poem above didn't have heart or logic or answer the title's question, it was a SO MUCH FUN to write!
Breaking News: sometimes it's not fun.
Sometimes I have to let things "cook" for awhile and the answers appear. But I didn't have time for that--this post was due!
I decided to admit to you, dear campers, that "I'm tired of trying to figure things out" (phrase from a
song by Tom Hunter). I can't seem to write a poem about endings. So, I took
Dory's advice. I just kept swimming. I thought about my favorite hike and how last week it was mysteriously much harder than usual. (I didn't know I was coming down with a cold.)
JUST KEEP SWIMMING
This gentle path along the bluff
becomes a trail up a hill
and now a trek up to the ridge...
that peak is far.
That peak is steep.
This hike is hard.
I hear it growl...
and then it steepens loud
at me.
============
all poems--or rough drafts of future Pulitzer Prize-winning poems (c)2023 April Halprin Wayland. All rights reserved.Thank you for sticking with me to the bloody end! I'll leave you with one last thought and, of course, the link to Poetry Friday:
“Poems are short stories
with punctuation disorders”
~ Tom Cassidy
for hosting Poetry Friday this week!
Image of the end papers from The Witchling's Wish
by Lu Fraser, illustrated by Sarah Massini
posted by Picturebook_particulars on Instagram
posted with love by April Halprin Wayland with help from Bruce Balan and the infinite knowledge of poets everywhere.
_____________
Marcie F.