The Music In It Poetry Blog

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I’d like to invite you to visit my blog where I post poetry prompts every Saturday morning. There’s also other poetry info and a standing invite for you to post your poems and thoughts as comments.

http://adelekenny.blogspot.com/

Here’s a sampling from this week’s prompt:

I recently came across an old collection of Robert Frost’s poems that I haven’t looked at in many years. The weather was hot and humid (too hot and humid for this time of year), so instead of sitting outdoors in the gazebo, I sat inside with the AC on full blast and re-read the Frost poems. I’ve always loved “The Road Not Taken” for its symbolisms and universal appeal. This one of American literature’s best known and most often quoted poems. There is, of course, much more to this poem than a surface understanding reveals.

For this week’s prompt, “The Road Not Taken” will be our inspiration poem. Before beginning, please give it a read. http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173536. As you read, note that one of the poem’s fascinations is its archetypal dilemma.  Be sure to note that the narrator looks back, reflects upon the meaning of choice and chance, and marks this decision as a defining moment in his life.
Ideas for writing:
Frost’s poem is about actual and figurative roads, and the fork in the path is an extended metaphor for making choices.
1. Write a poem about a metaphorical road that you didn’t take. Not the choice you made, but the one you didn’t. “Forks in the road” and “roads” seemed clichéd today, so be sure to create other symbolisms  and metaphors for making choices that are fresh and new.
2.  Write a poem about a “road not taken” in your life? Have you ever had to make a decision and then wondered much later how making the other choice might have impacted your life? Do you have any regrets?
3. Some analyses claim that Frost’s poem is about lost opportunities.  Write a poem about a lost opportunity in your life.
4. Write a poem about the complexities of choice making. How do you feel about choice and chance?
5. Write a poem about a time that you had no choice.
Examples:
Wishing you all blessings and peace,
Adele Kenny (poetry editor)

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