HIGHTOWN
WRITERS’ WRAP-UP FOR 14 MARCH 2023 MEETING
Venue: Peepo
Time: 7 pm [although a certain unnamed person arrived
around 7.25…] till around 9.15 pm
Host: Me (Alex)
Guestlist: Adam, Irena, Tony, me
The second annual Alternative Tuesday went down
better than a man tunnelling to New Zealand. Four intrepid word warriors
squared off against the English vernacular for an evening of syllabic synergy –
or something like that…
The escapades began with a free-write, which, as I mentioned in my previous write-up, is a stream-of-consciousness exercise where the participants write – or type – whatever comes into their heads.
Adam’s, Irena’s and Tony’s pieces were standard
pieces of prose, whereas mine was, as last time, rather surreal.
After that, we had the first round of the read-outs
portion of the evening. Tony had completed Liz’s homework task, and he recited
a piece of prose that he had written. It recounted the life of an 18th-century
man from Hereford. Tony’s knowledge of that period was rather good, and he
incorporated that knowledge into the piece, detailing the man’s life as a
clergyman.
Irena read a countryside-themed poem that she had
written whilst taking a break from her “lurcher memoirs”. Normally, she writes
prose; however, she is going through a poetic phase at the moment, and it is
producing good results! The poem contained great descriptions, and I look
forward to reading it on this blog.
Adam had completed some of my homework tasks, and
he read out a well-crafted space-inspired tanka and a woodland-themed sonnet.
Both were rich in imagery, particularly the latter, which zoomed in, so to
speak, on various aspects of a wood; it was a very imaginative and original
sonnet.
Then
it was time for the word maze. The words were tin, grass, mountain
and compound. Having just four members present perhaps made the task seem
a little less structured than it normally is, and so Tony’s, Irena’s and my
pieces were rather open-ended, so to speak. Adam, however, went in a different
direction and wrote a nature-themed piece about the history of a mine; it’s
always interesting to hear where these writing prompts take us.
Next, I decided that we’d have a second round of
read-outs because we had a lot more time tonight. So, Irena read out two more
of her poems, which contained a lot of imaginative imagery and original
metaphors.
Adam, continuing to contribute to my homework task,
read out a haiku entitled “Dark as night”, mentioning that he wasn’t keen on the
piece’s title. Nevertheless, it was an interesting haiku. He followed it with
another space-inspired tanka, which was based on
observations from his window. Adam has certainly
captured the essence of haikus and tankas, and I look forward to reading more
of his poems on this blog.
Tony read out a short piece of prose called
“Character study of a salesman”; this was a light-hearted biographical piece
about handy traits to have when pursuing a career in sales.
Adam then concluded the round by reading out a hip hop-style
piece by the name of “Civilisation”. This was a very rhythmic, rhyme-strewn
work that contained a lot of sociological themes, and he certainly conveyed a hip
hop song’s spirit.
The third, and final, writing task of the evening
was what I call “Simply Similes”. The challenge was to come up with some unique
similes from some “starter lines”, and I think we succeeded. The lines were as
follows:
As soft as…
As strong as…
As angry as…
As gentle as…
As light as…
As nimble as…
As slimy as…
Finally, it was time for me to set the homework. You
may select one, some or all of the following four tasks. So, for the prose
peddlers:
1. Write
about your favourite animal.
2. Write
about your favourite colour.
And for the poetry purveyors:
1. Write
a poem, using only ‘perfect’ rhyme.
2. Write
a spring-themed ballad.
Right then, I suppose I’d better explain the
preceding two tasks.
So, by “perfect rhyme”, I mean words that rhyme
completely. The following word pairs are examples of this concept:
grow/flow
blink/think
shade/glade
two/through
silly/hilly
thrifty/nifty
pulley/gulley
given/striven
The word pairs below are not examples of perfect
rhyme; they are examples of half-rhyme [on this occasion, assonance
– see my previous write-up for more information about half-rhyme].
grow/flows
blink/inch
shade/beige
two/view
silly/busy
thrifty/swiftly
pulley/flurry
given/vision
Yes, poetry is a rather pedantic science! Remember
that it is the sound that counts and not the spelling. So, for example, rough
and bluff rhyme perfectly. And if anyone manages to find a rhyme word
for pint, then I shall recommend them for an OBE (I have the authority to
do such things) – no eye-rhymes, please!
I am assuming that not everyone knows what a ballad
is, so here’s my explanation of one:
Basically, a ballad goes der-duh-der-duh-der-duh-der-duh/der-duh-der-duh-der-duh.
For example:
[Line 1] I stood upon the stairs and cried,
[Line 2] “I need a house, though, too!”
And then:
[Line 3] The vibrant wind engulfed my face;
[Line 4] A roof, as well, would do.
So, a ballad has four iambs in the odd-numbered
lines. (An iamb is a ‘light’ syllable followed by a ‘heavy’ one – for
example: the word away (-/) is an iamb; the word central (/-),
however, isn’t.) And it has three iambs in the even-numbered ones:
Line 1: -/-/-/-/
Line 2: -/-/-/
Line 3: -/-/-/-/
Line 4: -/-/-/
[etc]
A ballad’s rhyme scheme is generally ABCB:
A house, a roof – my life’s complete! [A]
I’ve never known such bliss! [B]
But now, of course, I need some rooms – [C]
They wouldn’t go amiss. [B]
However, a ballad doesn’t have to rhyme – it’s your
choice!
Well, everyone, that’s your lot! The group’s next
meeting is scheduled for 28 March at 7 pm; the host
is to be confirmed – volunteers, anyone…?
Alex
8 comments:
Apologies were sent from Marie, Kath, Andy, Sue, Martin, Liz and Jennie
Sounds like you shared some great writing last night. I’m looking forward to reading it. I’m super-impressed by the speed at which Stuart and Tony have tackled the March writing task and the creativity inspired by the other writing suggestions. We’ll never run short of HTW reading and (Martin) song writing pleasures. Such talents!
It was a thoroughly enjoyable evening, so much so, that we waive forfeits on the only person who was late, who shall remain nameless 🤣🤣🤣 special mention for Adam's fab hip hop, which blew me away 😮 😮gutted that we will be in Essex giving post op care to my sister for the next 2 meetings....Will miss coming and look forward to returning 🙂
Apologies were sent from Marie, Kath, Andy, Sue, Martin, Liz, Jennie and Tony H
Glad you enjoyed it, Irena! I hope it wasn't too quiet for you, as I know you're used to bigger meetings. Adam and I, though, can remember a time when there would be just three HTWs in attendance.
I hope all goes well with your sister.
I'm planning a meeting for the 11th of April, everyone! Please let me know whether you will be able to attend it. I plan on chairing it one last time, for now, and then someone else can take over, perhaps someone more competent. :)
Alex
I will not be available on 11th April - Easter family commitments
I enjoy bigger or smaller meetings, especially enjoyed the last smaller one 🙂🙂and you seem well competent to me lol
I'm glad you enjoyed the last meeting, Irena; I was concerned you may have found it too quiet, as I know you're used to larger groups. I hope to be able to keep "Alternative Tuesday" going, and I'd like it to have a rotating chairman, so to speak. Hopefully, I'll be able to get enough names in the hat for the 11th -- we need only three, but it'd be nice to have a few more!
Alex
Post a Comment