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Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Epistle Poem
Epistle poems date back to ancient Rome and Biblical times. Epistle comes from the Latin term, epistula meaning letter. The subject matter for the traditional poem is love, religion or philosophical matters. This type of poem is usually found written to an imaginary person or thing. Think about the tone and the person or thing you are writing to. Is it a friendly, business, formal, angry, sad or casual letter? You could write to someone dead or famous. There is no fixed form.
Here are some examples:
This is my letter to the world,
That never wrote to me,
The simple news that Nature told,
With tender majesty.
Her message is committed
To hands, I cannot see;
For love of hers, sweet countrymen,
Judge tenderly of me!
~Emily Dickinson
Here is one in postcard form:
On the other side of these words
are the tender green cane fields
my sugar, my alcohol, my rum
the chartreuse just after the rain.
This is my green wheelbarrow,
beauty, compelled by verdure,
even the white roses in head
burn jealous in a candle flicker
petals turn and coil in the flame
blacken to a foil of happy ash
that scatters among the palms.
~Richard Blanco
I look forward to your letters. I mean poems~
Ooooh! That Emily Dickinson is one of my favourites! What a good idea this is, thanks Ella.
ReplyDeleteLove it! I'm writing mine, will come back later to link it! Excellent idea. <3
ReplyDeleteI had so much fun being silly with yesterday's rondeau, perhaps I'll manage to be serious today. "Epistle" just means "letter" I know, and I've written plenty of letters, but "epistle" conjures up Serious Lessons from St. Paul in my mind. "Now, listen here, Ephesians, and listen good. You've got to live the way I say you should."
ReplyDeleteSigh.
— K
Kay, Alberta, Canada
An Unfittie's Guide to Adventurous Travel
I posted, and thanks for the great prompts and fun here!
ReplyDeleteHA! i had something sitting around but could never find the right context for it. a letter worked perfectly. :)
ReplyDeletethanks a million!
You all are so fun today! I really enjoyed your comments~
ReplyDeleteMy son's friend(a girl, but she has a boyfriend) came in while I was working on an article submission. I had it almost done. Got up to go tend laundry. When I returned she is on my computer. She infected it and my word document was rolling. I couldn't save it...gone! I did print out the rough draft, prior..augh~ I look forward to your letters I mean poems ;D
i like dickinson's better, not that you asked for a vote:)
ReplyDeleteI wrote a silly one after way too much caffeine, and in the afternoon too, so I likely will be posting wild poems in the wee hours this morning - that's what happens when the sensorily-deprived get Taken Out of an afternoon. Hee hee.
ReplyDeleteOkay, as this site has one of the most erudite memberships on the internet, might I ask a question? In my interviewing, the word "favourite/favorite" comes up often. I see Kerry's spelling above, which is what I used to use, and it seems to be the one most often used in Canada. But in the States everyone seems to use favorite, so I started using THAT.When I look it up online, it comes both ways....... And now I am most dreadfully confused. What is the poll? I will abide by the majority vote, hee hee. (WAY too much caffeine today!)
ReplyDeleteI posted what should be read as a letter to Theo, Van Gogh's brother, a letter from a good friend or a lover - you'll find the best way to tell which of these. Thanks for an adorable prompt! <3
ReplyDeleteHi Sherry.. I don't know about erudite (could just be I like the sound of my own voice ;) but the American dictionaries decided to drop the gratuitous 'U' a very long time ago. In all other parts of the world, English spelling is followed, which includes the silly old thing. Personally, I don't see the point in hanging on to it, but I am a sucker for tradition, so cling to the spelling rules I was taught in grade school.
ReplyDeleteI'm so thrilled to see many letters for my reading enjoyment here... I'm behind with mine again. Perhaps later, I'll have something worth showing.
shanyn - the link isn't working.
ReplyDeleteyou can get to it (i think) by clicking your homepage, though. :)
also, i only use the u when i'm feeling extra spunky... no idea why.
I'm English so I put the u in there.
ReplyDeleteThis poem(thing) is written in my half asleep, 'gods I hate mornings' state so appologies if not quite to the prompt.
Shawnacy, and everyone who had the bad link, here is the correct one: http://sunflowershan.wordpress.com/2011/09/14/dear-me/
ReplyDeleteI must remember to check that no volunteer random words end up on the end of my url :-)
I use the u because I'm Canadian and it gives me a little laugh when my spell check wants to leave jagged red lines under my Canuck spelled words! :-)
Thanks, Ella, for the inspiration!
ReplyDelete"To: Miss Emily Dickinson"
ReplyDelete@Shen, unfortunately the link you provided is not working.. Will you try to link up again?
ReplyDeleteThanks Kerry - No idea why the other link did't work, was fine when I did a direct copy/paste into my browser, but computers aren't particularly fond of me! I've linked direct to the front page of my blog this time, with the poem as the top one 'Little one, a note'
ReplyDeleteI have been sick and trying to play catch up! I am really enjoying your poems!
ReplyDelete