This is part three of my four-part National Poetry Month/Poetry Friday essay on poetic forms
A poem of address is a poetic form that allows the poet to “speak” to a subject. Most of the time the subject doesn't talk back because it’s a person who isn’t with the poet, or because the person is no longer living, or because the subject can’t talk back because it is an animal, a place, or a thing so this type of poem is usually in the form of a monologue. When the poet addresses a subject that can’t respond it’s called apostrophe.
On April Fools’ Day I posted an epigram by Samuel Taylor Coleridge along with a response that is a poem of address and uses apostrophe since Samuel is no longer living. Click here if you’d like to see those poems. April Fools' Poetry
This week I have once again been inspired by Samuel to write a poem that defines the poetic form. Here is my letter to the Poem of Address:
Dear Poem of Address,
I wish we could be good friends.
I wish you could tell me if
You like to sky dive, bake muffins, dig ditches, tell jokes.
But you’re as loud as a stone
Hiding deep underground
Leaving me
On my own
To
Monologue,
Solo.
Thank you for nothing.
Sincerely,
The Poet Who Has to Go It Alone
© 2013 Tamera Will Wissinger
TRY WRITING A POEM OF ADDRESS
This is a fun poetry form to try because the main rule is that the poet speaks to someone or something. It doesn’t have to rhyme, so it can take many different shapes. It can be funny and in a way, it legitimizes talking to yourself!
Here are a few tips for writing a poem of address that uses apostrophe:
For other examples of poems of address, check out A Fishy Spell and Lucy’s Song from my book GONE FISHING: A Novel In Verse.
Have a fun time writing poems of address and using apostrophe!
I hope to see you next Friday – the final week in my series – when I talk about limericks!
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Here are a few announcements:
Irene Latham is hosting Poetry Friday at LIVE YOUR POEM
Naomi Kinsman is featuring me this month at INK SPLAT
For Verse Day #16 at versenovels.com, I tried to answer the question: Why Write A Story In Verse