Jump to content
  • Join Gay Authors

    Join us for free and follow your favorite authors and stories.

    AC Benus
  • Author
  • 2,181 Words
  • 1,025 Views
  • 9 Comments
The content presented here is for informational or educational purposes only. These are just the authors' personal opinions and knowledge.
Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are based on the authors' lives and experiences and may be changed to protect personal information. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Zero to Hero, a Guide - 11. Poetry Prompt 7 – Blank Verse

.

Poetry Prompt 7

Let's Write Some Blank Verse!

 

Each language has a natural cadence. Since we’ve established poetry is about the musical lilt words can take in any specific language, it’s only natural a set pace will emerge as the most comfortable to recite out loud.[1] For the Greeks and Romans, they felt twelve syllable lines were just perfect to convey a thought completely before turning the line to add more detail or begin a new sentence. With English – our great late-bloomer of a language – we discovered our natural cadence in Blank Verse.

Seldom are great innovations attributable to one person, as nothing spreads faster than a good idea, but the system of ten-syllable (non-rhymed) lines we know today was invented by the poet Henry Howard in the mid-1500s. [2] He did it for his translation of Virgil, being responsive to how the Latin sounded when recited, he fell into a natural rhythm when his lines shortened to ten beats in English. This integral vocal/musical quality drew Christopher Marlowe to put it on stage. Soon all the poet-playwrights had drafted Blank Verse as the workhorse of their dramas. It is a most excellent storytelling form; perhaps the best there is.

Here’s an example of Howard’s ‘new’ verse from Book IV of his Aeneid:

 

Such words inflamed the kindled mind with love,

Loosened all shame and gave the doubtful hope.

And to the temples first they haste, and seek

By sacrifice with hogrels of two years[3]

Chosen as ought to Ceres that gave laws;

To Phoebus; Bacchus; and to Juno chief

Who hath in her care the bands of marriage.

 

If you count along, you’ll see each line is a perfectly settled expression where nothing hangs or holds the reader up, and you will see each line is a perfect 10 syllables. Here, even at the birth of the form, we can sense the ease with which Howard’s Blank Verse can tell us a story.[4]

And it’s this storytelling ability that has made Blank Verse the standard for so many later poets. Only recently did I come to learn that Robert Burns was a genuine master of the form. Here is his Tragic Fragment, whose theme of being an outcast for ‘sin’ should resonate deeply with anyone of the LGBT community.

 

All devil as I am, a damnèd wretch,

A hardened, stubborn, un-repenting villain,

Still my heart melts at human wretchedness;

And with sincere but unavailing sighs

I view the helpless children of distress:

With tears indignant ‘hold the oppressor

Rejoicing in honest man's destruction,

Whose un-submitting heart was all his crime.

Ev'n you, ye hapless crew! I pity you;

Ye, whom the seeming good think sin to pity;

Ye poor, despised, abandoned vagabonds,

Whom Vice, as usual, has turned o'er to ruin.

Oh! But for friends and interposing Heaven,

I had been driven forth like you forlorn,

The most detested, worthless wretch among you!

Oh injured God! Thy goodness has endowed me

With talents passing most of my compeers,

Which I in just proportion have abused –

As far surpassing other common villains

As Thou in natural parts has given me more.

 

Burns’ example introduces us to another element frequently encountered. Even in the Blank Verse of Shakespeare, an extra, 11th syllable is quite acceptable. Writing this poetry is not easy, and a certain about of ‘fudging’ is perfectly all right. So don’t beat yourself up if you need that extra word or sound. That goes for an occasional line with 9 syllables, but do be conscious not to make lines of Blank Verse either 8 syllables (which alters it to Lyric poetry), or 12 syllables, which makes it too breathy to serve as Blank Verse.

A great master of Blank Verse in the 20th century was Horace Gregory. A beautiful and subtle poet, he too was drawn to the grandeur of Rome. His Blank Verse translation (running to approximately 10,000 lines!) of Ovid’s Metamorphoses is a masterpiece of the poet’s craft. It should inspire all of us to be dedicated to our art.

Reading Gregory's work is almost a meditative experience. The Zen-like character seeps into your bones. Here is a quote from Book X dealing with Orpheus.

 

One day, while walking down a little hill,

He sloped upon a lawn of thick green grass;

A lovely place to rest — but needed shade.

Yet when the poet, great-grandson of the gods,

Sat down to sing and touched his golden lyre,

There the cool grass waved beneath green shadows,

For trees came crowding where the poet sang:

The silver poplar and the bronze-leaved oak,

The swaying lina, beechnut, maiden-laurel,

Delicate hazel and spear-making ash,

The shining silver fir, the ilex leaning

Its flower-weighted head, sweet-smelling fir,

The shifting-coloured maple and frail willow

Whose branches trail where gliding waters flow;

Lake-haunted lotus, the greening boxwood,

Thin tamarisk, the myrtle of two colours,

And viburnum with darkly shaded fruit.

And with them came slender-footed ivy,

Grapevine and vine-grown elms and mountain ash,

The deeply wooded spruce, the pink arbutus,

The palm whose leaves are signs of victory

And the tall pine, beloved of Cybele

Since Attis, loyal priest, stripped off his manhood,

And stood sexless and naked as that tree.[5]

 

Now, I may have overloaded you with classical examples, but lest you think this form is only good for gods and goddesses, let’s look at a how an American master of modern writing utilized Blank Verse. Hart Crane was a genius whose life ended much too early. However, it was not unhappy as his straight biographers like to make out, and one period saw him living contented with the love of his life and writing freely. As the Brooklyn flat of his partner’s father faced Manhattan, he and Emil Opffer would lie on the roof getting some sun, with Crane sketching poems about love and the sights.[6] From this sprung his magnum opus, The Bridge. Here is the title poem of the collection – To the Brooklyn Bridge – and it’s in Blank Verse.

 

How many dawns, chill from his rippling rest

The seagull’s wings shall dip and pivot him,

Shedding white rings of tumult, building high

Over the chained bay waters Liberty –

 

Then, with inviolate curve, forsake our eyes

As apparitional as sails that cross

Some page of figures to be filed away;

– Till elevators drop us from our day...

 

I think of cinemas, panoramic sleights

With multitudes bent toward some flashing scene

Never disclosed, but hastened to again,

Foretell to other eyes on the same screen;

 

And Thee, across the harbor, silver paced

As though the sun took step of thee yet left

Some motion ever unspent in thy stride –

Implicitly thy freedom staying thee!

 

Out of some subway scuttle, cell or loft

A bedlamite speeds to thy parapets,

Tilting there momently, shrill shirt ballooning,

A jest falls from the speechless caravan.

 

Down Wall, from girder into street noon leaks,

A rip-tooth of the sky’s acetylene;

All afternoon the cloud flown derricks turn...

Thy cables breathe the North Atlantic still.

 

And obscure as that heaven of the Jews,

Thy guerdon.... Accolade thou dost bestow

Of anonymity time cannot raise:

Vibrant reprieve and pardon thou dost show.

 

O harp and altar, of the fury fused,

(How could mere toil align thy choiring strings!)

Terrific threshold of the prophet’s pledge,

Prayer of pariah, and the lover’s cry,

 

Again the traffic lights that skim thy swift

Unfractioned idiom, immaculate sigh of stars,

Beading thy path—condense eternity:

And we have seen night lifted in thine arms.

 

Under thy shadow by the piers I waited

Only in darkness is thy shadow clear.

The City’s fiery parcels all undone,

Already snow submerges an iron year...

 

O Sleepless as the river under thee,

Vaulting the sea, the prairies’ dreaming sod,

Unto us lowliest sometime sweep, descend

And of the curveship lend a myth to God.

 

The Prompt: imagine you are free-floating in space, in orbit around the Earth. Don’t worry about a spacecraft or spacesuit – you are just able to orbit the earth – describe what you see, feel, think and expect to happen. Make it at least 10 lines, but remember, the more practice the better. Try to make it as long as you can.

 

As final inspiration, here’s a bit more from Horace Gregory’s Metamorphoses. This is the conclusion of Book VIII:

 

Who has been changed once, but then no more?

Others have been transfigured many times,

Like Proteus, who lives within the kingdom

Of that great wave whose arms encircle the earth.

O Proteus, how many times your image

Comes to us as a young man from the sea,

Then as a lion, then a raving boar,

Or as a snake whom many fear to touch!

Horns change you to a bull, or you might be

A sleeping stone, a tree, or water flowing,

Or fire that quarrels with moisture everywhere.

 

 

 


 

Self-Review: Now that you have written at least ten lines of Blank Verse, I ask you to perform a self-check against the following set of questions. If you answer ‘Yes’ to one or more of them, and this leads to feelings of dissatisfaction with your results, turn to the appendix List of Random Prompt Ideas and choose one to try the Blank Verse challenge again. Check this list of questions with your second attempt and whittle those ‘Yes’s down to a comfortable level before going on to the Haiku prompt challenge.

 

Ask yourself DID I:

 

- Fall short or go over on the syllable counts?

- Make hard stops at the end of each line?

- Treat the poem as a bunch of random lines and not a stanza?

- Regress to haiku-speak?

- Fail to make my stanzas of Blank Verse unified and flowing?

- Sacrifice basic grammar to achieve syllable count?

- Fail to create a pleasant metre for my poem? It does not have to be any one form of metre, but is the overall effect engaging to read? (You may try reciting your poem out loud to answer this question.)

 

Remember, this course is designed to build knowledge and confidence step by step, so please feel comfortable with Blank Verse before you proceed.

 

 

 

 

 


[1] Singing is a different matter, and English like most languages, feels best with 8-sylabble Lyric lines of poetry. Spoken, it’s best in Blank Verse with 10 beats per line.

[2] Earl of Surry. He and his friend Thomas Wyatt are also credited with jointly inventing the English form of the Sonnet.

[3] Hogrels = sheep in the second year of life; i.e. older than “lamb” but not yet matured to “mutton.”

[4] Pedants are fond of defining Blank Verse in a rather Victorian way: something better read in silence, and comprised only of iambic pentameter. It is a shame to further these silly ideas from a time when the plays of Shakespeare were deemed shocking and “better read than staged.” As for it consisting of only da-DUM rhythms, that’s utter foolishness, as every poet who’s ever used it makes the Metre fit the content and not the other way around. Blank Verse comes in any and all breakdowns of metrical feet the mind can create. What matters is the overall consistency of 10-sylabble lines.

[6] 20th century “experts” mislead the public concerning Crane’s acceptance of his orientation. His early death, the official story of which is highly suspicious, made him the perfect ‘moral tale’ of madness for these biographers wanting to scare Gay readers away from an open and self-accepting life. However, this is all categorically proven false by correspondence the poet made with his Gay friends, which show he was happy and out in the community of which he was a part. These letters have never been published in the “experts’” books on the myth of Crane as a miserable, maladjusted H-word, because they prove just the opposite. For Crane’s true feeling about same-sex love, see the selection of letters he wrote to his Gay friends included in Rictor Norton's My Dear Boy: Gay Love Letters through the Centuries (San Francisco 1998), ps.217-19. In one he penned to Waldo Frank, he had this to say about Emil Opffer: "[With Emil,] I feel that what ever event the future holds is justified before hand. And I have been able to give freedom and life which was acknowledged in the ecstasy of walking hand in hand across the most beautiful bridge in the world, the cables enclosing us and pulling us upward in such a dance as I have never walked and never can walk with another." Seen in this this light, all the poems of The Bridge can be understood as love poems to Opffer, and happy ones at that. When will this great, Gay American poet be given an honest biography?

 

_

Copyright © 2019 AC Benus; All Rights Reserved.
  • Like 2
  • Love 2
The content presented here is for informational or educational purposes only. These are just the authors' personal opinions and knowledge.
Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are based on the authors' lives and experiences and may be changed to protect personal information. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
You are not currently following this story. Be sure to follow to keep up to date with new chapters.

Recommended Comments

Chapter Comments

An awesome essay, so interesting! The examples you have chosen are great. I love the Gregory quote!  Thank you for sharing. 🙂  🙂 🙂

 

(This syllable counting is really hard for someone with, who speaks an other mother tongue. And as I found out onlinesyllable-counters in the net, aren't always a help, because they count differently.)

  • Like 2
  • Love 1
19 minutes ago, Lyssa said:

An awesome essay, so interesting! The examples you have chosen are great. I love the Gregory quote!  Thank you for sharing. 🙂  🙂 🙂

 

(This syllable counting is really hard for someone with, who speaks an other mother tongue. And as I found out onlinesyllable-counters in the net, aren't always a help, because they count differently.)

Thank you, and yes, I've found those online services to be dodgy at best. I'd suggest you try Google Translate. Feed a line (or lines) of poetry into the first box, then press the audio button below. The computer will read, and you can count syllables as it goes. Pressing it a second time repeats the line at a slower pace so you can check it again. Please try it :)

Horace Gregory should be better known than he is. I think I will post some more examples of his work on Live-Poets :yes:    

  • Like 2
  • Love 1

I've finally managed this. It was harder than I anticipated. I fear I fell into more cliches than I ought to have done. Anyway, here it is...

 

Orbital Observations

No scintillating distant star am I,

nor comet with a phosphorescent tail

with orbit too elliptical to track

amongst the floating asteroids and rocks.

Instead, I drift, a satellite too old

to be of further use to humankind,

but still I sense a multitude of things

upon the blue terrestrial ball below.

I watch the oceans spawn gigantic storms

aswirl with cloud and lightning phosphoresced,

play witness to the swift consuming death

of broad green ancient forests set aflame.

Beneath my eye the nations go to war,

the blood of armies flowing past my lens;

I hear a thousand thousand voices weep

ere falling ever silent in despair.

Yet come another circle of the sun

I’ll catch a glimpse of flowers in the bud

or birds in flock from tropic to the pole

and listen to an infant’s laugh and hope.

  • Like 2
  • Love 2

@Parker OwensThis is very smooth-reading Blank Verse. You have really captured the storytelling strengths of the form in this poem. Everything is good in it, and you are right -- Bank Verse is hard -- but your end product reads quite naturally. I hope you will work on more of them with the goal of putting this form firmly in your kit of parts, to be pulled out when inspiration demands a storytelling form. 

Thank you for taking the poetry prompt challenge! 

  • Like 1
  • Love 2
8 hours ago, AC Benus said:

@Parker OwensThis is very smooth-reading Blank Verse. You have really captured the storytelling strengths of the form in this poem. Everything is good in it, and you are right -- Bank Verse is hard -- but your end product reads quite naturally. I hope you will work on more of them with the goal of putting this form firmly in your kit of parts, to be pulled out when inspiration demands a storytelling form. 

Thank you for taking the poetry prompt challenge! 

Thanks for being so patient. There were a lot of cross outs and crumpled paper as one idea after another ran dry. It’s an interesting thought to write a full story in blank verse. And an intimidating one...

  • Like 1
  • Love 2
View Guidelines

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Newsletter

    Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter.  Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.

    Sign Up
×
×
  • Create New...