Divorce Bard's Blog

...Iambic pentameter is for the ear. Read it out loud.

Divorce Bard

Divorce Bard
Location
pretty how town, USA
Birthday
February 13
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While the ashes of marriage #2 were cooling, I began a journal here in verse, to keep myself out of trouble. So far so good, and one day at a time. I took a hiatus this past January, and I missed it terribly. Writing daily had changed the way I think - not my opinions, but the process of thinking itself. So here I am back again, and hungry. I began with three rules: (1) Iambic pentameter, (2) Perfect rhyme, and (3) It had to be true (no hyperbole). I hereby amend rule number 3: If I'm writing about myself, yes, it has to be true. But it doesn't, if I want to tell a story.

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NOVEMBER 12, 2010 1:19AM

Parts of Speech. Thursday Nov 11, 2010

Rate: 13 Flag

When she said yes, he thought to write a poem
Comparing yes to key, and heart to lock,
But that would be too soon.  Then coming home,
He closed the door, comparing yes to knock.
Or possibly contrasting, to a bell,
Or tapping.  Even scratching at the wall,
All nouns - if Yes had stories yet to tell,
He'd need some adjectives.  He'd need them all.
Like soft, to start.  And simple.  Yes, and hidden.
And tentative.  Or faltering.  Unsure.
Thus keeping verbs from charging in, unbidden:
Anneal.  Adapt.  Habituate.  Inure.
No, Yes must have an adjective or two:
Enduring.  Unrehearsed.  Intriguing.  New.

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Like skipping down the side walk on a sunny afternoon.
You captured the beautiful feeling of anticipation and all its possibilities. Always true to form, too. I admire your discipline.
This is wonderful.~r
You take us on a journey of such intricate detail as you stretch and tease out the subtle possibilities of yes and make what might have been familiar so distinctively new.
As always such grand writing.
Rated.
Falling, falling into somethin' Ricky.
Who knows, maybe in the process you'll discover new parts of speech... lovely on many levels. R
"Yes must have an adjective or two"

Indeed! Wonderful. rated.
What trig said? This was full of hope!
and at times, it would do to create a new language, one in which yes requires adjectives, to encompass the beauty of such a word
Thank you heidibeth, maryway, Joan, anna1, Scylla, tg, Antoinette, Midwest, hugs, pastvoices, trilogy, and vanessa.

I am begging your forgiveness, as I am frequently forced to do. My son is here, my schedule is filled, and I have to get to sleep. (I just stared at the wall for three hours, trying to start tonight's post - but it's done, hurrah.) I am unable to answer individually.

You are all wonderful. Thanks so much for coming.

Goodnight!
I'm basking in the words.

"No, Yes..."
You school us on how much can be hidden and revealed in a part of speech. The whole is excellent, the last line brilliant.
Thanks c&v. I'm embarrassed to say, it just sort of happened.

Pilgrim, thank you for that. By my reading of your blog, you and Mrs. P can lay claim to some of those excellent adjectives.