Thursday, January 23, 2025

Experiment with a Short Form

Family Button Box
Photo by Amy LV




Students - Today's poem blossomed from an old family cigar box full of buttons and a chance opening to a page in Kyle Vaughn's inspiring book LIGHTNING PATHS: 75 POETRY EXERCISES.


The short form is inspired by the landay, a thousands-of-years-old, two-line poem form with nine syllables in the first line and thirteen syllables in the second line. (Go ahead...count.) Vaughn explains that such poems are "simple and deal with common, earthly concerns: love, suffering, war, nature, beauty, death." Landays often criticize elements of life, are anonymous, and are shared by and among Afghan women, shared orally as a way to express anger and grief, frustration and love. 

I am not living in Afghanistan long ago or today, composing and speaking these words with my neighbors and in-person community, but I too wish to learn to express a feeling with a certain number of syllables - twenty-two. My small lines speak to the grandmother who died before I was born, who died before my parents were even married. I believe that the button box belonged to her, Geraldine Pappier Ludwig. I wish I could bring Grandma Ludwig back to life for a day with this box of buttons on the table and a kettle of water brewing for tea we could share.

You might wish to try writing a poem inspired by the landay form. If so, draft two lines about one of these big ideas or another big idea of your choosing:

love
suffering
war
nature
beauty
death

Consider choosing a feeling or a memory or an object or a small moment of time related to the big idea to get started. And try counting syllables. Work toward nine syllables in your first line and thirteen in your second line. Writing only two lines allows us to focus on the count more easily than when we are writing four or eight or sixteen or thirty-two lines.

Thank you to Tabatha for hosting this week's Poetry Friday roundup over at The Opposite of Indifference with a perfect monologue from Shakespeare's HENRY V and her ever-generous thoughts. Each Friday, all are invited to share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship in this open and welcoming poetry community.

Hmmmm. Perhaps each of those buttons yearns to have a poem written about it. Back to the box I go!

xo,

Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish.
Know that your comment will only appear after I approve it.
If you are under 13 years old, please only comment 
with a parent or as part of a group with your teacher.

16 comments:

  1. I really like this little poetry exercise - and new form - Amy. Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This continues your theme from last week, Amy - the stories that wait to be discovered in old things. Love. xo

    ReplyDelete
  3. Amy, your post makes me smile as I feel the tug between "I wish to learn to express a feeling with a certain number of syllables" and "Perhaps each of those buttons yearns to have a poem written about it." There's a longing in so many of us to lighten, to unburden, to simplify--and then the more, the extra, the fascinating taps us on the shoulder and off we go again. Is it discipline we need, or awareness, or another skill or way of balance?
    for love I stand back from suffering,
    at war, as nature's beauty wrestles death. both will win.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love short forms -- thanks for a new one to try and some big ideas to try it with.

    Thanks also for reminding me to open my little heart-shaped Eeyore box in which are the "extra" buttons mom saved from her clothing purchases over the years. The box also still contains her scent, which is just as precious as the buttons.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Ooh...a new form (for me) and a new craft book (for me) ... it's all about ME this morning :). Thank you, Amy!

    ReplyDelete
  6. This is a lovely sentiment for your button box, Amy, all that is needed to remember her. Thx for the new form, too.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Amy, it's enriching to remember that poetry is ancient & assessible to everyone. I'm going to try this historic & deceptively symple - when you get to counting, form. I love what your wrote about Grandma Ludwig.
    On occasion I pull out our family button box, where my Dad's military buttons are most-treasured, by me. I also love the pearly globes, woodies & all of them. Appreciaitons for the double prompt. Since we have New England winter temperatures & snow here in Florida, new indoors adventures are very welcome :)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Amy, thank you for sharing this form – a great way to distill a big idea into a compact package!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Thank you for introducing me to this poem, and sharing its origins. I'm definitely going to try this one out!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Amy, thank you for sharing this book, useful prompt, poignant poem, and Grandma Ludwig's buttons. I was given a book for Christmas called "The Essential Questions" about interviewing your family. There are so many stories out there, and it feels like not enough time. xo

    ReplyDelete
  11. Amy, thanks for the new form. Your poem brings me back to my childhood days with my grandmother and her sewing box. I wonder if she passed it on to my mother or if my mother had her own. I will try the short form with your 2 lines as the mentor text.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Thanks so much for sharing this form and for some ideas on how to try it. I love the idea of each button having a story, and it reminds me of your thrifting post. I really do need to consider my wardrobe more carefully...and when I drop clothes off for donation today, I may have to give each an extra glance! Thanks for a great post and enjoy your button rummaging!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Very cool! I didn't know about this form. And we had a button box (but it was in a cookie tin).

    ReplyDelete
  14. Thanks for introducing me to a new form, Amy. I'll be sure to give it a try.

    ReplyDelete
  15. I LOVE learning about forms--especially short forms. Thank you for this. The family button box that I love so much resides with one of my cousins. I wish I could go grab it right now.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Amy, your poem brought a tear to my eye. Over the last 18 months, sifting through all my parents' belongings after they passed away, I've found a number of things whose story I don't know. Would that your buttons could talk!
    And thanks for the information on the Landay form. Small poems about big ideas — I love that. xo

    ReplyDelete