List of Unsold Poems from the December 7, 2010 Poetry Fishbowl

Dec 09, 2010 02:46

The following poems from the December 7, 2010 Poetry Fishbowl are currently available. They may be sponsored via PayPal, or you can write to me and discuss other methods.

" after the humans" -- 15 lines, $10 SOLD
Your first prompt became the title of a poem, "after the humans," a free-verse description of how the waters of the world respond to their new freedom. Envision a bunch of women tearing off all their clothes and running wild.

"
A Breath Upon the Waters" -- 42 lines, $20 SOLD
I love this extended exploration of aikido and water and energy. It just so happens that I have an urban fantasy story about a fellow who practices aikido, and an angel -- and the tone of the prompt matches the tone of the story. So "A Breath Upon the Waters" is kind of a behind-the-scenes look at how an angel and a saint go about changing the world with a very subtle touch. This poem is written in free verse with water imagery running all through it.

"Dreamskating" -- 20 lines, $10 DONATED
The prompt about Torn World sea monsters -- along with some descriptive bits from the story "An Irresistible Attraction" -- led to the poem "Dreamskating." It tells about the illegal dreamers' liquor and those who seek it. This poem is written in free verse, with a lot of sentences broken across lines and stanzas; it breaks the conventions of Southern Empire poetry and is meant to imply the work of unlicensed poets. Think cheap, backalley, quasi-legal dadaism.
EDIT 12/10/10: One of our Torn World members just passed away. I'm donating this poem for public viewing on the Torn World site, in memory of valdary.

"The Dragon-Queen of Pirates" -- 28 lines, $15
From this I got "The Dragon-Queen of Pirates," a free verse poem written in unrhymed quatrains. It tells of Lo Hon-Cho and fleet of pirates, and how she became a legend.

"Drop by Drop" -- 21 lines, $10
wyld_dandelyon expected to be offline today, so left me an early batch of prompts dealing with various manifestations of water. I stuffed them all into one poem, "Drop by Drop," which looks at the way water surrounds our lives. It's free verse, with a particular pattern to the number of lines per stanza.

"going to the ocean" -- This poem has already been sponsored but will not be released for a while, as it happens near the end of the story arc in the Origami Mage series.

"No Speck of Land" -- 32 lines, $15 SOLD Slated for Star*Line July 2011 issue
I combined the "endless sea" prompt with an earlier prompt from  fayanora about humans colonizing a waterworld with no land at all. The result is "No Speck of Land," a free-verse poem about the effects of living on a landless planet and how people begin to adjust to that.

"The Old Sow" -- 24 lines, $10
I do not think I would venture near in a boat to see her. From this prompt I got "The Old Sow," a free-verse poem about this giant whirlpool.

"Only Begotten Earth" -- 99 lines, $49.50
Still following the Sea of Galilee prompt, and the sort of things that Jesus might have said to the world, I got to thinking: What if the Earth allowed humans to torture it for the enlightenment of their souls? (After all, why should something with the massive power of a planet put up with the indignities perpetrated upon it by a bunch of jumped-up apes?) So that led to another free verse poem, "Only Begotten Earth," in which Jesus talks with the world about the challenges to come, asking the Earth to forgive humankind and have faith in their potential.

"The Stone and the Ocean" -- 34 lines, $15
I was still thinking about  minor_architect's prompt about Jesus and the Sea of Galilee when I came across yours about the strait of Gibraltar and liminal waters. The result is the free-verse poem "The Stone and the Ocean." It explores some ideas of places that are neither here nor their, figures who are both human and divine, waters that unite and divide.

reading, writing, shopping, fishbowl, poetry, cyberfunded creativity

Previous post Next post
Up