Author Topic: How to Write Bad Poetry  (Read 3651 times)

hubag bohol

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How to Write Bad Poetry
« on: October 29, 2010, 07:43:47 AM »
How to Write Bad Poetry  
By Devrie Paradowski


“All bad poetry springs from genuine feeling.”--Oscar Wilde


People write poetry for a plethora of reasons, but this article has a sharpened arrowhead aimed directly at the fingertips of amateur poets who wish to be published yet refuse to learn the attributes of a well-crafted poem. These poets are the ones who plop their pieces, shining with every beam of ambiguity, vagueness and hackney, into cyberspace for review. I have encountered a few of these poets to whom I have given a courteous critique, only to be backhanded in the face by sore comments such as, “You must be too dense to get it,” or “Everyone I know tells me how great I am. You’re the only one…”

Of course I am usually left wondering why someone would care to post a poem in a critique forum if any constructive comment given to the poet gets immediately flushed down the cyber-potty. Many new poets seem to think that writing a poem is one hundred percent emotion. They overlook the notion that, as with any craft, poetry entails a good deal of practice and learning as well as desire and talent. So instead of writing about the importance of concrete imagery, figurative language, and the art of minimizing abstractions, I thought it might be fun, (and might even tick a few people off) to write a small compendium of attributes of bad poetry.

Recipe for a Really Bad Poem

-A bad poem should not have any original language. If you aim to write a bad poem, avoid coming up with stark images. The last thing you would want to do is write something fresh, innovative, and evocative. Use as many hackneyed expressions as possible, such as “crystal clear,” “dark as ebony,” “blue as the sky,” “dark as night,” “…paints a picture,” “climb the highest mountain,” Etc.

-An especially bad poem should be heavily weighted with abstract words such as “heart,” “love” “sadness,” “despair,” “hate,” and “destiny.” The more abstract and generalized your poem, the better suited it will be to mean absolutely nothing to the reader. Aim for zero concrete images if you want a particularly bad poem. For example, “The world is a sorrowful place/ filled with sadness and hate…blah blah blah.” Also, be sure to TELL the poet how to describe something by using superfluous abstract adjectives! “The water is pretty;” “The world is ugly;” “His eyes were beautiful…” A bad poem should never use figurative language or descriptive imagery to SHOW the reader a slice of life.

-No matter how odd the sentence becomes, or how unlikely the phrase would be concocted in normal language, make it RHYME. Rhyme anyway!! That’s right, a bad poem is going to have very forced rhyme. If you have to rearrange the structure of a sentence just to make the rhyme fit, go for it! For example: “The apple blossoms fell in May/ on the grassy field is where they lay.” (Notice how I just couldn’t say, “They lay on the grassy field?” That wouldn’t rhyme, so I had to make up a funky sentence.

-Don’t worry about punctuation, grammar, or spelling. What you really want to do is to make the reader scratch her head and read it a zillion times trying to figure out what it means. Bad spelling and poor grammar will really detract from the meaning, so get reckless with your words. Try this poem out for size:

i watch as the sun/ sets over the horisen/ the ocean pants/ like a wild monster/ breaths with heavy/ breath and then falls/ something small/ always gets lost/ in the mouth/ of agony

or

u r reel speciol/ like honi sweet/ from a candy bee.

-A good practice for a cleverly bad poet is to make the objects of the poem plural! Globalize your subject for an incredibly weak impact! “Trees are…” “People cry…” “Flowers bloom…” By pluralizing all the objects of the poem, you are blurring the imagery, thus making it sappy, intangible, and simply boring.

----------------------

Frequently Asked Questions of bad poets who want to be published but don’t want to work:

Q. Who are you to judge what a good poem is? A poem is like beauty; it is in the eye of the beholder!

A. Paul Valery once said, “a poem is never finished, only abandoned.” You have to work on your poem. You have to find a certain clarity that will reach the reader. Sometimes we get so fogged up with our own emotions, we don’t really see the true poem. Emotional outpours make excellent first drafts, but if you don’t go any further then that, you aren’t working hard enough to make your poem good—even in your own eyes. Also, as far a judging a poem is concerned, as long as you hope to publish your poetry, it will get judged. Know what these “judgers” are looking for.

Q. If clichés were so bad, why have they been around for so long?

A. Exactly!! Everyone understands clichés—almost to the point where they don’t even mean anything anymore. Poetry is an art of expression and exposition. If you are too lazy to come up with the images yourself, then you aren’t really writing poetry.

Q. I write poetry for personal reasons. It is my way of dealing with the world. Why should I care what you think about poetry?

A. You shouldn’t. Unless you are trying to perfect your craft so that you can express yourself through literature in some publication, you can write any way you want. Just know, though, that if you post your poem for critique, you might get some honest criticism based on poetic technique. If that is not what you are looking to get, please let people know what you are looking to get.


http://www.freepoems.info/how_to_write_bad_poetry.html


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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #1 on: October 29, 2010, 08:11:20 AM »
How to Write Bad Poetry  
 
 
Say not that you are bad at writing good poetry,
Say instead that you are good at writing bad poetry.



Ah poetry! To some it is the food of love, to others, a way to say farewell true love lost. Poets make us laugh, help us cry, or paint a picture through their use of the written word. Many of us attempt to emulate their genius; however, far too often we fall short of our dreams. If you fall into this category, do not despair, for in the very appalling nature of your efforts you may show talent unheard of in the celebrated bards. You could be the quintessential bad poet.

So what are the secrets of writing bad poetry?

The Basics

Unlike good poetry, the truly awful stuff can be written at lightning speed, and with very little thought. On the other hand you can agonise for hours and still write something truly appalling. Sometimes the longer you agonise over it, the more you will cause others to do so, too. However, beginners may find the 'take away' school of poetry the easiest to attempt: fast, nasty, and guaranteed to clog up the arteries.

Remember the adage of good writing: write what you know. Ignore this rule with impunity. After all, it doesn't apply to you.

Rhyming

Bad poetry should rhyme if at all possible, although some of the best of its aspirants have ignored this rule with considerable success. Trust us, with enough thought, anything can rhyme. When it comes to finding those rhymes, the following strategy is recommended; just add the sound of the word you're trying to rhyme with to successive letters of the alphabet, until you come up with:

--A word that fits
--A word that doesn't fit (for a very bad poem)
--If you're still stuck, just go for something that you can convince your friends is an actual word (and then keep them away from dictionaries).

Here is an example of how to find a rhyme:

Oh my love, you led me astray,
You cast me aside as the night does the day!
How I moan and I choke until I hardly speak!
The dilemma - what to rhyme with 'speak'? A-eek? Beak? Creak? Deek? Eek? Freak? Greek? Geek? Heek? (And so on... continue until you get to Zeek). Just find the first that you like. Here's an example:

I'll love you at least 'til the middle of next week!

If all that seems like too much work, cheat. The rhyming dictionary has already done the work for you! After all, why go to more effort than you have to?

Now you've gone to all that trouble to find all those rhymes, why waste them? Nothing says 'three minutes thought' more than an endlessly repeated sound. Here's an example:

Boom!
It shook the room!
The sound of my doom!
Then, I smelt the fume!
And heard the death tune!
Played on a loom!
Everything went... Voom!

The above example also demonstrates another old reliable technique: the 'not quite rhyming' technique. If you've gone through every letter of the alphabet and haven't found a single word you're happy with, and your friends aren't gullible enough to believe 'gistansil' really is a word, near enough is always good enough. So, tune rhymes with boom, and if your readers don't believe it, well, they may be right; on the other hand, maybe they're just too ignorant to understand your literary genius. You decide.

Never forget the 'absent' rhyme. So you can't find a word that rhymes with 'cactus'? Who cares? There's no point in letting the flow of your thought ebb for such a minor detail. Ignore the last sound of that line, and just get on with the rest of the poem. The sudden change in your rhyming pattern will make a powerful statement. Of some description. For example:

It was a dark and stormy day
When you went away!
I cried and I cried and I cried,
(I think I nearly died)
You left me for Suzie Caronabularis,
Which was awfully sad,
I felt so bad,
You broke my heart,
I should have known from the start!

Advanced Bad Poetry

There are many techniques used by good poets to create imagery through words. These include alliteration, sibilance, and cacophony. Needless to say, these are not in any way necessary in your poetry. However, from time to time, you may find them useful. A good rule of thumb is while in good poetry a little is good, in bad lots is best. It's impossible to overdo it. So, if 'Anna ate eighty apples avidly all around Australia' you're definitely on the right track.

Rhythm; if you haven't completely ignored this aspect of your poem, and you find you must keep it flowing then feel free to contract words as it suits you. After all, don't even good poems have o'er and e'en in them?

Why reinvent the wheel? You could spend hours perfecting the turn of phrase most suited to your muse, but why bother? There’s a cliché for every occasion, and an occasion for every cliché. Season your poetry liberally with them. Once again, you can never have too many:

Oh warm and fuzzy feline,
With your razor-sharp claws.
To you I'd give anything,
Rest it gently in your paws!
For 'though you tipped your bowl over
And ruined my new blue silk,
My mother always told me
'Never cry over spilt milk!'

Haiku

The haiku deserves special consideration, not only because it is a short, meaningful type of Japanese poetry, but because it is so easy to do badly. While traditional haiku has all sorts of elements that provide atmosphere, yours need only follow the syllable rule. Your first line should have five syllables, the second seven, and the third five again. As long as you have most of your fingers intact, this should not cause a problem:

I like bees, they're so
Yellow and black, and yellow
And black and yellow

The Clerihew

Once you've mastered the art of bad poetry, the first thing to do is to show off to your friends; and in what better way than immortalising them in verse? The Clerihew is the perfect vehicle for this, allowing you to appease their vanity while using all those rhymes you've so carefully uncovered. And since rhythmic form is completely optional, you can churn these out at a rate that will please even the most exacting public.

Humphrey McDuff
Thought he'd had enough
After a loaf of bread and six bowls of stew
A trip to the little boy's room seemed long overdue!

Finally...

Should your poetry, despite your most heroic efforts, be looking suspiciously classy, there's nothing like a bit of gratuitous name-dropping to bring it down a peg or two. Don't be fussy. It doesn't matter whose name you drop, or (if you've managed to slip more than one name in) how incongruently you juxtapose them; their very presence will suffice.

Remember, while you may never aspire to being William McGonagall, just be the worst poet you can be.

 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A577118
 


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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #2 on: October 29, 2010, 09:51:44 AM »
hahahahaha!  one of the best and wittiest poetry writing lessons i've come across. :D 

thank you very much, hubag/ for not being a drag/ you're not the lady with a bag/ much less the boy with a brag! ;D

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #3 on: October 29, 2010, 09:53:30 AM »
hehe, taas ra gyod kog appeal.  appeal sa kite festival, appeal pod sa bad poets society.  could i ask for anything more? ;D

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2010, 12:57:23 PM »
hehe, taas ra gyod kog appeal.  appeal sa kite festival, appeal pod sa bad poets society.  could i ask for anything more? ;D

Bad Readers Society na lang ko apil...  ;D

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #5 on: October 29, 2010, 05:41:07 PM »
-A bad poem should not have any original language. If you aim to write a bad poem, avoid coming up with stark images. The last thing you would want to do is write something fresh, innovative, and evocative. Use as many hackneyed expressions as possible, such as “crystal clear,” “dark as ebony,” “blue as the sky,” “dark as night,” “…paints a picture,” “climb the highest mountain,” Etc.~


Ohwaa U've had touch my galamhan to reminisce my ye§teryear§  8)

Kana nga word power "crystal clear" we often used this in our silly act nyahaha³. Like pol-an na sa titzer maminaw balik² ang lesson ky naa pay wla kaibot lagi ky labawng pod dli maminaw.Inig ingon ni titzer..kazabortz ba mo class? Mag chorus dayon mig ingon..yes Sir we can boogie and its crystal clear dalang juhom² ..huuh mag lingo² nalang among titzer woi..hay§ badlongon..!

Uza ka higayon sa sulok niyng panumdoman, nag asked ang uza ka admirer or suitor;
   Dai sani man jud naa ba koi chance?
   Tubag: (hangad² sa langit) sabay ingon oh oh..dark as night boi  ;D

Uza ka boardmate nakorfiohan ky nagtuman ug "date"..didto agi sa bintana mikatkat (maau gani ky dli kaau taas)  ;)
  Pagka ugma kansyawan..! Pa dungog² dayon: Huuh bazta gugma na gani..,“climb the highest mountain" jud zha  ;D
    Pati inig pangaon na, halos na laman mazud-ipan kinatawa..bazta naa nay mosugod ug ingon; kumuzta ang atong climber?

Sa unin amoa english titzer pasuwaton mig "essay",tuyoon namo pakapinan ug blah blah³,
   eAgi pa jud ug balak² unja mga phrazes nga wa deri wla didto..,sayopon ang spelling ug grammar hee³.
      Instead nga molagum si Sir magpahiyom nalang ug mag dingo²  :-[
Ijara hawod ug kauban man diay ko§ mga bad powiter nah? Zaon dli man gud hilig ug loborzter  :-[

ligid²..tnx. U..yu..yo made my day..!  :-*


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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #6 on: October 29, 2010, 11:52:02 PM »
this must be a very interesting book:



We all need a bit of poetry in our lives—to inspire and to elevate.  But what happens when poetry goes wrong, and how bad can it get?  Stephen Robins has scoured the anthologies of the world to amass the most astonishing examples of really awful verse.  Each featured poet is introduced with a light–hearted discussion of his or her life, exploring published works, fame, and reputation.  The result is a treasure trove of poetic disasters that should hold the attention of even the most jaded reader. (from the publisher)

some poems in the book:

The Dentologia—A Poem on the Diseases of the Teeth (Solyman Brown’s epic poem of 1833)

Lines Written for a Friend on the Death of His Brother, Caused by a Railway Train Running Over Him Whilst He Was in a State of Inebriation (James Henry Powell)

sample lines from Ode on the Mammoth Cheese Weighing over 7,000 Pounds:

We have seen thee, queen of cheese
Lying quietly at your ease
Gently fanned by evening breeze
Thy fair form no flies dare seize. 

-Amazon.com



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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #7 on: October 30, 2010, 12:11:44 AM »

Remember, while you may never aspire to being William McGonagall, just be the worst poet you can be.


William Topaz McGonagall (March 1825 – 29 September 1902) was a Scottish weaver and amateur poet and actor.  He won notoriety as an extremely bad poet who exhibited no recognition of or concern for his peers' opinions of his work.  He wrote some 200 poems, including the infamous "Tay Bridge Disaster", which are widely regarded as some of the worst in British history.

McGonagall has been acclaimed as the worst poet in British history.  The chief criticisms of his poetry are that he is deaf to poetic metaphor and unable to scan correctly.  In the hands of lesser artists, this might generate merely dull, uninspiring verse.  However, McGonagall's fame stems from the humorous effects these shortcomings generate.  The inappropriate rhythms, weak vocabulary, and ill-advised imagery combine to make his work amongst the most spontaneously amusing comic poetry in the English language.  However, his is a long tradition of verses written and published about great events and tragedies, and widely circulated among the local population as handbills. (excerpts from wikipedia)



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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #8 on: October 30, 2010, 01:05:22 AM »
deemed one of the champions of bad poetry:

Flash! flash! - Bang! Bang! - and we blazed away,
And the grey roof reddened and rang!
Flash! flash! - and I felt his bullet flay
The tip of my ear -Flash! bang!

Bang! flash! -and my pistol arm fell broke:
I struck with my left hand then:
-Struck at a corpse through a cloud of smoke!
I had shot him dead in his den.

                                    -from Wolf and Hound*
                                     Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833-1870)
                                     Australian poet

*entered in The Book of Heroic Failures by Stephen Piles



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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #9 on: October 30, 2010, 01:23:56 AM »
the champion of the southern humorist.com bad love poem contest:

More than fungus loves your feet,
More than roadkill loves the street,
More than babies love to pooh,
That is how much I love you.

More than dogs love their ticks,
More than stomach viruses make me sick,
More than kidney stones in your pee,
That is how much you love me.

                                 -Lucy B. Goosey

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #10 on: October 30, 2010, 06:41:50 AM »
hahahahaha!  one of the best and wittiest poetry writing lessons i've come across. :D 

thank you very much, hubag/ for not being a drag/ you're not the lady with a bag/ much less the boy with a brag! ;D

I'm just a poor wag who has no patience
With oily dickheads full of pretentience.

 ;D


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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #11 on: October 30, 2010, 06:50:59 AM »
McGonagall has been acclaimed as the worst poet in British history.  The chief criticisms of his poetry are that he is deaf to poetic metaphor and unable to scan correctly.  In the hands of lesser artists, this might generate merely dull, uninspiring verse.  However, McGonagall's fame stems from the humorous effects these shortcomings generate.  The inappropriate rhythms, weak vocabulary, and ill-advised imagery combine to make his work amongst the most spontaneously amusing comic poetry in the English language. 

Ang nakapahimuot ani kon ang gasuwat seryoso pero wa siya masayod nga ang iyang sinuwat kataw-anan diay...  :P

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #12 on: October 30, 2010, 06:54:54 AM »
Ang nakapahimuot ani kon ang gasuwat seryoso pero wa siya masayod nga ang iyang sinuwat kataw-anan diay...  :P

Kanang magzuwat nga th, ;D borag nag narrate ug daily diary?  :-X

Kanang syay ray gilamian pero ang nagbaza gaduka og gipol-an,corNizious paloi§?  8) di ba?

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #13 on: October 30, 2010, 07:07:04 AM »
Kanang syay ray gilamian pero ang nagbaza gaduka og gipol-an,corNizious paloi§?  8) di ba?

He he, anzo pa jud...  :-X

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #14 on: October 30, 2010, 07:16:55 AM »
He he, anzo pa jud...  :-X

Dulot zad sa amay ang pagmahal sa kaugalingorn§..dafat lang ky wla man laing mopataaz sa ija bandera
   maong sya ray mag bayang mag-iliw permi  :-X

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Logical consequences are the scarecrows of fools and the beacons of wise men. ~ Thomas Henry Huxley~

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"That if you shall confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and shall believe in your heart that God has raised him from the dead, you shall be saved."
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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #15 on: October 30, 2010, 07:50:12 AM »
Dulot zad sa amay ang pagmahal sa kaugalingorn§..dafat lang ky wla man laing mopataaz sa ija bandera
   maong sya ray mag bayang mag-iliw permi  :-X

Kaluoy... 

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #16 on: October 30, 2010, 08:09:38 AM »
on second thoughts, bisag makasakit ug bag-ang nga basahon, ganahan baya sad diay kog bad poetry kay makahatag ug fresh perspective ang iyang pagkabanga.  tiaw ba god pod ug---

what rhymes with you?  pooh. 
what rhymes with me?  pee.
eh?  peepooh who need peepooh are the luckiest peepooh in the world...
 ;D

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #17 on: October 30, 2010, 08:46:34 AM »
ganahan baya sad diay kog bad poetry kay makahatag ug fresh perspective ang iyang pagkabanga. 

...ug kalingawan nga way sama. May their tribe increase!  :-X

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #18 on: October 30, 2010, 10:21:47 AM »
Kanang magzuwat nga th, ;D borag nag narrate ug daily diary?  :-X

Unya ibatbat ang tanang way lami nga panghitabo (nga ang kadaghanan pang-Disneyland ra), nga palamion kintahay pagsuwat pero kataw-anan hinuon ang resulta?

 :-X

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #19 on: November 01, 2010, 08:59:05 AM »
How to Write Bad Poetry
By an eHow Contributor


Everyone knows a poem or part of a poem that moved them and some have spent agonizing hours, weeks or years trying to replicate the feeling with their own words. However, no one tries to write bad poetry. If you think about it, writing bad poetry takes a fraction of the time and anyone can do it. Therefore, people should endeavor to write bad poetry, not good.

Instructions

1
Write what you don't know. An old adage for good writers is "Write what you know." Therefore, to write bad poetry you should write about things you have no idea about.

2
Think as little as possible to write bad poetry. Do not agonize over the words; just let it all flow out of you and onto the page with no thought whatsoever.

3
Rhyme the words every chance you get to write bad poetry. Rhyming is not as difficult as you think, and it will make your poetry stink. See, there is an example for you.

4
Repeat the same rhyme throughout the poetry. Nothing says bad poetry like a repetitive rhyme that just keeps repeating throughout your poetry over and over and over.

5
Use words that have lots of letters but you have no idea what they mean. Look in a dictionary for particular long and complicated words and include them in your poetry. It also helps if they rhyme, but anything goes in bad poetry.

6
Compose as much haiku poetry as possible. Haiku was once a decent form of Japanese poetry that, thanks to pop culture, is the definition of bad poetry in its current form. All haikus are three lines long. In a Haiku, the first line has five syllables, the second has seven of them and then the last has five again. Those are the only rules for haiku poetry.


http://www.ehow.com/how_2273903_write-bad-poetry.html

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #20 on: November 01, 2010, 09:12:40 AM »
Compose as much haiku poetry as possible. Haiku was once a decent form of Japanese poetry that, thanks to pop culture, is the definition of bad poetry in its current form. All haikus are three lines long. In a Haiku, the first line has five syllables, the second has seven of them and then the last has five again. Those are the only rules for haiku poetry.

Bwahaha! Naay easily accessible examples ani, but here are some for starters...


Serial Killer Haiku
by Jack Lurhstaap


Gleaming white arches
Spin around the spinal cord
Horseshoe, played with bones.

----

Curving silver edge
Rise above the horizon
Full moon or knife blade?

----

Warming up the grill
Seeded buns, home-made chuck
Long pork for dinner!

----

Sleek steel crimson-graced
Opens a window into you
Pericardium!


http://www.verybadpoetry.com/poems/show/Serial_Killer_Haiku/


 ;D


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Scarb

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #21 on: November 01, 2010, 05:53:33 PM »
Unya ibatbat ang tanang way lami nga panghitabo (nga ang kadaghanan pang-Disneyland ra), nga palamion kintahay pagsuwat pero kataw-anan hinuon ang resulta?

 :-X

Unja coRniciou§ na ky borag nagpadala ug lovah lettah ajehehe³

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #22 on: November 01, 2010, 08:26:14 PM »
Unja coRniciou§ na ky borag nagpadala ug lovah lettah ajehehe³

Unja uzahay borag makalibat? Bwahaha!  :-X

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hubag bohol

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Re: How to Write Bad Poetry
« Reply #23 on: July 02, 2011, 09:24:49 AM »
Dulot zad sa amay ang pagmahal sa kaugalingorn§..dafat lang ky wla man laing mopataaz sa ija bandera
   maong sya ray mag bayang mag-iliw permi  :-X

on second thoughts, bisag makasakit ug bag-ang nga basahon, ganahan baya sad diay kog bad poetry kay makahatag ug fresh perspective ang iyang pagkabanga.  

He he, padayon mong malingaw kay to be continued ra ba ang asinine lines... ;D

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