Thursday, October 11, 2018

15 Sentence Poem

AGENDA:

Continue to work on animated poem.  If you finish, post on Google Classroom.

HMWK: Read to page 101 in The Elegance of the Hedgehog

American Haiku:

https://poetrysociety.org.nz/affiliates/haiku-nz/haiku-poems-articles/my-favourite-haiku/favourite-haiku-by-tom-painting/

https://haiku.mannlib.cornell.edu/category/author/tom-painting/


http://examples.yourdictionary.com/examples-of-haiku-poems.html

http://grammar.yourdictionary.com/style-and-usage/rules-for-writing-haiku.html

http://www.hsa-haiku.org/virgilioawards/virgilio.htm


PERIOD 3:  Follow the instructions to create a 15 sentence portrait poem


The Fifteen-Sentence Portrait

This assignment will generate descriptive writing. It is purposefully guided. So, begin by choosing a person to describe. Then follow the directions.
1. Picture in your mind a person you have strong feelings for. The subject may not be a "love" interest, but should be someone you feel strongly about. The person can be living or dead but should be someone you know or knew rather than a famous character.
2. For a title, choose an emotion or a color that represents this person to you. You will not mention the individual’s name in the writing.
3. For a first-line starter, choose ONE of the following and complete the sentence:

1. You stand there . . .
2. No one is here . . .
3. In this (memory, photograph, dream, etc.), you are . . .
4. I think sometimes . . .
5. The face is . . .
6. We had been . . .


  • THEN:1. Following your first sentence, build a portrait of this individual, writing the sentences according to these directions:
  •   Sentence 2: Write a sentence with a color in it.
  •   Sentence 3: Write a sentence with a part of the body in it.
  •   Sentence 4: Write a sentence with a simile (a comparison using like or as).
  •   Sentence 5: Write a sentence of over 25 words.
  •   Sentence 6: Write a sentence under 8 words.
  •   Sentence 7: Write a sentence with a piece of clothing in it.
  •   Sentence 8: Write a sentence with a wish in it.
  •   Sentence 9: Write a sentence with an animal in it.
  • Sentence 10: Write a sentence in which three or more words alliterate; that is, they begin with the same initial consonant: she has be left, lately, with less and less time to think . . .
  •   Sentence 11: Write a sentence with two commas.
  •   Sentence 12: Write a sentence with a smell and a color in it.
  •   Sentence 13: Write a sentence with a simile (a comparison using like or as).
  •   Sentence 14: Write a sentence that could carry an exclamation point (but do not use the exclamation point).
  •  Sentence 15: Write a sentence to end this portrait that uses the word or words you chose for a title.
  • 1. Next, read the portrait. Underline sentences in which you discovered new things about this individual or your feelings and attitudes toward him or her.
  • 2. Now, use this portrait as a starting point for a poem or prose portrait or simply revise what you have. (Be sure to keep a copy of the original, so that you can examine the changes between original and revised piece.) Do anything you need to make this a piece of writing that you like. Choose a new title, use the person’s real name, and so on. 

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