Don't blame me, OBX Dave started it when he talked about Edgar Allan Poe, which rhymes with David Allen Coe (I cannot believe it's taken me 55 years to realize that). What doesn't often rhyme is my poetry.
My multi-hyphenate kid (poet-dancer-choregrapher-lunatic) turned me on to Robert Peake's poetry prompt generator a couple of years ago, and we'll send quickly dashed-off poems to one another on occasion. Mostly me sending to them these days, as they have bigger artistic fish to fry.And now I'll send a few to you, 'cause a little bit of poetry never hurt. Here are a couple of my recent attempts at turning prompts into poems. I don't know from meter, and fuck off with rhyming, but I've got some tonality, if I do say so myself. Professor Truck taught us about timbre, and that's where I'm hanging my hat.
Forthwith, a couple of pomes (with the prompt that inspired them in bold):
Include as many of the following words (or variations on these words) as you like: luminous, larkspur (purple, palmate), variance, mutual, drupelets (little bits of fruit like blackberry), samite (rich silk fabric), roosted, relic, sage, occidental, feignings, faithless
Also:
- Include a mythical or fantastic creature
- Refer to a particular sensation
Faithless, but not without belief
A relic, maybe, but sage
Mutual friends roosted in one
Not the other
Feignings of neutrality as drupelets
Fall off slowly, inevitably
She went to Occidental
The Mighty Tigers
Now the variance vibrates
Pins and needles in her heart
- Refer to an an extreme or intemperate landscape
- Mention something absurd or impossible
- Make up an unusual name for a person and include it in the poem
- Mention another art form besides poetry

That last one is Ghostfacian.
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