Angeline
Poet Chick
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2002
- Posts
- 27,333
I just read a poem, elsewhere, by a wonderful poet who has written here as Denis Hale. He is very talented and I love reading him anyway, but this poem sorta reminded me of Billy Collins', Fishing on the Susquehanna in July because the vehicle for the poem's content is a description of a painting. Tzara started a thread for this sort of poem in his Eckphrastic (sp?) challenge. Denis' poem, however, is not about a real painting: it's all just his twisted poetic imagination.
And this got me thinking about what a good idea that is: using a description of artwork as a framework in which you build a poem about whatever you want. And I realized that I will likely steal that wonderful idea and write a poem of my own that way. So here's my question: how often do you "borrow" or steal ideas you get from other poems? Personally I do it all the time and I don't give a fig if people steal from me--well, as long as all they're stealing is an idea. Plagiarizing is never a good thing in my book.
If you've done this, have you a poem that illustrates an idea you've borrowed? Would you be willing to post that poem (or a link to it) here? I'm really hoping you people are as low about this as I am. It'll make me feel better if you do it, too.
And this got me thinking about what a good idea that is: using a description of artwork as a framework in which you build a poem about whatever you want. And I realized that I will likely steal that wonderful idea and write a poem of my own that way. So here's my question: how often do you "borrow" or steal ideas you get from other poems? Personally I do it all the time and I don't give a fig if people steal from me--well, as long as all they're stealing is an idea. Plagiarizing is never a good thing in my book.
If you've done this, have you a poem that illustrates an idea you've borrowed? Would you be willing to post that poem (or a link to it) here? I'm really hoping you people are as low about this as I am. It'll make me feel better if you do it, too.
