As the dumpster fire of 2024 burns on, I find myself craving escapism in both my reading and writing, and this poem by Brendan Constantine is perfect for me (full disclosure: I always love his poems). If you want to listen to him read it and another poem published by The 2River View, here is the link: https://2river.org/2RView/28_3/poems/constantine.html. [I somehow lost the ability to add hyperlinks to text and use other features on my iPad, hence the delay.]
For the first prompt, write your own legend or fairytale about forgiveness. As here, leave the reader with some mystery.
Or, as in so much of fan fiction, take the thief here and write a poem or story to provide his backstory. Be sure to credit the poet for your inspiration.
The third prompt is to take the line “This time she did as she was told” as a ghostline to begin a new story. Don’t try to finish this story, but create your own, still giving credit to the poet for the starting line. Remember to erase the line, or alternatively, you could keep it as a title, again acknowledging the poet in with an “after Brendan Constantine.”
This next prompt is only an exercise: take this poem and replace the verbs and nouns with those of your own. Now take a line you’ve made in this exercise as the first line for a new poem or story. Be careful that you are not writing too close to the original.
A fourth prompt is to write a fairy tale for “when the world was” not “a forest.” What was the world then? A castle, a broken vase, a high-rise, driftwood, a calculator? Begin there.
The last prompt is to write a love poem or romantic story using the following words: “animal,” “body,” “build,” “storms,” “river,” “hold,” “firelight, “mask,” “touch” and “song.”
Bonus prompt: write about this image as fairytale, bleak warning, however you wish.
Or use this cartoon for inspiration instead.
Good luck writing! Have fun!