I am fascinated by multilingual poets, their ability to create layered meaning in multiple languages, how one language can set the frame for another and all the choices required in translating from one language to another. My friends who write bilingual poems convey meaning and emotion even if readers do not speak both languages.
If you wish to learn more about the poem’s languages, including the Egyptian hieroglyph, and hear Jesse Arlen read it aloud, you can click on this link: https://poets.org/poem/tree-1.
For the first prompt, write a poem in your first language and provide an English translation or vice versa.
The second prompt is to write how you would discover or recreate your history, that of your people, your family or your individual self. Where would you search, what items you use and whose testimonies would you gather?
The third prompt is to write a poem using the following list of words: "bearer," "extinct," "parchment," "secret," "potion," "herbs," "elixir," "barren" and "revived."
The last prompt is to write a one-sentence poem, broken up into stanzas, that represents an essential goal of your life.
As always, these prompts can be used for short stories and essays.
Bonus, prompt, write about these mushrooms that appeared the next day after a rain. One seems to be wearing another mushroom as a hat.
Good luck writing.