Ruth Ayres invites us the celebrate each week. Click over to her site Discover. Play. Build. to read more celebrations.
Marilyn Singer is a master poet. At NCTE in the fall, I had the pleasure of meeting her. I was also a lucky participant who won a copy of Follow, Follow. Marilyn invented the reverso poem and has published 3 books of them, two based on fairy tales and her latest Echo, Echo based on mythology.
On Today’s Little Ditty, Michelle Heindenrich Barnes interviewed Marilyn Singer and offered a ditty challenge to use the word echo in relation to a poem. I was determined to try the reverso form.
With my students as cheerleaders, I worked hard and produced something worthy of being called a reverso poem. The process began when we watched this video together.
I asked my students to select an insect to be in a mask (or persona) poem. I selected this image to inspire my writing.
Then I did some caterpillar research. I wrote “zig zag stitch” and then discovered that caterpillars excrete a silk line as they crawl in addition to using the silk to create a chrysalis.
Creepy crawly caterpillar
munch munch
munching milkweed
at tremendous speed.Life changes
slowly
creeping, crawling
leaf to leaf.Sunlight glimmers
on fuzzy bristles.
I zig-zag stitch
a silkthread path
leaf to leaf.Leaf to leaf
a silkthread path
I zig-zag stitch
on fuzzy bristles.Sunlight glimmers
leaf to leaf.
Creeping crawling
slowly.Life changes
at tremendous speed.
Munching milkweed
Munch, munch
creepy, crawly caterpillar.
This is a tough form to get just right. I don’t think mine successfully creates a different meaning in reverse. But my students liked it, so I am celebrating it none the less.