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Friday, April 04, 2008
In honor of National Poetry Month
Posted by maria
Hi Writers,
It's National Poetry Month, so I thought I'd offer up an excerpt courtesy of our wonderful new Poetry columnist Dorianne Laux. This is from the June 08 issue of
Writer's Digest
(on newwstands 4/15), from a column on word choice:
There’s something in the name Romeo—those three sweet, open syllables—that our English-speaking ears have come to love. No one-syllable Fred, no matter how beautiful of mind, body and spirit, will do. Even if we substituted another three-syllable name more fitting to the times, Christopher, for instance, we hear right away what it lacks. Partly it’s the erotic quality of the Italian language and its lilting syllabics and luscious Latinate endings. Benvolio and Mercutio, Romeo’s friends, also have poly-syllabic names that end in that lovely, open “o.” But only Romeo possesses the particular combination of the warm romantic “R,” mellifluous “m” and rolling “o’s,” so sensual to say and hear.
To get your full April poetry fix, check out our write-a-poem-a-day challenge on
Poetic Asides
.
Keep Writing,
Maria
language issues
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the writing life
|
writing technique
4/4/2008 10:17:56 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [3]
4/4/2008 11:21:40 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Wow -- Dorianne inspires a whole new appreciation for the name "Romeo"! :)
Cheryl Barker
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ckbarkerAT NOSPAMgmail dot com
4/4/2008 3:59:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I'm loving the poem-a-day challenges. Now if only I could find more time to write!
IrreverentFreelancer
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theflawlesswordAT NOSPAMgmail dot com
4/5/2008 3:32:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I just love this focus on every sound in a name/word. I am totally in love with alliteration, assonance, consonance, ALL of it, whether it's in poetry or prose. I love her description!
: Donna
:Donna
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simmerartistAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
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