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365 Sonnets is completed! While there be no more new posts, feel free to read the sonnets and comment! :)

You can read my new poetry at Some Turbid Night: http://someturbidnight.blogspot.ca/ :)

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Sonnet CCV

An English teacher is a nasty code to break.
Until you know their wants, until you know their style,
their code remains a cryptic one. With crafty guile,
they mask just what they want. Their comments are so vague –
“For next time, work on depth!” – and while I slowly break,
their code’s intact. And all this angry, busy while
(of writing), some elitist few have cracked the style
and never get below a hundred – though I ache!

It takes me ages still to find what teachers want.
And while I search and search, my marks shall mock and taunt.

Destructive, burning wickedly, my hands are hot.
And seething, taking what I wrote – at them I flaunt;
the codes of teachers chip away as them I daunt…
and now I spurn all wicked things that I was taught.

5 comments:

  1. This is kind of a sad aspect of school to me. I suppose it's difficult for teachers NOT to force their personal style onto students but that could easily stunt your creativity.

    I remember in 6th grade I was having trouble getting good grades in penmanship. My penmanship had been looked upon nicely by other teachers, but not this one. So I checked out what type of penmanship was getting A's and saw it was the "bubble letter" style. So I changed how I wrote, and my grades improved. Mind you, I wasn't writing more neatly, just in a different style.

    Not nearly as big of a deal as changing your actual WRITING style...but I look back now and am a little disappointed with how quickly I changed, just to fit my teacher's whims. On the other hand, sometimes grades are a game, and sometimes it's okay to play that game.

    (Hey, you popped up at the top of my blog roll as having updated--woo hoo!)

    ReplyDelete
  2. English teachers don't like people who think outside the box, who can take something and interpret it in a way they wouldn't of thought of, describe something in a style that they don't relate to. Writing is often far to subjective to be given a mark out of a hundred.

    Do you write these sonnets on the spot or do you revise them and work on them for days?

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  3. English teachers can't
    begin to understand your
    daily sonnets blog.

    Yes, it's Haiku.

    ReplyDelete
  4. - for Beth: Thanks for the encouragement! My current English teacher is such a pain...and yes, I did poorly in penmanship too! Perfect doctor's writing :)

    - for Sandie: My average time is 20 minutes per sonnet. I don't like to revise...but I will have to in order to send them off to a publisher one day!

    - for Comedy Goddess: I LOVE the haiku! Ever consider writing 365 of them? :P

    ReplyDelete
  5. I awfully like the sound of "365 Haiku[s]!"

    ReplyDelete

A word is dead
When it is said,
Some say.

I say it just
Begins to live
That day.

- Emily Dickinson

Thanks, Wordle!