Poets Online Archive As a model, we use Peter Murphy's poem "The Stubborn Child" from his book of the same name which was a finalist for the 2006 Paterson Poetry Prize. The poem has its inspiration in the Grimm's tale by that name. The original story is a creepfest in itself. Try reading this one to a kid before he goes to sleep.
Of the poem's genesis, Peter says:
Peter's poem has the child emerge from the grave, live on, have a daughter to pray over and protect. He resurrects the willful child who is more than stubborn, and who still loves his mother who he knows loves him. It's a story of transformation, as is the poem a transformation from the original. If you want to try the prompt yourself, you can check a book of the tales, or Google a Grimm title that you know, but a good site to start with is SurLaLuneFairyTales.com. It includes tales that we are all familiar with like "Goldilocks and the 3 Bears", and ones I had never read, like "The Girl Without Hands". The tales there are all annotated, so you get some good background information that might well serve as your inspiration. There's a list of the Grimm tales on Wikipedia too. Peter E. Murphy is the author of Stubborn Child (Jane Street Press, NY, 2005), a finalist for the 2006 Paterson Poetry Prize. His poems and essays have appeared in The American Book Review, The Atlanta Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, Commonweal, Cortland Review, The Journal, The Shakespeare Quarterly, Witness, World Order, and elsewhere. Peter taught for many years at Atlantic City High School, and since retiring has focused on professional development programs in writing for educators. He is the founder/director of Murphy Writing Seminars, LLC. He has received fellowships for writing and teaching from The Atlantic Center for the Arts, The New Jersey State Council on the Arts, Yaddo, The Folger Shakespeare Library, and the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars. For many poets in the northeast, Peter is also known for creating the very popular Winter Poetry & Prose Getaway, a retreat for poets & writers held annually in Cape May, NJ. He also maintains the Poetry NJ group site at Yahoo! which lists readings and poetry event in and around the NJ/NY/PA area. There's more information about this prompt, Peter Murphy and the Brothers Grimm, plus the opportunity to post your own comments about all this on the Poets Online Blog. |
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If all you learn in one year is dog-talk, GODFATHER DEATH Sobbing, the young But nothing can surpass The liquid solidifies no longer, THE YOUNG PRINCE, WHILE OUT HUNTING rolls off a rock and a chunk of broken concrete of metal with ungloved hands, eyes blinded for the squirm of ribbonous snakes, the braided knot its heavy edge grooving his palm, one knee nobly planted the insect trill rising from fields of Queen Anne's lace, strewn with rubbish under a frayed canopy of maple, inviting him to explore their texture, to feel in his fingers, each strand extrudes—electric cables twisting the height the bright window at whose sill the enchanted world MY KING HAS GIFTED ME HANDS Stumbling through the woods every thicket whips scars The hind’s eyes and tongue in a silver basin by the bed He has darkened the door and held my pinkened hand in his NO RETURN Childhood locked Home now as remote GIRL WITHOUT HANDS Not because of some birth defect or accident, This miller, to save himself, is told by the Devil "My
child, if I do not cut off both thine hands, That's bad enough, but when she replies I had to stop reading. Did she get them back? Did the Devil win? THE GLASS COFFIN She lay in her glass coffin She lay in her glass prison “Kiss me!” she cried The brave man complied MOTHER BEAR I am the one I am the one who cooks it I am the one who dishes it I am the one who shows baby I am the one who interrupts his crying, I am the one who says, I am the one who sees wet footprints I am the one who notices I am the one to follow the footprints I am the one scandalized And I am the one tempted out the window THE TAILOR IN HEAVEN Reading Grimm I chance upon this tale A tailor arrives at the gate and Saint Peter refuses him entrance. The poor tailor begs, but all he has to wait for God to come back from
his walk. Who could resist. He sits. God comes back right then. Go figure. Of course, the tailor gets kicked out of heaven. GRETEL So I told him what I could recall: like Hansel alone, with no Gretel. Too dark to see things discarded maybe that's where Gretel was now. Let's talk about that, he said
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