from the mouths of babes
Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2011 3:27 pm
I did a poetry workshop on Thursday and Friday at our local library for 11 children aged between 9 and 11.
They were all raw beginners
I got them to get up and try their hand at performing by reading a poem. A young boy got up and I asked him to read C.J. Dennis's poem, " The Circus "
he started off " hey there hoopla the circus is in town have you seen the elephant have you see..... "
Stop there !
I stopped him and asked him to start again. I asked him to read it differently..
like this " HEY THERE ! HOOPLA ! the CIRCUS is in TOWN
HAVE you seen the ELEPHANT, HAVE you seen the CLOWN
HAVE you seen the DAPPLED horse GALLOP round the RING
...and so on
So he set off and did it just like I said.
To my astonishment, after a few lines, he spontaneously began to sing it, making up a tune as he went along.
Fantastic...Wonderful.. Made my day
That experience says more about poetry than all the analysing of metres and things.
I'd give all the judges awards for that amazing experience, to see that young boy realise that poems are not just words on a page..but music. The music of language.
Like Marty Boyce has said " If Joe Blow can pick up a poem and read it as the writer intended...then it is probably close to the mark with its metre "
Or perhaps, if a child can read a poem and turn it into a song, probably it is a real poem.
Neville.
They were all raw beginners
I got them to get up and try their hand at performing by reading a poem. A young boy got up and I asked him to read C.J. Dennis's poem, " The Circus "
he started off " hey there hoopla the circus is in town have you seen the elephant have you see..... "
Stop there !
I stopped him and asked him to start again. I asked him to read it differently..
like this " HEY THERE ! HOOPLA ! the CIRCUS is in TOWN
HAVE you seen the ELEPHANT, HAVE you seen the CLOWN
HAVE you seen the DAPPLED horse GALLOP round the RING
...and so on
So he set off and did it just like I said.
To my astonishment, after a few lines, he spontaneously began to sing it, making up a tune as he went along.
Fantastic...Wonderful.. Made my day

That experience says more about poetry than all the analysing of metres and things.
I'd give all the judges awards for that amazing experience, to see that young boy realise that poems are not just words on a page..but music. The music of language.
Like Marty Boyce has said " If Joe Blow can pick up a poem and read it as the writer intended...then it is probably close to the mark with its metre "
Or perhaps, if a child can read a poem and turn it into a song, probably it is a real poem.
Neville.