This article was co-authored by Adrienne Raphel and by wikiHow staff writer, Hannah Madden. Adrienne Raphel is a writer and crossword puzzle expert based in Brooklyn, New York. She is the author of Thinking Inside the Box: Adventures with Crosswords and the Puzzling People Who Can't Live Without Them (Penguin Press, 2020), named an Editor's Choice by the New York Times Book Review; What Was It For (Rescue Press, 2017), winner of the Rescue Press Black Box Poetry Prize; and, most recently, Our Dark Academia (Rescue Press, 2022). She is currently on the English faculty at CUNY-Baruch College. She also teaches graduate-level poetry and nonfiction with the Mountainview MFA program of Southern New Hampshire University, the Writer's Foundry MFA program of St. Joseph's University, and the Berlin Writers' Workshop. Her essays and poetry appear in The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The Atlantic, Poetry, and many other publications. Raphel has been awarded a Visiting Fellowship from the American Library in Paris and named a James Merrill House Writer-in-Residence; she has been a featured speaker at events such as the National Book Festival at the Library of Congress and the Edinburgh Book Festival. She serves as a mentor with the Periplus collective. Raphel holds a PhD in English from Harvard University, an MFA in poetry from the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and an AB from Princeton University.
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Writing poetry is a way to convey emotions, memories, and nostalgia without directly stating what you are describing. Writing poetry for the first time can be challenging, since there are so many ways to start and finish a poem. If you are a beginner and want to write poetry for the first time, use a journal to keep track of your inspiration and expand your language by using metaphors and similes to create beautiful and relatable poetry.
Quick Tips for Writing Poetry as a Beginner
- Start by finding a source of inspiration. Poet Adrienne Raphel suggests analyzing your favorite poems to get ideas and learn about the craft.
- Pick a theme or topic for your poem, like nature, love, or loss.
- Decide on a form for your poem, such as a rhyming sonnet or free verse.
- Use vivid, descriptive language to convey emotion.
- After you draft your poem, go back over it and make edits until you're satisfied.
Steps
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Read famous poems as examples to follow. People like Emily Dickinson, Edgar Allan Poe, Robert Frost, and Walt Whitman all changed the way people perceive and write poetry. Look up some poems by famous writers to see what you like and what you don’t like about each of them.[1]
- Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou, and Sylvia Plath are also famous poets that have varying styles.
- You can also see some examples of different styles and tones in poetry by comparing and contrasting authors.
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Get in tune with your emotions. A lot of poetry is saturated with feelings. You can easily inject emotions into your poetry if you understand what you are feeling throughout the day. Try to note whenever you are feeling a strong emotion and what made you feel it.
- Understanding your own emotions can be difficult. Try to dissect how you feel on a daily basis, and what situations disrupt your mood often.
- Emotions are a great tool to use in poetry because people feel them universally.
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Set aside time to write every day. The only way to get better at writing poetry is to practice it. Try to write poetry for at least 10 minutes a day, or more if you have time. Write about anything that you are inspired by.[2]
- If you think you will forget to write, try setting an alarm on your phone or using a post-it note to remind you.
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Keep a poetry journal with you to write when inspiration strikes. You never know when you might see something in your daily life that you want to write about. Carry a small journal or notebook around with you so that you can write down ideas or small poems in your daily life.[3]
Tip: Use a journal that is small enough to keep in your bag, or even your pocket.
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Use writing prompts to give you inspiration. If you’re having trouble getting ideas about what to write, look up writing prompts that are specific to poetry. Be as creative as you can when reacting to the prompts, and don’t be afraid to take them in an unorthodox direction.[4]
- For example, answer a prompt like, “Write about your first birthday party,” or, “Convey an emotion using only colors.”
- You can often find poetry writing prompts on sites that accept poetry submissions.
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Choose the type of poem you want it to be. Your poem doesn't have to be among an already-set category.[5] Poem structure is purely dependent on the poet and the poem itself. As a beginner, rhyming poems are a good structure to start with.
- A poem doesn't have to make sense grammatically. What matters is that your audience gets the message you want to communicate using your own formation of the words.
- Common poetry formats include: sonnets, limericks, haikus, acrostics, and free verses.[6]
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Decide on a theme for your poem. A theme is your topic plus your opinion on the topic. Something like “a sunflower” is just a topic. In order to create a theme, you have to explain your opinion on what you are writing about.[7]
For example: Do you like the sunflower? Does it invoke any emotions in you? Does the sunflower represent or remind you of something?
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Use descriptive language to convey emotions. To evoke feeling and depth in your poem, try describing an element, object, or emotion. You could write a whole poem just describing something. To help you get started in this descriptive process, ask yourself questions. Taking the sea as the example, here are the types of questions you'd ask yourself:[8]
- How does the sea look? Use descriptive terms relating to colors, motion, depth, temperature, and other standard features. The sea might be foaming, producing whirlpools, looking glassy, or turning grey at the advent or a storm; describe whatever comes to mind for you.
- What are some of its aspects that are noticeable in your sea? The froth of the waves, the fish under the surface, the height of waves during a storm, the lull when the wind dies down, the mounting garbage greys, a school of dolphins passing through, sea level rise along coastlines, the mournful cries of the Pacific gulls––these are all things you might notice in relation to the sea of your poem.
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Use rhyming words if you’d like your poem to have a rhythm. Some poetry uses rhyming words at the end of each line or every other line to create a flow. If you’d like to use rhyming in your poetry, try to insert them as you write, instead of thinking of them before you start writing.[9] For example, a poem could use words that rhyme with the last syllable of “seen,” like “clean,” “mean,” and “glean.”
- Try to think of these words yourself rather than looking them up in a dictionary or online so that your poem flows better.
- Stressed and unstressed syllables also create rhythm in a poem. In the sentence “He’d like some pumpkin pie,” “like,” “pump-,” and “pie” are all emphasized based on how you say them.
- If you're having trouble coming up with rhymes, check out rhymezone.com.[10]
- Feel free to use internal rhymes in your poetry! You don't have to end every line with a rhyme.[11]
- Remember that not all poems rhyme! It's okay if you don't want your poem to rhyme.
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Write your poem using metaphors and similes. Use language that doesn’t exactly describe what you want to convey, but instead uses metaphors and similes to portray emotions, settings, and people. Similes use the words “like” and “as” to compare something, while metaphors don’t.[12]
For example, you could say, “The sea was a night sky, expanding like an inkblot in the water.”
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Don’t feel like your poem has to be a certain length. There is no limit as to how long a poem is. Some are a mere sentence long, while others are paragraphs long or even the length of a novel. It all depends on when you are satisfied with your work.[13]
- Your first poem can be short. You can work your way up to longer poetry over time.
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Revise your first draft of your poem. When you first write something, it might not be the quality or the length that you would like. Come back to your poem after a few hours or days and take a second glance. Check for spelling mistakes, areas where writing could be tightened up, or places that need more information.[14]
- Remember that you are the poet, expressing your feelings through your poems so intuition, above anything else, is key.
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Create a final draft of your poem. Once you have revised your poem and you are satisfied with it, make a final draft by copying your finished poem to a clean sheet of paper. You can write it out, type it on the computer, or keep it in your notebook.[15]
- If you will be submitting your poem anywhere, it is very important to make sure your final copy looks exactly how you want it to.
Poetry for Beginners Worksheet
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Community Q&A
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QuestionHow do you write a poem about love?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerThink about the feelings, images, and thoughts you associate with love, and incorporate those into your poem. For example, you might think of the way your heart beats or your cheeks get hot when you see your loved one, or about how their eyes look when they smile. Jot down a few phrases that come to mind and try working them into a poem. -
QuestionHow do you write a short poem?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerThink of a small, simple topic that sparks inspiration, like a beautiful image you saw or a feeling you had. Try writing down your thoughts about the topic in just a few lines or words. You can then write a list of words, phrases, or metaphors that relate to your topic. Arrange your thoughts in a way that sounds good to you (it doesn’t have to rhyme), then try reading your poem out loud. Keep tweaking it until it sounds right! -
QuestionWhat are some poetry techniques for kids?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerKids can use a lot of the same techniques as adults. Try starting with a topic (such as springtime or pets) and writing down a list of words you associate with that topic, then build a poem from the word list. If you want, try a simple rhyme scheme, like rhyming couplets.
Reader Videos
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References
- ↑ https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/adventures-in-divergent-thinking/202404/why-you-should-read-poetry-all-year
- ↑ https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/147699/how-to-make-a-poem
- ↑ https://www.loc.gov/poetry/180/007.html
- ↑ https://poetrysociety.org.uk/competitions/national-poetry-competition/resources/poetry-writing-prompts/
- ↑ https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/147699/how-to-make-a-poem
- ↑ Alicia Cook. Professional Poet. Expert Interview
- ↑ https://earlham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/poetry_guidelines.pdf
- ↑ https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/70212/learning-image-and-description
- ↑ https://www.education.vic.gov.au/school/teachers/teachingresources/discipline/english/literacy/writing/Pages/examplespellingfound-lesson3.aspx
- ↑ Alicia Cook. Professional Poet. Expert Interview
- ↑ Alicia Cook. Professional Poet. Expert Interview
- ↑ https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/69588/the-start-writing-your-own-poem
- ↑ https://www.highlandhs.org/uploaded/Highland/Academics/Signature-GuidetoWritingPoetry.pdf
- ↑ https://www.highlandhs.org/uploaded/Highland/Academics/Signature-GuidetoWritingPoetry.pdf
- ↑ https://www.highlandhs.org/uploaded/Highland/Academics/Signature-GuidetoWritingPoetry.pdf
About This Article
If you’re a beginner trying to write poetry, start by deciding what your poem will be about, like love or a meaningful experience. Then, choose a structure that you're comfortable with, like rhyming or free-form. Next, come up with an interesting or mysterious first line that entices your reader to keep reading. Once you have a good opening line, use as many strong, descriptive words as you can in the rest of the poem to express your thoughts and feelings to the reader. To learn how reciting your poem out loud as you write can make your poem even better, keep reading!
Reader Success Stories
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"Pointing out the use of similes is something I feel is the essence of good poetry and an inspiration for a new beginning for me. Thank you for all of this wonderful information."..." more