Gail Carson Levine is today’s guest poetry poster and is the author of many award-winning books for children, and, I’m pleased to say, a friend and a couple-of-towns-away neighbor.
Gail’s guest post for poetry month:
For fun and devilment, I wrote a bunch of poems which are collected in my new book, Forgive Me, I Meant to Do It, wickedly illustrated by Matthew Cordell, and in it I tell how you can write your own false apology poem. It’s simple: three short stanzas, no punctuation, a little thought for where to end a line (but don’t sweat it), an offense, and insincere regret. We all have real regrets, which you are free to versify about in this form or any other, but the delight here, in my evil opinion, is in the dastardly deed without remorse!
My poems are riffs on William Carlos Williams’s great poem “This Is Just to Say” which you can read here.
Here are two of mine:
This one comes straight from Pinocchio:
This Is Just to Say
I have shortened
my nose
with your saw
because
honestly
telling lies
is so much fun
Forgive me
I don’t care
about becoming
a real boy.
___
This Is Just to Say
I’m the one
who stuck
the cradle
in the tree
which
was probably
a stupid place
to put a baby
Forgive me
I thought
that bough would break
sooner or later
You can read Gail’s blog here
5 Comments
Julie Hedlund
Too funny! MUST GET THIS BOOK!
katie
So great, right? I want tO try this at school visit workshops!
Robyn Hood Black
Oh, these are wickedly wonderful!
janet wong
Kids will love writing these!–and I know I’ll enjoy writing a few of my own, too!
Andjela
This is evily redonkioulus!