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Ron Baratano Speaks – Write Poetry Like the Master Himself

by Martin Gray Content Writer


Ron Baratano is one of the most prominent authors right now. He’s the author of The Writings of Ron Baratano and Our Reflections. Ron was born in Detroit, Michigan. He has a passion for acting and professional with his books being read all across the globe.

His books take you on an amazing journey of hardship, addiction, depression, and a lot more. His amazing ability to write about emotions in a clear and concise manner, giving meaning to those writings, has made it easy for many people to connect with him. Many of his quotes are based on moral philosophy, which captures a reader’s attention, relating to a similar situation that reader faced.

Finding a Unique Theme

A poem is different as compared to most other forms of writing, since it is presented in such a unique form. Since it is about celebrating or denouncing a subject that is particularly close to your heart, it is better to devote yourself to this unique theme without being too dispersed. Love, suffering, life, etc., are universal themes that are very often found in poetry. It's up to you to make the allegory of what inspires you, so the lines of your poem will gravitate around this simple word to become something sublime.

Defining a lexical field

Finding this topic in question will allow you to define a lexical field later. That is to say the rhetorical set of terms related to it such as the words "forest", "tree", "flowers" if you are writing a poem about nature. You might want to begin by bringing together the words that you intend to rhyme together. Listing these many words will help you compose nice verses, and your rich vocabulary will guide readers to better understand what you have attempted to illustrate through your poem.

Simple and melodious words

You cannot improvise Baudelaire overnight. If you are embarking on poetry for the very first time, prefer laconic and harmonious sentences, without embarking on clumsy lyrical flights. Favor the words you know and let your pen guide you, quite naturally.

Seductive stanzas

The stanza determines the length of the poem in groups of verses gathered together and the size of the stanza is done mainly if the poem forms a homogeneous group of stanzas with regular lines (same number of feet) or if the choice to alternate stanza lengths is assumed. The best known being the sonnet, made up of two quatrains (stanzas of four lines) and two tercets (three lines). So it's up to you to determine which shape best suits your poem.

Writing beautiful verses

The verse gives rhythm to the stanza and is measured in number of syllables when it comes to regular verses. We will say that it is monosyllabic up to 12 syllable verse, better known under the term of Alexandrian. If this is your first poem, maybe prefer free verses, rhymed or not, depending on your inspiration. Then read your poem aloud to judge its musicality.

Choosing prose

Prose is the free form par excellence: devoid of rhymes, it neither counts the feet nor gives importance to the length and the number of stanzas. That said, it's imperative that you do not ignore the importance of being imaginative in your stylistic processes and the melody of your rhythm because these elements alone will judge your poetic art.

Figures of styles

In poetry, the reader expects a certain virtuosity from you in using images, metaphors, comparisons, anaphors that will enrich your style and the beauty of your poem. Figures of speech of all kinds exist and allow you to think outside the box by exploring new writing techniques. The acrostic, in particular, is more like a fun writing game where, read vertically from top to bottom, the first letter or, sometimes, the first words of a series of verses make up a word or an expression related to the poem.


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About Martin Gray Advanced   Content Writer

42 connections, 5 recommendations, 226 honor points.
Joined APSense since, July 17th, 2020, From New York, United States.

Created on Apr 7th 2021 08:55. Viewed 775 times.

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