NaPoWriMo Day 18: Will Ingrams – The Unlikely Metaphor

Will Ingrams returns with another prompt, this time using metaphor.

Another day, another poetry prompt. This is Will Ingrams with another challenge, and this one is about metaphor, which we all use all the time in poetry. Today however, I would like you to think of a comparison which at first glance seems unlikely or unpromising, and then, in your poem, make us realise why the comparison works. The unlikely metaphor is sometimes called a conceit, and perhaps Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 was a bit of a conceit – his love and a summer’s day?

I’ll read you an example of a conceit poem I wrote a couple of years ago, which compares a boy to a bonfire:

A Bonfire Boy

Please, Mister Blunt, don’t take offence,
I was not being rude or cruel.
Your boy is like a bonfire, yes,
that’s what I said, and meant it too,
but Carl is not a heap of twigs,
a mound of old unwanted goods
just waiting for the match.
That’s not my view at all.

I meant Carl has a heart so fierce
it dazzles when it bursts to flame,
I mean he gathers all things in
and kindles them to dancing sparks.
Carl never lets a good thought die
so when you prod him, hours on,
he’ll flare again with brilliancy
till others feel their face and hands
revive in his inspiring glow.
Carl radiates his warmth.

And on this cold October night
when crisp leaves rustle down the path,
wind-swirled and drab with winter’s shade,
a bonfire’s what we love the most.

Will Ingrams

So, think of two things, perhaps one concrete and one abstract, which don’t immediately seem alike, and then use this interesting metaphor in a poem. An acorn and a memory? Embarrassment and breakfast? Maybe not, but be adventurous!

For more NaPoWriMo tips and writing prompts check out the book Poetry Non-Stop.

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Norfolk Poets: Jenny Pagdin

We welcome back Norwich poet, Jenny Pagdin, to share some poems from her debut collection The Snow Globe. On her previous appearance spoke about her experiences of postpartum psychosis which this collection explores. The Snow Globe is published by Nine Arches Press and can be purchased here.

Jenny Pagdin published ‘The Snow Globe’, her first full collection, with Nine Arches Press in February 2024. Her pamphlet Caldbeck was published by Eyewear in 2017 and shortlisted for the Mslexia pamphlet competition. Other competition wins include second prize, Norfolk prize and Commended in the Cafe Writers Competition, Highly Commended and shortlisted in the Bridport, and longlisting for the Rebecca Swift Foundation. Her poetry is widely published including in New Welsh Review, Smoke, Magma, Ambit, Wild Court, The Stand, Finished Creatures, Interpreter’s House, Ink, Sweat & Tears and an Emma Press anthology.

Jenny lives in Norwich with her family, where she works in the voluntary sector. She has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia and a BA in English from Oxford University. 

jennypagdin.co.uk

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

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Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

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Norfolk Poets:  Andy Bennett and Russell J Turner

A double dose of Norfolk poets on this edition with Andy Bennett and Russell J Turner reading sonnets from this year’s edition of the annual project 28 Sonnets Later, in which four poets take it in turns to write a sonnet for each day in February. You can hear Andy on this previous episode talking about the sonnet form and it’s great to welcome Russell J Turner for his Poetry Non-Stop debut. Also check out previous episodes by the other 28 Sonnets Later contributors Fay Roberts and Leanne Moden.

Andy Bennett is a poet and performer. He likes history and tries not to be too serious.

Russell J Turner is an actor, poet, broadcaster and mathematician based in Norwich. He is a co-founder of the 28 Sonnets Later collective, presents Sound of the Suburbs on Future Radio, and survives solely on a diet of caffeine and nicotine which he metabolises into useful nutrients

You can read all the sonnets from 28 Sonnets Later here.

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

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Norfolk Poets: Martin Figura

We welcome back one of the first guests on Poetry Non-Stop, Martin Figura. Martin has a new collection coming out, The Remaining Men, and it’s wonderful to have him back to share a couple of the new poems. Martin’s poetry grows line by perfect line until you don’t think it can get any better, then it does. The title poem is a surreal, yet down to earth tale of those who are left behind when times change and in Harold Wilson Rows Towards Bishop’s Rock we see the former prime minister blissfully far from the world of politics. It promises to be an outstanding collection which is available direct from Martin here.

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

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Norfolk Poets: Tony Amis

Tony Amis is an active performer on both the poetry and improv comedy scenes in and around Norwich. After a lifetime working in IT he has spread his wings later in life. He performing his own poetry in 2010. He recorded an album with his band Spewtum called ‘Mrs Slocombes Pussy’ in 2015.  He started Improv in 2018 and took up Singprov after Covid.  He’s an annual poetry & music turn at Capstock Festival and politically feels he’s a pragmatic Socialist whatever that is.  The bucket list means Tony needs to publish a book of his Poetry before Death gets its gnarly claws on him. Oh! He’s a Lover not a Fighter & his BiPolar doesn’t define him.

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

Norfolk Poets: Jenny Knight

Jenny Knight is an active performer and promoter of poetry in Norwich and until recently ran the excellent Poets in The Cellar at The Bike Shop in the city. She says: “I am a concentrate of transexual ambition, Prosecco and middle-class privilege that may contain traces of passion fruit.”

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

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Norfolk Poets: Kevan Taplin

Kevan performs his poem, It’s where you call home.

Norwich poet and musician Kevan Taplin kicks off 2024 with a Yorkshire lament in the style of  Alan Bennett.

Kevan’s alternative bio reads:

Failed scholar.
Failed ‘alternative’ busker @ Banksy’s Dismalworld!
Failed teacher.
Failed poet.
Failed husband.
Failed father.
Failed lyricist
Failed rugby player.
Failed acoustic guitarist.
Failed novelist.
Remaining ambition : To turn failure into an art form!…

He also adds: “As a working class dyslexic I was encouraged to start writing poetry by Roger Mcgough when he allowed me to put a couple of his to music. I have been invited to play for a Poet Laureate twice. I have also supported poets such as John Hegley and put poem to music for The poetry exchange.”

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

Norfolk Poets: Terry Griffiths

Terry Griffiths shares a couple of his experimental poems on this episode of the Norfolk Poets podcast.

Terry Griffiths, Instagram poet @hardtokeepmyheartoffmysleeve, enjoys experimenting with different mixtures of feelings & facts. His poem “Not too comfortable with this” features in the 46th issue of Dreamcatcher, and “Change” on the May 2023 section of the website of Ink, Sweat and TearsTerry reads regularly on the Norwich circuit, at events such as Last Poet Standing, Poets in the Cellar & Volta. He is trying to learn touch typing and an array of historical facts. 

If you are a Norfolk based poet and would like to feature on the series please send 2-3 poems, a short bio and photo here.

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

Norfolk Poets: Jimmy Hall

Picture by Patrick Widdess

Jimmy Hall has lived in Norfolk for 13 years. He was born across the border in Southwold. He is a professional musician with a lifelong love of poetry. He shares a couple of poems inspired by people. One he met in passing, one he knows very well.

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

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Norfolk Poets: Stuart Webb

Stuart Webb from Cromer published his debut chapbook, Notes from Hysteria Island, in 2023 with Backroom Poetry. On his Poetry Non-Stop debut he shares a selection of poems which are sharp, witty and political with a few local references.

Books by many of the poets featured on the podcast are available from the Poetry Non-Stop bookshop here. All books purchased via this link help to raise money to keep this podcast going.

You can also support this podcast with a donation via ko-fi.com

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