Thursday, 11 June 2009

Writing Love Poems In Three Easy Steps

By Francis Garner

Anyone who has experienced love, passion, a broken heart, or even a love lost can put pen to paper and write a love poem. A love poem is something that many people attempt at least once in their life when trying to show their feeling through words. Those words don't have to be an award winning prose, but something meaningful and passionate.

Writing a love poem is really a matter of reaching into your love, your passion, and your emotions to put into words so others can see the depths of it. While that might seem intimidating, writing a love poem is really not as difficult as it seems. Show your loved one how deep and wide your devotion runs by writing a love poem with these simple steps.

The biggest thing to remember in writing a love poem is that you're not trying to win a contest (unless you actually are entering your poem into a literary contest), but show your love to someone. It should be all about your love, not a love you are making up. Real emotions, passion, and love are the main emphasis. Don't think about love. If you don't feel it in your heart, then you're not going to be able to create something that comes alive. It will simply flop. Write with your heart and not with your mind. Don't try for correct form or words right now. Just write from your heart.

Once the initial flurry of writing is over it is now time to clean it up a little. The key to the first step is to write without thinking, now you want to check it over and change out any verbs or adjectives with ones that are stronger or fit better. Also, if you didn't include a literary theme, such as a metaphor for your love, now is the time to think about one and craft the verbs and adjectives to align with it.

A poem is loved, and adored, by both literary connoisseurs and casual readers alike, because of the way they look. They are not just blocks of paragraphs that are sometimes hard to read, but crafted in a way that is pleasing to the eye. If your poem is a gift, or something to prove your love, you want it to look good - beautiful, in fact - for a much greater impact.

After your line, there would be a line break and either a small indentation (3 to 4 characters in) or start flush with the beginning of the previous line. You can finish the sentence or thought with another line. Once you have completed 4 to 5 lines of a particular thought you would make a break. This collection of lines is called a stanza. There are no requirements for stanza length.

Writing a love poem is not an overwhelming task for anyone who is passionate about their love for someones. Use these simple tips to write your love poem as a gift, in a card, or as a reminder of your love.

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