Exercise 3:
Write down an emotion:
e.g. worry
Think of an animal to represent that emotion:
e.g. sparrow
Think of a scene for that animal to exist in:
e.g. garden path
Think of an action for that animal to carry out:
e.g. watching
Create your example of metaphorical nature-based imagery:
e.g. She waits by the window a sparrow on the garden path restless eyes searching the trees for the ill-fitting shadow
And here are some examples of superlative nature-based poetry which should inspire you to look at the details around you and capture them for your own nefarious poetic means. Enjoy!
The moment Echo saw Narcissus She was in love.She followed him Like a starving wolf Following a stag too strong to be tackled. And like a cat in winter at a fire She could not edge close enough To what singed her, and would burn her.
Ted Hughes, from Tales from Ovid (1997)
You know me as a turbulent ocean clouded with thunder and drama.
Carolyn Kizer, from In the First Stanza
I’ll chatter metaphysics with a chimpanzee, now my thoughts are the antlers of the Irish elk, the wings of flightless birds, peptides spelling out the phrase very like a whale
Brook Emery, from Very like a Whale
No lik the past which lies Strewn around.Nor sudden death. No like a lover we’ll ken An connect wi forever. The hem of its goin drags across the sky.
Kathleen Jamie, from Skeins o Geese
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