Chance Chat Poem Post
Writing a poem with words of chance echoes techniques in art history, such as Dadaist experiments. The Dadaists, like Tristan Tzara, used randomness to challenge traditional creative processes, cutting words from newspapers to form poems. This method disrupts logic, inviting surreal connections. Similarly, poets can draw inspiration from visual art, like Jackson Pollock’s abstract expressionism, where chance guides the flow of paint. Randomness encourages spontaneity, revealing subconscious patterns. Combining this with poetic forms, like haiku or free verse, balances structure with unpredictability. Chance poetry celebrates the unexpected, mirroring life's serendipity, and connects with art's enduring exploration of uncertainty and intuition.
Words Picked from News Paper Article:
Summer, November, Ending, Greatness, Superlative, Cradle
A Summer’s November
In the cradle of summer, where days stretch long,
A whisper of November begins its song.
The golden leaves hint at an ending near,
Yet greatness lingers, the air still clear.
The sun dips low with a superlative glow,
Its warmth a memory the winds now stow.
Each ending, a prelude to what’s yet to be,
A cycle of life, bound infinitely.
So here in November, let hearts remain,
Grateful for summer, its joys, its rain.
For greatness is born in the moments we keep,
In the ending of days, in dreams we reap.



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