Writer's Digest

CAPTURING CHARACTERS IN POETRY

- BY ROBERT LEE BREWER Robert Lee Brewer is senior editor of WD and author of The Complete Guide of Poetic Forms.

Poetry is not the first place many people turn to when discussing characters and character developmen­t. Most readers probably think of fiction and maybe creative nonfiction, but poetry? Probably not. Still, many of the oldest pieces of written literature were actually epic poems, including the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Odyssey. These poetic stories included well-developed plots and interestin­g characters.

However, poets don’t have to write epics to capture characters in their poems. In fact, Edgar Lee Masters’ Spoon River Anthology collects the voices of more than 200 different characters, albeit dead characters. Nearly every poem in the collection is titled as the name of the narrator, who shares a bit about their life and death and the fictional town of Spoon River itself. These poems are epitaphs but also persona poems, which are written by poets taking on another person’s point of view.

Literature classes may debate whether all first-person poems should be treated as the actual poet (or a narrative persona representi­ng the poet), but persona poems are blatantly supposed to be someone else. The persona could be someone famous but also someone more obscure or personal (for instance, I once wrote a persona poem in the imagined voice of my grandmothe­r). A couple of great collection­s to find more contempora­ry examples of persona poems include Patricia Smith’s Blood Dazzler, which includes persona poems for George W. Bush and Hurricane Katrina, and Julianna Baggott’s Lizzie Borden in Love: Poems in Women’s Voices, which includes persona poems for Borden, Mary Todd Lincoln, and Monica Lewinsky.

Poets can write first-person poems about other characters without taking on their persona. In Zeina Hashem Beck’s “Message From My Aunt on Her Son’s Death Anniversar­y,” the narrator (possibly the poet) works through the possible reasons their aunt sent an orange emoticon, including whether it was accidental or with intention.

Of course, we started with the epics, which were written in third person, and it’s definitely possible to write shorter third-person poems with characters. One of my all-time favorite poems, “Going Home,” by Wisława Szymborska as translated by Stanisław Barańczak and Clare Cavanagh, is an 11-line masterpiec­e that explains everything about a nameless man’s life while putting him to bed. Another good example of a third-person character-based poem is Christina Rossetti’s “Goblin Market” about two sisters and their interactio­ns with goblins trying to sell them a variety of fruits.

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