Excerpt for Acrostic Poems…and some prose by Mike Miller, available in its entirety at Smashwords



Acrostic Poems … and some prose

Published by Mike Miller at Smashwords

Copyright 2011 Mike Miller


This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.


Cover image created using http://www.wordle.net.


Contributed acrostics, all used with permission:
Quilting Decisions Copyright Debby Bulmer.
Genealogy Copyright Victoria L Taylor.
Infused Imagery Copyright Steven Greene.


Photos/images attribution:
Dandelions from www.clker.com.
Fifteen Puzzle image created by the author.
Mona Lisa public domain from images www.wpclipart.com/art/Paintings/
Silence Copyright Rick Bertrand
Spatial Pattern 2 Copyright Amanda Tomasikiewicz
The War of Art, Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles, Copyright Steven Pressman.
Together Forever image is a "fair use" of the image, Copyright 2007, The Archaeological Society SAP, in Mantua, Italy
Rooster Wake Up from www.clker.com
Winter Sentinel Copyright Patty Perry


www.clker.com is the online royalty free public domain clip art website.


Formatting justified text for eBooks is tricky. Last letter acrostics in the print version of this ebook are right justified. Right justification in an ebook is impossible when you consider the reader's opportunity to change font size.


The cover for the ebook is different from the cover on the printed book; the contents are very similar, the differences include the alphabetic reordering of most of the acrostics, and several minor changes to the text.


Table of Contents




A Collection of Acrostics
A Palette - A Work In Progress I
A Palette - A Work In Progress II
Abecedary
As Napoleon Said
Awake - Aware
But Is It Really?
Change
Concise
Dandelions
Dear Writers Block I
Dear Writers Block II
Decision Making
Edmond Locard
Equilibrium
Fifteen
Financial Planning
Genealogy
Happy Birthday
Happy Thanksgiving
Hey You, Over Here
How's that again?
How Do You Know What You Know?
I Am Not My Body
I'm Confused
Infused Imagery
Innocence
Live Your Biography
Misprint
Moderation
Mona Lisa
Museum of Appalachia
No Fun Like Snow Fun
Now It's Your Turn
Poets
Quilting Decisions
Reindeer
Resistance
Responsibility
Risks
Rule of Thirds
Sally and Jim
Silence
Sir Isaac
So, How's your Mom, How's your Pop?
Stop, Look, and Listen
Take Only Memories
Talking
The Juggler's Lament
The Maze
The Unexpected
The War of Art
Third Dimension
Together Forever
Twenty-Foot Ladder
Twenty-nine
Untold Stories in the Shoeboxes I
Untold Stories in the Shoeboxes II
Wake Up
Watch and Learn
Waterfall
What Do You Mean By That?
What is Art?
Where are we going?
Who Discovered the North Pole
Why Do I…
Winter Sentinel
Wonder
Wonderful Bedlam
Write On
Writing and Reading
Yonder the Future Beckons
You Are Here
Functional Acrostics
Write Your Own
Curious About the Uncurious
New Year Resolutions
Duplicate Bridge
Other Acrostic Prompts
Evaluating Your Acrostic
Acrostic Words List
References & Websites
Some Definitions
About the Author
Thanks To…


_END_CONTENTS_

Introduction


Acrostics are a challenging form of writing, a game of words, and fun to create and to read.


There are two basic types of acrostics, the puzzle variety, and the prose/poetry variety.


Acrostic puzzles look superficially like crossword puzzles, a formatted grid of white and black squares. The acrostic includes a set of clues with numbers to match cells in the grid. Answers to the clues are entered into numbered spaces, and then transferred into the grid according to the cell numbers. Acrostic puzzles are available in newspapers, word puzzle books and online. They are fun to create and fun to solve, but they are not the subject of this eBook.


This eBook guides you in creating prose/poetry acrostics. These acrostics are readable on two levels, the content itself, and the "acrostic" message. Acrostics are fun to create, and the "constraint" associated with creating sentences or phrases using a set of letters or words provides a challenge, but is far from an obstacle. At times this "constraint" is an enabler.


Prose/poetry acrostics come in two varieties: fun and functional.


Fun acrostics deal with information, feelings, and insights.


Functional acrostics deal with procedures and processes.


Unless otherwise indicated, acrostic in the rest of this ebook refers to the prose/poetry variety.


Here's an example - read down the first letters bolded of each line


The sections and page numbers
Aid navigation through
Books, easing scanning, reading,
Locating and citing references,
Explanations, and examples.

Of course you can thumb through
For your intended content.

Chapter titles help the
Organization, and enable
Near hits, useful for
Targeting areas for
Exploration, and for
New ideas
That's what research and
Study are all about.


And another:


Creative energies. Their fruits
Often risk being
Plagiarized, at times undetected
Yet the author must protect them. A
Reality, not always sinister.
Intellectual property
Generates insight, and value, and
Holding control over it is
The essence of the copyright.


These are simple functional acrostics: the first letter of each line is bolded, the message is read down.


Note how the down words aka acrostic messages are related to the content of each acrostic.


OK, now that you've seen a couple of acrostics, let's define some terms to help in exploring acrostics.


Letters or words or phrases can be combined to form the "hidden" message. To simplify, let's call these letters, words, or phrases the tokens.


These tokens form the acrostic message.


Each token is located in a grammatical construct, for example a line, phrase, sentence, paragraph, even chapter and larger groups. Let's call this construct the span. In the TABLE OF CONTENTS and COPYRIGHT examples above the span is a line.


The easiest for creating and for reading token placement is the first position in the span.


Acrostics in which there is one token per span are called single acrostics. In double acrostics, two tokens per span - the tokens need not be consecutive. And, triple acrostics, three, etc. Single acrostics are easier to create than double or triple.


The positions of the tokens may be anywhere in the span, although some consistency is required. The consistency can be simple for example, first position, third position, or less obvious for example, immediately following a comma.


The reader might be given a hint when the acrostic contains less obvious token patterns. The hint need not be specific, but might suggest the rule used in creating the acrostic.


Simple acrostics for example easily detected letter/word position are intended to be read and enjoyed. Complicated acrostics need to be read, then solved, then read again and enjoyed.


The reader should be able to understand the "story" without the even knowing that it's an acrostic. The acrostic nature is the frosting.


I've found that the reader of acrostics often tries to detect the message first. This is fine, but sometimes the reader doesn't even read the text. This is not so fine, since the real value of the acrostic is the combination of the two.


The creator "solves" the acrostic during the creative/writing stage. Like all writing, you should plan to revise your acrostic to improve its message and its delivery.


The Write Your Own chapter describes one process I use for writing acrostics, includes a number of original acrostics, and references to a number of acrostics available on the internet and in books.


My preference is to create a "pure" acrostic, one in which no significant message tokens are used in the acrostic.


Here is a simple acrostic, the span is each word, and the token is first letter of the word:


Any Challenge Requires Outside Study To Inform Completely.


Here, the token is the first letter of each line.


Challenge
Realities of
Experience.
Allow
Thinking to
Invite
Valuable
Insights
To challenge
Your understanding.


Challenge what's written before your
Readers get their chances.
Invite criticism, accept it, but
Temper it; it's your work, after all,
Instead of making other's changes
Question why it was felt to be
Unable to deliver its message,
Evaluate, evolve, improve.


There are other related word puzzles:


Cryptograms try to conceal a message, to communicate to those who can decode the cryptogram, but not to others. And solving cryptograms is more difficult than reading acrostics.


A mnemonic is a memory or learning aid. "Mnemonics rely on associations between easy-to-remember constructs which can be related back to the data that is to be remembered." - extracted from Wikipedia "mnemonic".


Roy G Biv is a mnemonic to help remember the colors of the spectrum the first letters of each color name: Red, Orange Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet.


"Acronyms … are abbreviations that are formed using the initial components in a phrase or name." - extracted from Wikipedia "acronym".


Examples of acronyms include:
scuba self-contained underwater breathing apparatus
FAQ frequently asked questions
3M Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company
IOU I owe you
FX effects


For more examples, use a search engine to find acrostics, acronyms, cryptograms, mnemonics: for example: google mnemonics mathematics, or acronyms electronics or other disciplines science, architecture, religion, etc. for more examples.


While we are on the subject of search engines:


Getting answers
Opening minds
Offering information and images
Guiding the users
Lending information access
Enabling research.


and



Your
Answers to
How, why
Offered
Online.


And finally


Because
It's
Not
Google.


Well, we are at a decision point - do you want to learn how to write your own, or do you want to read some original acrostics?


If you want to learn how, go to the Write Your Own chapter.


I tend to use obscure words at times, or so I'm told by my reviewers, so I included a short Definitions chapter later in this ebook.


A Collection of Acrostics


Here are some original acrostics in a variety of styles, some with hints, first or last letter, first word, and embedded letters.


Challenges abound
Obscure topics in
Life become real
Living entities, needing
Exploration, providing
Catharsis.
Time hides opportunities
Inflicting limitations
On the thinker, but writing
Now provides an outlet.


A Palette - A Work In Progress I


Any subject, any style,

Paint, a medium,
Artist, the control.
Looking deeply - to see, to grasp the
Essence of the scene, using art
Techniques, experimentation and exploration
To establish the composition, the
Environment, the vision, the message.

Art is creative problem solving

With self-identified goals, values, and judgment
Other disciplines have external values
Realization is judged by others
Knowing the distinction can be helpful.

Insight for its own sake, the artist creed
Nuance achieved through color mixing

Primary colors, secondaries, tertiaries
Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet, the grays
Organizing knowledge through the painting
Getting maximum value per stroke, overcoming
Resistance of the blank canvas
Expecting to revise, to refine. "Done, sign it"
Signifies the artist's yielding to
Schedule.


A Palette - A Work In Progress II


Alphabet to words to sentences to paragraphs

Pronouns, nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs
All integrate into poetry, fiction, nonfiction, essay
Leading the writer, then the reader to
Exposing preconceptions, exploring ideas
Title, hook, dialog, dialect, point of view
Together combine into
Expressions, insight for the writer

And the reader.

Write what you know is the canon
Only that may be limiting
Reading is learning,
Know what you write works too,

Inviting new relationships
New thought patterns

Pushing through the comfort zone
Replacing it through distress and eustress
Organizing knowledge through writing
Getting maximum value per word, overcoming
Resistance of the blank page
Expecting to revise, to refine. "Done, print it"
Signifies the writer's yielding to
Schedule.


Abecedary


Authors Bring Creative Descriptions Emotion Feelings Genealogy History Information Judgment Knowledge Laughter Manipulation Nuance Organization Pleasure Questions Research Simplicity Transforming Unfinished Vulnerability Wonder Xanadu Yearning Zeal.


Yes, abecedary is a word. Try writing one of these, or an abecedary from Z to A, or using five words beginning with the same letter.


As Napoleon Said


We study the past, we want to know, we need to know
How, what, where, when, why, who,
All the facts we can find and articulate,
To tell us about our pasts, to help guide our futures.

Important investigation, with possible false
Starts, but hopefully, integrity in conclusions.

Hypotheses abound until the facts and factors surface
Insights evolve, expand, disappear; all
Seeking the goals of knowledge and understanding.
To not repeat the past - that is the one
Overarching challenge.
Reading, research, pondering, listening,
Yearning for a truth, the truth.

Baseless opinions, distractions are offered to
Usurp energy, not for progress, but
To mislead, misguide, distort.

Answers sought, but not always achieved.

First things first - what are the essential questions?
Abstract the hearsay, the opinions, the facts, the relevant.
Bias, beliefs, agendas
Lean toward misinformation, misguided thought.
Effects, causes, correlations, post hoc ergo propter hoc.

And why? Sometimes, to purposefully mislead.
Greed is the unacknowledged basis, power, money, fame.
Respecting constituents' wants.
Each deed based on a "greater good", the
Expansion of benefits, the redistribution of wealth.
Desires overrule needs.

Unless the research is conducted tabula rasa
Posturing and pandering
Overwhelm facts and relevancies
Negating observed effects, causes, and correlations.


Inspired by a conversation about Napoleon, with Randal Dunlap, artist and Civil War buff.


Awake - Aware


This is a first and last letter per line acrostic.


Anyone can achieve truth, all it takes is a
Willingness to be enlightened, to see anew
All there is, without condition, to embrace a
Knowledge more profound than we ever
Envisioned, considered, or desired before.



But Is It Really?


This is an essay about conformance of reports and written material to rules. Page by page, the report is intended to provide information, guidance, and not leave out important facts. Intentionally leaving out material may likely be an attempt to hide information, mislead the reader. Left page or right, could be either, could be both pages; what is the reader to infer? Blank pages could be purposeful, or could be as simple as the failure of the printing device.


This one is tricky. The first word of each sentence forms an acrostic frequently seen in technical and legal documents.


Change


Time and opportunities pass
Replaced by wishes and hopes.
Expecting others to step up and
Place their names in the hat.
Instead of sitting by waiting, you can
Do the job, and take responsibility.
And now, we are at that juncture.
The group moves forward, new
Initiatives, new leaders, new future.
Or
Not.


Concise


Attracts
Readers
Seeking
Insight
Metaphor
Observation
Nuance
Yumor*


*That's what poetic licenses are for.


Dandelions



from www.clker.com


Dry wispy parachutes
Air-borne, descending through the
Neighborhood, creating yellow flowers
Delighting the kids, bouquets for mom,
Expressing Spring's arrival
Leaving the snow behind
Inviting flowers, trees,
Outdoor living to invigorate.
Nothing refreshes like a change of
Seasons.


…and another…


This is a last letter per line acrostic.


As we look across the yard
And see the budding flora
We feel warmth of the sun
Shining down, warming the ground
And accelerating snow's demise,
Our chores invite, and we honor all
Tasks converting the garden from quasi
To real, pruning, tilling, turning it into
A sanctuary, a Garden of Eden
If only for a few months


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