Poetry Writing Experiment (04/2026)

The other day I attempted a poetry writing experiment where I wrote some verse based off ‘random’ phrases that I had found in various sources.  Initially, I compiled a list of 40 of them but then I whittled them down to 15, which you can see below.  The statements come from a broad cross-section of sources: one sentence is from the well-known poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Coleridge; another is from the novel Robinson Crusoe.  Some are from an Australian lifestyle magazine, one is from a Christian devotional, another is from a recipe book for diabetics, and some are from the sports section of a newspaper.  The quotations that I selected are as follows:

  • Anise hyssop
  • Mistletoe bird
  • The Pyjama Federation
  • Navicular hotspot
  • Muscle twitching
  • Simmering casserole of commerce.
  • “The naked hulk alongside came”.
  • Peering into the collapsed crevasse.
  • “Today we love what tomorrow we’ll hate”.
  • “None of the bomb damage was wasted”.
  • A full account of our calamity was sent.
  • So, how are your roots doing?
  • Don’t go wasting snowstorms.
  • The perfect way to embellish corners.
  • Desert is the new black.

I molded and adapted the statements to suit the poem that I was writing and what follows is what I eventually came up with; it’s cryptic and ambiguous, but it was fun to write.  The first two stanzas sound more serious but the last was more playful, one where I was able to find a place for the words “Pyjama Federation”.  It’s 138 words in length and was written in rhyming couplets of (mostly) hendecasyllables, where each line has 11 syllables.  Enjoy.

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