Tiny Forest
Christopher Shaeffer
I see on stern stone
Eons of erosion
Stress of frost
Serenity of rest
It sires itsy rifts
Its inner iron sifts
Stone - ore, is it?
Or, is it fire?
Intensi-fier of ions
Testi-fier of irony
Not sentry nor fortress
For stone is site to softness
Roots riot in it
Feisty ferns set nests to sit
Irises rise in neon fits
Roses tint if noses sniff
Too soon for trees
To roof off noon
For its terse first firs
One tiny forest frets
(E, F, I, N, O, R, S, T, Y)
Larches
This is where the aether starts
Tae heat the wan white heather
Hear with ears, and bear with hearts
The water, wind, and weather
(A, B, D, E, H, I, N, R, S, T, W)
Acceptance
I choose this sharp heart for me
Oh irregular jungle machine
Spinning coarse cloth from jute
(A, C, E, F, G, H, I, J, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, T, U)
I'm Chris, the Graduate Program Manager for Linguistics here at UW!
A "lipogram" is a form of constrained writing in which you exclude one or more letters. Many of my poems are extreme lipograms that only use letters from a short "seed phrase". That phrase could be the title itself (as in Tiny Forest), be the whole first line (as in Larches), or not appear in the poem at all (as in Acceptance). The constraint naturally leads to sound repetitions like alliteration and rhyme, and to interesting choices for words and phrasing.
It's challenging to search for words from such a small set of letters and then try to fit them together in a way that creates a coherent narrative or theme, or follows other constraints like meter and rhyme. Like a lot of creative work, it's often more about what you choose to exclude that can make a piece great.