Hope’s prompt: Be the thing
Write a Dinggedicht: a poem that enters so deeply into a thing that the thing seems to speak for itself through image, texture, movement, and sensation alone.
Choose anything: an object, animal, plant, machine, weather pattern, body part, or natural phenomenon. Describe it from the inside out. Let its physical reality guide the poem: its weight, surface, rhythm, sounds, habits, decay, memory.
You may lean into the surreal. Let the thing dream, contradict itself, remember what it should not remember, or behave in ways that defy logic. But keep the poem grounded in the thing’s material presence. The strangeness should emerge naturally from the object itself, not feel imposed upon it.
Do not explain what the thing symbolizes. Let the thing be the meaning.
Guidelines
- Stay rooted in concrete imagery and sensory detail
- Avoid abstract explanation whenever possible
- Surreal elements are welcome if they grow organically from the thing itself
- Free verse or rhyme are both welcome
- 10–20 lines
Rusting Legacy
Many stories are hidden in its chest
If it could speak…and if you care to listen,
It would have told you-
Once upon a time,
It was well-known and bustling with activity. proud, renowned directors sitting in their high chairs would shout through their megaphones,
“Silence! Camera! Rolling! Action!”
Wasn’t it the launching pad for many legends who are now
Superstars and Directors
Wasn’t it their life’s important chapter
After a few failures, the owner went bankrupt—it was abandoned, dismissed as a jinx.
No one comes here.
Nobody even remembers
that it was once a significant part of this industry,
Now, it is nothing but the ruins of its glorious past.
It longs for a bit of recognition and remembrance.
Then how could everyone leave it uncared for and neglected,
and shun it like an outcast?
(I am reposting an old, edited poem of mine, because I feel it fits perfectly here—perhaps.)











