An American sentence:
My writing process involves long stretches of my sitting motionless.
What’s an ‘American Sentence’?
Allen Ginsberg, inventor of the American Sentence, felt that the haiku didnโt work as well in English. Ginsberg decided to remove the line structure of the haiku, maintaining the requirement of 17 syllables total. He felt that removing the line count freed the American Sentence up for the idiosyncrasies of English phonemes.
The requirements:
- Composed in one line;
- Syllabic, 17 syllables;
- Condensed, written with no unnecessary words or articles;
- Complete sentence or sentences;
- Includes a turn or enlightenment.
Let’s write poetry together!

When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.
–Ben Harper (b. 1969)
Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!
I love American Sentences and yours is great. โ sitting motionlessโ gives the way for great stillness and beautiful prose!
๐๐๐ป Bridgette ๐๐ป๐ ~ thanks
~David
Haha! This one made me smile, David! ๐
๐๐๐ป Cheryl ๐๐ป๐ ~ I’m glad!
Most of my writing involves thinking instead of doing!!
๐๐๐ป Muri ๐๐ป๐
โฆstaring unfocused into space (K)
๐ ๐๐ป Kerfe ๐๐ป ๐ ~ yes!
Me too.
๐ค๐๐ป Nicole ๐๐ป๐ค
The motionless must be the contemplation phase. All I can think of is that let no fly lands on you (because you stay so still). ๐
๐๐๐ป Cassa ๐๐ป๐ ~ hahaha ๐