Overview
Most elegies fail through generality: they describe grief in abstract terms, render the lost person as a collection of virtues, and arrive at consolation the poem has not earned. The reader is told someone mattered without being shown why.
An elegy that works mourns through the specific: the particular habit, the exact object, the precise way the person moved through the world. The grief is not described — it is present in the gap between what was and what is now absent.
The Elegy & Grief Poem Prompt generates an elegy where the lost person is rendered through specific detail, the grief is present without being announced, and the ending neither resolves nor refuses — it holds.
What you get: - The specific detail that renders the lost person - The grief present in absence rather than statement - A complete elegy - The ending that holds rather than resolves - Three elegiac approaches (direct address, third person, object-centered)
Built for: Poets writing elegies for people, relationships, places, or any form of loss.