I wrote my poem Be a Lighthouse for this week’s W3 Poetry Prompt #203, hosted by poet of the week Dennis Johnstone. His prompt invites us to be the lighthouse in a poem of 20–25 lines. Full guidelines are linked below.

Be A Lighthouse |Digital ink©️Lesley Scoble

Be a Lighthouse — written, narrated, and produced by Lesley Scoble

Method Acting and the Lighthouse

In my poem, the lighthouse isn’t a tower at all but a body learning how to be one. This is pure Method territory: the actor doesn’t imitate a lighthouse, doesn’t pretend to rotate or shine — they inhabit the stillness, the stiffness, the slow swivel of the beam. Method acting asks the performer to locate the truth of a thing inside their own physical experience, and that’s exactly what I hope my poem enacts.

The closed eyes become the shutter of the lantern.
The blink becomes the flash of light.
The stiff legs become the fixed column rooted to rock.

By committing fully to these gestures, the speaker discovers the lighthouse from the inside out. And the drama teacher’s quiet “Well done” at the end reminds us that this is a study in embodiment — a lesson in how an actor can transform through attention, breath, and the smallest calibrated movement.

My poem becomes a demonstration of Method acting’s central belief: that truth is found not in grand performance, but in the disciplined inhabiting of a role until the boundary between self and symbol briefly dissolves.

In drama class, I was once asked to enact a chair. I won’t describe the choices I made to inhabit the role — some things are best left to the imagination — but I can assure you my performance received a standing ovation.

Here’s a 20‑second timelapse of the lighthouse sketch taking shape in digital ink.

THANK YOU
Warm thanks to Dennis for his wonderful prompt,
and to David for hosting W3 We’ave Weekly Poetry Prompts.
And thank you, dear reader, for spending time with my poem.


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7 responses to “Be A Lighthouse: Free verse Poem (And Audio Narration)”

  1. I really enjoyed your response to the prompt. I was able to place myself as a fellow classmate watching and learning (and I did learn). Also, I appreciated the time lapse sketch work. I am not sure, but you might have inspired me to try more sketching myself. I occasionally do a sketch to head my blogs, but have never been very confident about it. Great stuff!

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    1. Thank you so much, Sean. Your words mean a great deal to me. And yes — do draw! Never mind the confidence; just do it. It’s your voice and your heart that matter.

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  2. Thank you dear Lesley for the amazing written and verbal poetry.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. And thank you dear John for your compliments. I really appreciate your comment.

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  3. Nice job with the prompt! I loved your time-lapse drawing

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    1. Thank you so very much, Sally 🤗

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  4. Wow Lesley! I don’t know which is better – this or the previous one!

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