Unlock your writing with prompts from Margate and Cambridge: May, 2025

These prompts are offered individually or taken together as a whole, whatever comes to you. Or you may find just two of three words take you off into your own writing world. With prompts, you can’t get anything wrong, as long as you write and keep writing as far as the energy takes you. The paradox, as always, is that the less you aim for excellence, the more easily the good stuff will be free to find you. Have a happy time:

The lad came to the door at night,

when lovers crown their vows,

and whistled soft and out of sight

in shadow of the boughs. 

A Shropshire Lad, LIII, The True Lover, AE Housman, 1896

For I will consider my lover, who shall remain nameless.

For at the age of 49 he can make the noise of five different kinds of lorry changing gear on a hill.

My Lover, Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis, Wendy Cope, 1986

“A mighty pain to love it is,
And ‘t is a pain that pain to miss;
But of all pains, the greatest pain
It is to love, but love in vain.”

Abraham Cowley, The Poems of Abraham Cowley, 1618 – 1667

‘Father! Father! Where are you going? / O do not walk so fast.’

 Little Boy Lost, Songs of Innocence & Experience, William Blake, 1794

But it was from one little window, with its blind drawn down, a mere blank transparency on the night, that the sense of home and the little curtained world within the walls – the larger stressful world of outside Nature shut out and forgotten – most pulsated.

The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame, 1908

it’s not that i miss tamarind balls mashed up in my palm

squashed by my thumb   licking it clot by sticky clot

on its way to my mouth

Tamarind, I Sing to the Greenhearts, Maggie Harris, 2025

PROMPTS FROM CHURCHILL WRITERS

Last Saturday we gathered in Churchill College again to chat about writing and have a scribble or type together. My prompts are in bold – have fun with them:

Mr Robinson’s expense book for May (1845) gives no hint that anything was wrong.

The three hours he had intended to stay stretched into three days.

(both from Daphne Du Maurier’s biography: The Infernal World of Branwell Bronte)

No coward soul is mine

(Title of Emily Bronte’s poem)

From Marion McCready’s poem Ailsa Craig

I write your name on a slip of paper /with a question mark, /place it under my mattress.

From Auden’s poem Epitaph on a Tyrant

He knew human folly like the back of his hand.

Prompts from Churchill Writers last Saturday

We jumped straight into writing together last Saturday, almost as soon as we sat down. For a good twenty minutes everyone was absorbed, head down, scribbling or typing. Members of the group are free to write whatever they like, to respond to a prompt any way they like or not at all. The important thing is to free up the writing muscles and enjoy it. Very often, the writers are surprised and proud of what comes to them. Here are our latest prompts in case something works for you:

‘No one is immune to her power: the gods themselves are as much at risk of falling in love as the rest of us.’

Natalie Haynes, Divine Might

‘The evidence is in, and you are the verdict.’

Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird

‘We look before and after/ And pine for what is not’

PB Shelley, Ode to a Skylark

‘I don’t know nothin’ of what life’s about / just as long as you live, you never find out.’ Don McLean’s song, Wonderful Baby

At Serge Gainsbourg’s home in 2005

Prompts from Churchill Writers last week

The Churchill Writers came up with some fantastic writing from these prompts last Saturday, all in just ten minutes with no preparation. The essence of free writing is to start anywhere and keep writing at all costs. Welcome whatever comes without judgement until the time is up and let your writing surprise you. Writing alongside other writers can create an intoxicating energy but you can do it on your own too. Our prompts were these:

Too close to call.

They hardly ever touch.

‘Free as a thistle, white hair blowing’ (from Second Childhood by Phoebe Hesketh)

Her arms were around his neck and she would not let go.

Here’s a photo prompt to welcome spring too.

Happy writing!