
Our World Word by Word
National Poetry Month: April 25, 2015
Today's Prompt: It’s the weekend, so I’d thought we might go with something
short and just a bit (or a lot) silly – the Clerihew. These are rhymed,
humorous quatrains involving a specific person’s name. You can write about
celebrities, famous people from history, even your mom (hopefully she’s got a
good name for rhyming with).
I seem to be on a math kick...
Day 25:
Day 25:
Leonardo Bonacci or Fibonacci
Would have loved sunflower seeds in Karachi
He swooned over numbers so many
he would have munched much more than twenty
National Poetry Month: April 24, 2015
Day 24: It seemed
that every prompt I tried today did nothing for me, so I decided to go back to
my current favorite writing trick: Haikubes. I chose 5 words to use in a poem.
Here is what I came up with:
Brother
Before you arrived,
competition had no name,
the world all mine.
You quickly clapped
illusion away.
I learned the taste
of jealousy
in the salty folds
of your baby legs
as you chased
after my assurance
to catch as your own.
I learned the word rival.
Ever after would I check
over my shoulder
for your reflection,
but never did I think ask,
which of us started
this?
National Poetry Month: April 23, 2015
Prompt: Today, I challenge you to take a chance, literally.
Find a deck of cards (regular playing cards, tarot cards, uno cards, cards from
your “Cards Against Humanity” deck – whatever), shuffle it, and take a card –
any card! Now, begin free-writing based on the card you’ve chosen. Keep going
without stopping for five minutes. Then take what you’ve written and make a
poem from it. (Hat tip to Amy
McDaniel for the idea!)
Little Red Cap
You with your long innocent hair
under that little red cap,
knitted by someone who loves you,
the tassel floating like flame behind.
Why have you paused on your way,
ignoring your mother’s warning?
I know the woods are tempting.
I could stop you if I wanted.
But maybe I’ll wait to see
if you take the wise path,
if you notice the birds
have to fallen silent
before that dark presence.
National Poetry Month: April 22, 2015
Prompt: Today is Earth
Day, so I would like to challenge you to write a “pastoral” poem.
Traditionally, pastoral
poems involved various shepherdesses and shepherds talking about love and
fields, but yours can really just be a poem that engages with nature. One great
way of going about this is simply to take a look outside your window, or take a
walk around a local park. What’s happening in the yard and the trees? What’s
blooming and what’s taking flight?
Day 22:
Suburban Aviary
Bird poop on the back stoop means
the doves are back loving and laying,
so I look to find their twiggy nest
peeking from the eaves,
safe from the tabby cat
who uses our fence for her highway,
far from the raccoons who sleep
in the oak tree next door,
those raccoons who once visited us
while we sat outside eating sandwiches,
watching with their little flashlight eyes.
Now that I think about it
I haven’t heard much cooing
in the early morning lately.
Maybe this means the doves
are exhausted new parents.
All the birds are pretty quiet right now,
the juncos, sparrows and chickadees
must be building and nesting,
which makes the bluebird
I saw twice last week
an even more astonishing sight,
bright with rust collar and buff belly,
a true bluebird of happiness
because seeing him hop in the grass
that is exactly what I felt.
National Poetry Month: April 21, 2015
Our prompt for today (optional, as always) is an old
favorite – the erasure!
This involves taking a pre-existing text and blacking out or erasing words,
while leaving the placement of the remaining words intact… Erasures can feel almost like a game – carving new poems
out of old texts like carving statues from blocks of marble — and so they take
some of the anxiety out of writing. They can also lead to surprising new ideas,
as the words of the original text are given new contexts.
Day 21:
This erasure poetry is dedicated to my sister Lana who told me last weekend her favorite number is e.
National Poetry Month: April 20, 2015
Today, I challenge to write a poem that states the things
you know. For example, “The sky is blue” or “Pizza is my favorite food”
or “The world’s smallest squid is Parateuthis
tunicata. Each line can be a separate statement, or you can run them
together. The things you “know,” of course, might be facts, or they might be a
little bit more like beliefs. Hopefully, this prompt will let your poem be
grounded in specific facts, while also providing room for more abstract themes
and ideas.
Day 20:
What I know
Like trees,
we should root ourselves
into the earth, snuggling deep,
but not forgetting to reach
our limbs high into the air,
stepping on tiptoe if need be,
but stretching up, up
to reach clouds water-laden,
then cradling them
with abundant love
so rain washes down upon us,
wetting our hair and skin,
nourishing our bodies,
filling us
until that clean fire
comes to burn
us away to ash.
National Poetry Month: April 13, 2015
In keeping with the mysterious quality of the number 13,
today I challenge you to write a riddle poem. This poem should describe
something without ever naming it. Perhaps each line could be a different
metaphor for the same object? Maybe the title of the poem can be the “answer”
to the riddle. The result could be a bit like our Day One poems of negation,
but the lines don’t need to be expressed in negatives.
Bedtime
Running from my capture machine
of paper cup and envelope,
she scuttled under the bed skirt.
Now she lies in wait for that first opportunity,
to scurry back up the white sail of sheet
flapping over my huge body.
Covered up to my chin, I dread she will pounce.
Both of us wrapped in our own fears.
I know she just wants somewhere
to light, to spin, to grow fat and contented.
She has made a bad choice, the wrong turn.
I’ve done it myself many times.
Trapped in a tomb of her own making,
dust-covered carpet and shadows,
she won’t come out.
Soon she’ll molder to dust herself.
I could try to find her, but know I won’t.
National Poetry Month: April 12, 2015
NaPoWriMo Day 12 Prompt: It comes to us from Dr. Cynthia A. Cochran of Illinois
College:
Here is a great prompt for anyone who likes to write
descriptive prose but shudders at writing poetry–and it really works:
Describe in great detail your favorite room, place, meal,
day, or person. You can do this in paragraph form. Now cut unnecessary words like articles and determiners (a,
the, that) and anything that isn’t really necessary for content; leave mainly
nouns, verbs, a few adjectives.
Cut the lines where you see fit and, VOILA! A poem!
Utica Street
white clapboard house
green shutters
upstairs downstairs kind
fence gate overlooked alley
backyard bursting
apple tree purple Concord grapes
garden patch tomatoes
green beans corn
humid air laden
wasps bees hovering
fruit sticky split by summer rain
cherry tree my cherry tree
so old most grew
far from reach bird nibbled
pink spring blossoms
then sweet tartness
rosy hearts picked sun warm
over chain link fence
rows of other yards
rows of houses marching
front porches shaded
by white-blossomed bridal bush
swing sets squatted
in patchy grass rough-mown
dogs barked we romped
slid down slides
legs pumping
we
flew through air
National Poetry Day: April 11, 2015
NaPoWriMo Prompt: Today, rather than being casual, I challenge you to get
rather classically formal, and compose a poem in Sapphics.
These are quatrains whose first three lines have eleven syllables, and the
fourth, just five. There is also a very strict meter that alternates trochees
(a two-syllable foot, with the first syllable stressed, and the second
unstressed) and dactyls (a three-syllable foot, with the first syllable
stressed and the remainder unstressed). The first three lines consist of two
trochees, a dactyl, and two more trochees. The fourth line is a dactyl,
followed by a trochee.
Well, I certainly can count syllables, so my poem qualifies on that count (pun intended). However, as for the trochees and dactyls, I gave up. Lazy modern poet...
Lesvos
That day I first saw Sappho’s island of birth,
Greek sun rose hot even at dawn’s blue hour.
Scrub covered hills rolled
outside the dust caked car window. I drove on,
clutch crabby and grumbling like an old woman
stumbling on gravel.
To the sea I sped, past signs I couldn’t read.
On to the Aegean where Sappho had first
penned poems of love.
I should have studied some verses to recite,
but my throat ran dry. Words flew away, cinders
orange against blue.
National Poetry Month: April 9, 2015
NaPoWriMo Day 9: Our prompt for the day (optional, as always) plays of our
resources. Today, I challenge you to write a visual poem. If that’s not
specific enough, perhaps you can try your hand at a calligram? That’s a poem or
other text in which the words are arranged into a specific shape or image. You
might find inspiration in the famous calligrams
written by Guillaume
Apollinaire. And a word to the wise — the best way to cope with today’s
exercise may well be to abandon your keyboard, and sit down with paper and pen
(and maybe crayons or colored pencils or markers!)
This form made me think of writing concrete poetry with my middle school students, so I tried to channel that energy. Since I'm no visual artist, be kind to my awkward swirl. Ironically, attending the first meeting of a poetry class kept me from posting earlier!
National Poetry Month: April 8, 2015
Today is the eighth day of the NaPoWriMo challenge, and that is truly what it is for me today. Here it is Wednesday of the first week back after my Spring Break, and tonight I have to go to a school board meeting. I've stayed up too late every night since I got back from my vacation, so I am already tired and cranky.
Obviously these are not the ideal conditions to write a poem, so at the moment I feel myself dried up. However, when in doubt haiku can come to the rescue! I'm still writing one a day (462 so far since 1/1/14) so this will be my poem of the day:
Day 8:
milky way streaking
through star dotted sky swept clean
then the moon risesNational Poetry Month: April 7, 2015
NaPoWriMo Prompt: So today, I challenge you to write about
money! It could be about not having enough, having too much (a nice kind of
problem to have), the smell, or feel, or sensory aspects of money. It could
also just be a poem about how we decide what has value or worth.
Day 7
Money
At home she sees kids on the street everyday,
but here in Paris, with the Eiffel Tower
shining over her shoulder,
she can’t watch them sitting, hands outstretched.
She asks for a euro, thinking perhaps, it equals a quarter.
I don’t tell her it’s more than a dollar.
“Tonight is too cold
for someone to sleep hungry,” she says,
and I am filled with the light of her
as she bends, dark hair swooping over her face,
dropping the coin into his waiting palm.
National Poetry Month: April 6, 2015
NaPoWriMo Day 6: Today’s prompt springs from the form known as the aubade. These
are morning poems, about dawn
and daybreak. Many aubades take the form of lovers’ morning farewells, but . .
. today is Monday. So why not try a particularly Mondayish aubade…
Monday Aubade
Four of us to get to
school, four bowls of cereal or scrambled eggs,
Mom from table to stove,
from one need to the next.
Dad long gone, having
drunk his coffee and climbed into his truck
driving off into pre-dawn
darkness.
Monday when beds stripped
of weekend lay empty,
school books gathered
and sneakers lost, then found.
Dawn peered over the
trees across the farm field,
birds chattered in the
oak outside the kitchen window.
Four squabbles, milk
spilled on the plastic tablecloth,
dog under our feet
searching for scraps.
My mother’s face
grim-set.
Soon the fat yellow bus
would arrive for my brother and me,
soon my sisters would
make their way to school down the street.
Soon the house would
fall hushed except for clicking
of doggy nails across
the kitchen floor.
Now I wonder what my mother did.
Would she sit and watch
the day come awake,
just sit with coffee cup
nested in her hands?
Completely still, gazing
out at her garden before she shook herself out
and cleared the plates
to set in soapy water.
National Poetry Month: April 5, 2015
Today's NaPoWriMo Prompt: Find an Emily Dickinson poem - preferably one you've never previously read - and take out all the dashes and line breaks. Make it just one big block of prose. Now, rebreak the lines. Add words where you want. Take out some words. Make your own poem out of it!
Gulp! Who am I to tamper with the great Emily's words? I didn't follow the directions completely...
Day 5:
Before I got my eye put out – (336)
Before I got my
eye put out –
I liked as well
to see
As other
creatures, that have eyes –
And know no
other way –
But were it
told to me, Today,
That I might
have the Sky
For mine, I
tell you that my Heart
Would split,
for size of me –
The Meadows –
mine –
The Mountains –
mine –
All Forests –
Stintless stars –
As much of
noon, as I could take –
Between my
finite eyes –
The Motions of
the Dipping Birds –
The Morning’s
Amber Road –
For mine – to
look at when I liked,
The news would
strike me dead –
So safer –
guess – with just my soul
Upon the window
pane
Where other
creatures put their eyes –
Incautious – of
the Sun –
Dear Emily #33
the sun
comes up
fueling
morning’s
amber road
it is mine
to look at when
I like
it is mine
to share
with dipping
birds
or other
creatures
mountains
meadows
forests
are mine
mountains
meadows
forests
are mine
the sky
of stintless stars
of stintless stars
has split
my heart in two
my heart in two
National Poetry Month: April 4, 2015
Today's Prompt from NaPoWriMo: So today, I challenge you to write a "loveless" love poem...and if you're not in the mood for love? Well, the flip-side of the love poem - the break-up poem...If that's more your speed at present, try writing one of those, but again, avoid thunder, rain, and lines beginning with a plaintive "why"? Try to write a poem that expresses the feeling of love or lovelorn-ness without the traditional trappings you associate with the subject matter.
Day 4:
Goodbye
I bent to pick up the socks,
black skins dropped where he had sat.
Anger burrowed into me unexpected, and I knew.
Here was nothing left to hold or caress.
My hands like strangers dropped
those limp scraps right back onto the floor.
National Poetry Month: April 3, 2015
Today's writing prompt from Kelli Russell Agodon: Write a poem that has only five syllables in each line. Give the poem a long title. This one sounded fun since I've been writing haiku everyday for over a year now. I can spot a five syllable line anywhere.
Day 3:
I Listen to My Friend Make Breakfast While I Wake Up
outside I hear sounds
dishes and footsteps
I know soon coffee
will be brewed because
that is what we do
each morning as we
begin again we
drink and eat give food
to our bodies yes
cereal is now
poured into a bowl
and I imagine
milk after even
though I can’t hear that
each day we build our
selves back into what
we were until night
sleep took us before
we sank deep to float
in what we don’t know
with such trust that we
would return to light
National Poetry Month: April 2, 2015
Today's poem comes via a writing prompt from Kelli Russell Agodon: Grab the closest book. Go to page 29. Write down 20 words that catch your eye. Use 7 of the words in a poem. For extra credit, have 4 of them appear at the end of a line.
I grabbed Rebecca Solnit's A Field Guide to Getting Lost. The words I chose were: blue, edges, depths, spectrum, shallow, scattered, touch, horizon, go, ranges
Day 2:
there
beyond computers
and Facebook
grocery shopping
grunt of everyday
beyond the mundane
want of I
lie the blue edges
of the horizon
if we go there
where rocks range
scattered above shallow
waves slapping sand
perhaps then we can
touch what we have
always been
meant to find
I grabbed Rebecca Solnit's A Field Guide to Getting Lost. The words I chose were: blue, edges, depths, spectrum, shallow, scattered, touch, horizon, go, ranges
Day 2:
there
beyond computers
and Facebook
grocery shopping
grunt of everyday
beyond the mundane
want of I
lie the blue edges
of the horizon
if we go there
where rocks range
scattered above shallow
waves slapping sand
perhaps then we can
touch what we have
always been
meant to find
National Poetry Month: April 1, 2015
It's that time again: National Poetry Month which means I'll be participating in NaPoWriMo once again. Last year I posted a haiku on my blog every day in April. This year I'm determined to post different types of poems each day.
And if any of you want to write a poem to me, I'll post your work as well.
So taking courage in hand (who in her right mind would post poems when they are newborn?), here goes.
Day 1:
Washing Dishes
White shards shattered,
scattered over the tile floor.
The plate flew past his head,
like in a movie
she had once watched,
like she had often imagined.
How it started doesn’t matter.
A bird trapped in her cage,
approval the worm she craved.
Not his half hidden glance
as he turned away,
derision written in the curve of his
lips.
As she wiped that plate dry,
warm from its bath,
porcelain smooth,
this time her hand
knew the reply
she had never dared.