Monthly Archives: December 2010

My Passion

A contest posted on All Poetry asking the question: What is your passion?
Rather than a constructed poem, I just wrote some thoughts.

I know I should but don’t,
have patience with those
who wish for death as though
it were a great adventure,
a solution to life’s troubles.

I know I should look forward
to heaven and a part of me does…
but I am in this world.
It’s all I know, though heaven is
dreamed of, prayed for.

Faith is a tricky thing.
I have it, but need more.
For now my passion is
divided between this world and
the next.

I love this earth, the sky, the sun.
The creatures that roam the land
and sky and seas are a wonder…
the sound of music or babies laughter
the feel of my husband’s hands.

The smell of coffee in the morning,
or gardenias in bloom,
the feel of sun on my face, and
cool grass under bare feet…
losing track of time in a good book.

So many things that I love,
and you ask what is my passion?
There are many things that
I could say. Music, writing, love
But the answer boils down to this:

Life.

Shelter

AllPoetry Prompt

Rictameter using angel as the two syllable word


angel
winged beauty
wingspread shelter o’er me
protect me lift me hold me up
weak flesh feet ankle deep in doubt and pain
only grace can lift and cleanse make free
you can fill empty spaces
make this clay holy gem
shine God’s light my
angel

Cinderella

The party was a big success.
I had the shoes, the hat
the dress.
I danced dawn under the table
and I drank until my nose  well
you know…
but
I never got his name –
the one who danced,
who’s hand was at my back
and guided every graceful step
as though my feet were
winged things
and smiled awhile.
I never tired.
Now I sit
and wonder if
a hundred years will
pass ere I forget
this night,
this dance.

Image Prompt: http://img3.visualizeus.com/thumbs/10/11/03/girl,glamour,vintage,fashion,retro,surreal-4870a22c65bd353f962a8596bec6d1cc_h.jpg

Rainy Day Windows

To see with the narrowed down
single-minded concentration
of a child who has discovered art
in window condensation.

To forget the rest of the world
and become one single moment,
clear-eyed, one with reflection,
joyfully joined with beauty.

To look at a drawing
with imagination.
To read words and envision
a heretofore unseen universe.

To lose the concept of time,
moments stretch to days,
hours shrink to seconds,
then sails in a tub to dreamland.

To grow up to be a super-hero
pirate, fireman,  whatever can be
dreamed, be drawn, be seen
in rainy-day windows

Image prompt: Window Pictures by Barbara Fox
contest was for 15 words and obviously I did not do that – this was where the picture took me.

Christmas Eve Bells

On Christmas Eve the bells did ring
Oh Holy Night rang through the streets
Joyous refrain the carolers sing
On Christmas Eve the bells did ring
Anticipating newborn king
Poor shepherds watched with angels sweet
On Christmas Eve the bells did ring
Time kept by snowy boot shod feet

All Poetry Contest entry – first attempt at a triolet. These were the requirements:
“A Triolet is a poetic form consisting of only 8 lines. Within a Triolet, the 1st, 4th, and 7th lines repeat, and the 2nd and 8th lines do as well. The rhyme scheme is simple: ABaAabAB, capital letters representing the repeated lines.

To make it more challenging, make each line 8 syllables in length (4 metrical feet), written in iambic tetrameter (the more common way).”

Christmas Spirit

We focus on the season
the Christmas spirit
speeds from the sky
whooshes through streets
all around town

It lights on the hand of
the Salvation Army bell ringer
and causes the pause of
the shopper who digs for change
and shrugs and drops in a bill

It glows from the child who smiles
at the lights on the manger
in the downtown square
where the carolers sing Emmanuel
sparkling in eyes

It breathes and the smell of
cookies and pies drift past
the kitchen and down the hall
as a finger holds a ribbon that
becomes a bow

It wraps round the shoulders
of lonely old spouses to lift
grief for a moment and bring
memories of love and family
as the doorbell rings with a gift

It fans the heat from the sidewalk grate
and the homeless man stirs
as a cup of hot cocoa is handed
and a ride to the shelter is given
warm blanket for the night

It melts the snow on shoes in the hall
and rings with laughter and chatter
friends and relatives gather
and smile as children sneak
cookies and hugs

It ruffles the hair of the soldier
opening the package from home
carrying breath of a mother’s
prayer for safety and peace
pride mixed with fear baby boy

It joins in the candlelight service
as Silent Night fades and
folks tramp through the night
to homes remembering, laughing
dreaming, hoping.  For a better new year.

Never Too Late

for fun…

heart          beats

bent but not broken

all second chances

no such thing as

causes that are

lost

**update – Thanks Elizabeth for the heads up on how to fix my centering issue 🙂
You rock!!
well this was interesting.  I got it to center at AllPoetry but after five tries it just doesn’t want to play nice…evidently you don’t always get a second chance with WordPress…

Language of Birds

Rictameter contest entry at AllPoetry









Speaking
To all the world,
Clothed in God’s soft feathers.
You have such wisdom to impart.
Eat well, nest warm, fly high, keep watch, sing loud.
We are stuck in deep drifting snow.
Covered in boots and coats,
We don’t hear you
Speaking.






Image used for prompt: http://www.freefoto.com/preview/90-07-7?ffid=90-07-7

What Is magic

allpoetry contest entry

What is magic
and where do you find it?
I think it comes from
hearts that open
and minds that sing
when they should
be paying attention.

I think it comes from
eyes that stare out windows
when dishes are
being washed.

What is magic
and where does it come from?
I saw some on a
sparrows wing
yesterday at my window
and a backyard squirrel
chittered spells at me
for hours.

What is magic
and how do you keep it?
Smoke rings have more
substance
and hold the secret
of rainbows just
before they disappear.

I heard the music
as it went round the corner.
I wanted to follow
til it was gone in the night.

Dive Right In

Sunday Scribbling #245 prompt: limits and AllPoetry contest entry.

the ocean
the big freaking ocean
teeming boiling roiling with
aeons and beyonds of living
giving birth to the all of alls
and called to waves and tides
by moons and soon as I can beat
feet to the beach and stick my
toe in that salty soup I’m gonna
surf the turf the earth is
covered by the plankton growing
brightly colored blue and green
the stars live there and I will too
ripping off the veil, veneer that
separates us from the deep the sleep
of fishes wishes seahorse riding
food providing current gliding
diving deeper deeper still and
soon I will when I can break this wall
this glass that keeps me holds me
separates me from the real
the wall that lets me see not touch
but one of these days the ways
will be the crazy crazy hang up
hang out break out take me out
let me loose I want to swim just
dive right in and be a part not
in this jar that keeps me out
or in no matter how you spin it
I will win it swim in with the life
the streams the lakes
the seas the ocean
the big deep ocean

Image Credit: http://ahermin.deviantart.com/art/Ink-Sea-52166212

Daily Lit (reading in your inbox)

I subscribe to a website called DailyLit.  DailyLit is a cool little place on the web where you can subscribe to reading material sent to your inbox in installments.  The choices range from the classics, the Bible, fiction and many more.  I have included a screenshot of the list of categories.

There is now an option to “gift” a collection to someone else.  This might be a great thing to do for someone who likes to read but doesn’t like to create accounts on different websites. Maybe someone you know would like to have a bible verse sent daily – the book of Matthew for instance, is divided into 34 readings.

I subscribed to poems by Emily Dickinson today and as you can see from the screen shot there are 447 installments.  You can configure what time they come to your inbox, as well as how many times a week.  There are discussion forums and you can write a review.

If you set p your own free account very occasionally receive update emails from them letting you know when new books are available. With the coming holidays I hope everyone has the opportunity to stay warm, eat well, and spend time curled up with a good book.

Happy Reading!

(click images for bigger views)

Poetry On The Kindle

PoemHunter.com has a section that allows you to download free ebooks.  They are in pdf format so you do not have to have a kindle to take advantage.  You can read them on any device that supports pdf.  I run these through calibre and convert them to .mobi files and drag them over to my kindle to carry around and read whenever I have a spare moment.

There are over 300 pages of ebooks listed – some classic. If you will look on the right in the sidebar there is a section of top download poets and there you will find Langston Hughes, Emily Dickenson, Charles Bukowski, Walt Whitman and more. You can also find many of the familiar poets at the very end so click on the last page and work your way forward.  If you are feeling more adventurous you might click a random name and discover something new.  If you don’t see your favorite poet listed you can search PoemHunter and you may just find a treasure to download. Some ebooks may only contain one poem, others are entire collections.

http://www.poemhunter.com/eBooks/

for other kindle resources click the Kindle Resource Tab above.

Just added to resource page: Free ebooks at Smashwords

Imaginality

grounded in reality
anchored in maturity
unhampered by neutrality
I leave this planet gratefully
to worlds viewed in obscurity
must be my abnormality
I question it’s legality
maybe my irrationality
I tell you without formality
I cling to no modality
and throw myself at gravity
dive off the cliff of levity
on paper royal authority
weave a verbal tapestry
that takes me where I want to be

I Asked For Light

shine a little light in here
I asked the darkman, please
but he just smiled and pointed at
the stars and shook his head

shine a little light in here
I asked the lady in the moon
but she just kept on smiling
enigmatic when all I wanted
were answers

shine a little light in here
I asked the night that settled round
the night birds sang and evening bells rang
but night just kept on falling

shine a little light in here
the darkness gathers round
and I am huddled in the corner
fear and sheer determination
stay awake, keep watch it’s coming
what it is I do not know but darkness
gathers round and I am gathered to myself
in corners former courage gone
the warmth is stripped the
armor chipped and I will not survive
without a little light in here
can you I ask I wish I plead
the bleeding stops when crops
are in the barn door shut
but horses gone I am alone
in this dark can you light a little
light a candle tiny flame
to shame the deep and help me
sleep the cold the gold of glow
will show that I am here and safe
and warm and harm will never
darken more than I can handle
hold the candle up to sky
give lie to all the bad
you had the chance before
once more just try, just try

shine a little light in here
I asked for love and spent it dear
the price but twice returned and
candle lit, my hands cupped round
softly warmed but never burned
my back I turned to darkness
I will face the light and feel
the heat of tiny sun that shames the moon
and lessens dark and keeps my eyes
turned lightward fingers gentle
flame tenders, ray senders,
carried forward carried light
shared roundabout

Exercises in Brevity

I have been participating in a lot of contests at AllPoetry that require brevity – usually with an image or two word prompt and a 13 to 15 word limit.  The little pieces below are some of the results.

Darkness

cold wind blows
frost fencing in a
hurt heart
nothing grows
without sun

Higher

Growing,
stretching wings
I wasn’t born with.
I am trapped by gravity…
but not forever.

Snowsong

music muffled
by snow blankets
softly piling dreams
crystal layers
frozen stars
uncounted

My Father

the things he left behind
left more questions than
answers about a life