Welcome to Poetry Friday!
It's the last Poetry Friday of 2012
and I'm honored to host
from cold and snowy Denver.
Seems like it should be a time
for deep profundity
or great levity
or the reviewing of resolutions.
Leave your poems, (deeply profound or otherwise)
in the comments
and I will round them up periodically
throughout the day tomorrow.
"Questions Before Dark"
Day ends, and before sleep
when the sky dies down, consider
your altered state: has this day
changed you? Are the corners
sharper or rounded off? Did you
live with death? Make decisions
that quieted? Find one clear word
that fit?
when the sky dies down, consider
your altered state: has this day
changed you? Are the corners
sharper or rounded off? Did you
live with death? Make decisions
that quieted? Find one clear word
that fit?
Jeanne Lohmann
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Mary Lee needs people to sign up to host the Poetry
Friday Roundup in June 2013. You
can sign up here.
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Just spent a couple of hours compiling the morning's offerings. What gifts people have brought to us.
This time of year
brings many celebrations of family and traditions…
·
Tara celebrates her season of family traditions
with Mary Oliver’s “Poem
of the One World.”
And Mary Oliver fans can read "I Asked Percy How I Should Live My Life" at Miss Erin's blog.
And Mary Oliver fans can read "I Asked Percy How I Should Live My Life" at Miss Erin's blog.
·
Fellow Denverite Linda captures a joyful
Christmas moment with her granddaughter at Teacherdance.
·
Elaine Magliaro dedicates her original poem, “Things
to Do if You are a Book” to her granddaughter
·
At Inside
the Dog, Steve Peterson honors his grandfather with an original poem, “The
Measure of a Life.”
·
Margaret is writing a series of poems in
response to Christmas cards her father has created for the last nine years. I
loved “Out
of Egypt” during Two Writing Teachers
Slice of Life on Tuesday. Today Margaret gifts us with a triolet, “Songs of
Angels.”
·
Matt
Forest Esenwine honors his wife with a special poem and provides blog
readers with some information about the history of haiku and tanka.
·
Joy bakes up a fortune
cookie haiku, and a challenge to try writing one of your own.
Lori Ann Grover has an original holiday haiku here.
Lori Ann Grover has an original holiday haiku here.
·
Margaret is writing a series of poems in
response to Christmas cards her father has created for the last nine years. I
loved “Out
of Egypt” during Two Writing Teachers
Slice of Life on Tuesday. Today Margaret gifts us with a triolet, “Songs of
Angels.”
·
At Bald
Ego, Charles Ghigna brings us not one, not two, not three, but seven
original poems from his boyhood in the South. The vivid detail in these poems
reminds me of Don Graves’ BASEBALL, SNAKES, AND SUMMER SQUASH, which is one of
my favorite books to use to draw poetry from children and adults.
Today’s postings also
brought lots of poetry “gifts.”
·
Laura Shovan is gifting 44 lucky people with
postcard poems for her 44th birthday in February. Today, she gifts
all of us with “Speedway.”
·
At “The
Opposite of Indifference,” Tabatha Yeatts shares both sweet and serious.
Her “sweet” is a gift poem written for Tabatha by Robin Hood Black. The serious
is sobering news about the plight of journalists around the world in 2012.
·
Robin Hood Black stopped by to say she has been
buried in family, and is only sharing her poetry gift to Tabatha Yeatts.
·
At The
Write Sisters, Diane Mayr gifts Mary Lee with an original birthday poem.
Violet Nesdoly gifted children's author with "Wear a Scarf," a poem all you fashionistas out there will definitely want to read.
Violet Nesdoly gifted children's author with "Wear a Scarf," a poem all you fashionistas out there will definitely want to read.
· Jone
is gifting people with poetry books for her 26 Acts of Kindness. I don’t have
26 books, but I could definitely give away 26 poems. Hmmmm.
There are several gorgeous
images from nature…
· Matt Goodfellow journeys all the way from the UK
to share two original poems, “Midnight
Hare” and “The
Hill. Matt’s words evoke images of mystical, dark, evenings.
· And more images from the natural world in Steve
Withrow’s “Taunton River in
December. ” Steve’s words make it easy to imagine the sound of those hungry
geese honking for handouts.
And of course there
are wishes, hopes, and dreams for the New Year…
· At Growing Wild,
Liz Steinglass shares an original New Year’s Poem, “This New Year.”
· Mary Lee
features Linda Pastan’s “Clock.” When I finish the first iteration of the
roundup, I’ll be heading out to visit a friend and her new baby in the
hospital. The friend is actually a young woman I have mentored since she was in
second grade. She is now 22! Yikes!
· At Drift
Record, Julie Larios brings us “Blessed Illusion,” a perfect wish for the
New Year.
· At Bildingsroman, Little
Willow posted D.H. Lawrence’s poignant, “A Passing Bell.”
· At Kurious
Kitty’s Kurio Kabinet, Diane Mayr sends out the old year with Robert Louis
Stevenson’s “Where Go the Boats?” Diane rings in the New Year with a haiku
postcard exchange to celebrate the
coming of the New Year at Random
Noodling.
**********************************************
Friday evening (9:30 MST)
OK, I think I've got everyone (if I left anyone out, it was totally unintentional, just email me and I will fix it!), it's been a pretty quiet Poetry Friday. Think I'll end tonight's festivities with a found poem from Parker J. Palmer.
**********************************************
Friday evening (9:30 MST)
OK, I think I've got everyone (if I left anyone out, it was totally unintentional, just email me and I will fix it!), it's been a pretty quiet Poetry Friday. Think I'll end tonight's festivities with a found poem from Parker J. Palmer.
What if we
spent 2013
focusing more
on our shared human condition
than on our
differences?
What if we cultivated
the capacity
to feel for each other's
losses
and developed a deeper awareness
of our mutual mortality?
Surely
we'd want to spend more time
working with others
to bring a better,
more beautiful
world
into being...
Parker J. Palmer
Hi Carol! Thanks for letting us post links early (mine will be live after midnight)! Have a fabulous 2013!
ReplyDeleteAt Random Noodling I explain the haiku New Year's card exchange that I participate in each year.
Kurious Kitty has Robert Louis Stevenson's "Where Go the Boats?" And KK's Kwotes has a Stevenson quote.
At the The Write Sisters I share an original poem that I sent to Mary Lee Hahn for a holiday poetry swap.
Thanks for hosting, Carol!
ReplyDeleteToday I have an original poem, "Taunton River in December," at Crackles of Speech:
http://cracklesofspeech.blogspot.com/
Happy New Year! Thanks for hosting, Carol. We're saying goodbye to 2012 with "Southern Bred," a little memoir of prose poems at The Bald Ego blog
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting, Carol! I try to warm things up a bit with a tanka I wrote a few weeks ago: http://mattforrest.wordpress.com/2012/12/28/poetry-friday-with-her-at-midnight/
ReplyDelete(It'll be live just after midnight)
Hi Carol,
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting. The poem you shared is quite apt, something to think about as the year ends.
Here's our poem for today...a bit of Neruda
http://gatheringbooks.wordpress.com/2012/12/28/19142/
Hi Carol, thank you for hosting! I like the poem's line "are the corners sharper or rounded off?" Something to consider every day, right? I have an original poem, inspired at our Christmas, a special moment!
ReplyDeleteHi Carol, thanks for hosting.
ReplyDeleteI have two original poems this week:
The Hill
http://www.mattgoodfellow.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/the-hill_6269.html
and Midnight Hare
http://www.mattgoodfellow.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/midnight-hare.html
best wishes,
Matt
Hi, Carol - The poem you share today is so quiet and lovely with the way it asks questions...I especially like "bewilderment that invites / the possible."
ReplyDeleteOver at http://julielarios.blogspot.com/2012/12/poetry-friday-blessed-illusion-for-new.html I have a poem by Antonio Machado (via Naomi Shihab Nye.)
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteHi, Carol. I love the question "Has this day changed you?"
ReplyDeleteThe second poem in my postcard project is up today. The postcard a 1960s photo of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway of Indy 500 fame.
http://authoramok.blogspot.com/2012/12/poetry-friday-poetry-postcard-2.html
Good morning! I have a post about the relentless passage of time here:
ReplyDeletehttp://readingyear.blogspot.com/2012/12/poetry-friday.html
There are still slots to be filled on the Jan-June Poetry Friday roundup shedule here (scroll down):
http://readingyear.blogspot.com/2012/12/poetry-friday-sensing-solstice.html
Thanks for hosting, Carol! You picked a great poem to end the year. I will be re-reading that.
ReplyDeleteMy post is here: http://tabathayeatts.blogspot.com/2012/12/the-sweet-and-serious.html
Carol, Thanks for hosting Poetry Friday today. I am writing poems about my father's Christmas card drawings. Listen to the angels sing. http://reflectionsontheteche.wordpress.com/2012/12/28/listen/
ReplyDeleteCarol,
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting. I'm sure I'll be thinking about these questions tonight and many others.
I have an original poem "This New Year" at www.lizsteinglass.com
Liz
Thanks for hosting the party!
ReplyDeleteFrom the poem you posted, I LOVE the lines: Did you set a straw / parallel to the river, let the flow / carry you downstream?
Here's a poem I wrote recently that seems to fit the end of one year and the beginning of another.
http://insidethedog.wordpress.com/2012/12/28/poetry-friday-the-measure-of-a-life/
Carol, Thanks for hosting! And thank you for sharing that wonderful poem. The writer in me loves the line, (Did you)..."Find one clear word that fit?"
ReplyDeleteWe've been happily covered up in family all week so I didn't find a blog post that fit today, except sharing a link to Tabatha's. Wishing you and everyone a Happy Poetry Friday and Happy New Year.
Thank you for hosting, Carol, and for that wonderful poem! The writer in me loves the line, (Did you...) "Find one clear word that fit?"
ReplyDeleteWe've been happily covered up in family all week, so I didn't find words for a blog post today that fit except to link to Tabatha's and yours. Happy Poetry Friday and Happy New Year!
Sorry, I forgot the link! http://www.teacherdance.blogspot.com/2012/12/one-bright-christmas-moment.html
ReplyDeleteHi Carol, thanks for hosting today! Today I have another poem from Mary Oliver's latest:
ReplyDeletehttp://tmsteach.blogspot.com/2012/12/poetry-friday-poem-of-one-world-mary.html
I have 26acts here: http://maclibrary.wordpress.com/2012/12/28/poetry-friday-twenty-six-acts/
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for doing the roundup at such a busy time of the year!
ReplyDeleteAt Wild Rose Reader, I have an original list poem titled "Things to Do If You Are a Book."
http://wildrosereader.blogspot.com/2012/12/things-to-do-if-you-are-book-original.html
Thanks for doing the round-up!
ReplyDeleteI posted A Passing Bell at Bildungsroman.
Happy holidays, everyone!
Carol,
ReplyDeleteI've been so busy with the holiday, (I'm in Kauai on the beach) that I almost forgot it is Friday. I have a haiku about fortune cookies up today with a writing exercise for writing your own fortunes. Everybody is welcome to leave their fortune in my comments. I'd enjoy having you come visit today. Please drop by.
Oops, I too forgot to put my link in --
ReplyDeletewww.poetryforkidsjoy.blogspot.com
Hi Carol!
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting during this holiday time!
My poem today is one I wrote for Tabatha's winter poem swap. It's called "Wear a Scarf" and is here: http://wp.me/pC77F-lK
Violet N.
Thanks for hosting the last round up! At On Point I have:
ReplyDeletehttp://lorieanngrover.blogspot.com/2012/12/poetry-friday-snuggled-holidays.html
a holiday haiku. Happy New Year!
Another Mary Oliver, from me--! http://www.misserinmarie.blogspot.com/2012/12/i-ask-percy-how-i-should-live-my-life.html
ReplyDelete