This month I'm doing "Poetry Pairs." My original idea, which still feels kind of half-formed and still doesn't have a cool logo, like everyone else's was that I was going to find a poem I liked, and use it as a mentor to write off of. I was thinking, I think, that it would be more topic related, but so far, there have been several form related poems. Today's is another one of those. I had never heard of the Etheree, until Mary Lee posted Gratitude on Year of Reading. She got the idea from Liz Garton Scanlon's poetry prompt. Tonight, when I was walking Rooney (and yes, I was alone, and yes, I was practicing appropriate social distancing), it was absolutely beautiful outside- warm, that right before dark light, the moon just rising, gorgeous clouds-- and I kept seeing people on their phones, totally missing the beauty that was right there. And it made me sad, and this poem came to me, pretty much as I walked.
Rebuke
Glorious
Spring evening.
Full moon rising.
Pink tinged clouds fading.
Bird chorus sings bedtime melody.
Yellow lab tail enthusiastically signals joy.
Pig-tailed toddler dances across baseball diamond.
You miss all this sweetness, thumbs pounding frantically,
Eyes held in rapt attention, as you worship Lord Screen
Surely He cannot offer more than all the richness here.
(C) Carol Wilcox, 2020
“Reading should not be presented to children as a chore or a duty. It should be offered to them as a precious gift." Kate DiCamillo
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Saturday, April 4, 2020
Poetry Pairs- Day 4/30
If There is Such a Thing
by Adele Kenney
(After a Woman Feeding Her Dog, by Mary Cassatt)
If there is such as thing as forever, I will be here by this high window,
this dog beside me, sun on our faces. Everything important will
spread out beneath us: gazebo and fountain. Each will be held in its
own moment of beauty like the Yorkshire Terriers whose pictures
hang on my kitchen wall: three no longer with me and this one who
chews his rope giraffe to pieces with no regrets, no sentimental
attachment-- the chew worth whatever loss it incurs. Informed by
his own spirit, he sees in things only things and wants nothing more
thank his leash and long walks, a game of throw the ball. He needs
nothing more than to sleep on the floor beneath my feet or curled in
the right angle my arm and elbow make when I hold him-- the
happiness he was made for.
If only forever were a choice we could make, I would choose this
dog's world (and my place in it)-- absolute innocence-- no other life
to plan for but this. Nothing but this: love without reservation-- his
world and mine as it it ought to be and, in this moment, is.
This poem first appeared in Paterson Literary Review.
"If There Is Such a Thing"
by Carol Wilcox,
modeled after Adele Kenney
If there is such as thing as forever, I will be here by this pond,
watching this dog paddle, sun warm on our backs. Everything important will
spread out beneath us: the pond, the sun dancing across the rippling water,
then glinting off your wet black fur, your faded red collar restored to its
original glory. Each will be held in its own moment of beauty,
like the Heinz 57 mutts whose collars parade across the wall in my study:
Ramsey, Maggie, Jack Black, Boo- no longer with me and soon you, old Star,
snoring deeply at my feet and then Sweet Roo, you who find enormous joy
in dismembering your stuffies within minutes- absolutely sure that the sole
purpose of such toys is to remove the plastic balloon inside, so you can race around the yard,
squeaking delightedly, until someone grabs you and rips it from your mouth.
You see in things only things and want nothing more than a full bowl of kibble,
a leash and long walks, a good game of tug of war, then to sleep on the floor
beneath my feet or sneak onto the couch and press your nose against my thigh--
the sole happiness you were made for.
If there is such a thing as forever, I would choose this dog's world
(and my place in it)-- total contentment-- no other life to plan for but this.
Nothing but this: love without reservation-- his
world and mine as it ought to be
and, in this moment, is.
Friday, April 3, 2020
3/30- POEM PAIRS- Learning from one of my favorite poetry mentors
Bryant Webster Dual Language ECE-8, where I really teach |
Let Remote Learning Commence
next week
fifty-seven
sixth graders arrive in
my messy cluttered family room
welcome
come in.
read, write, rest, dream
print's power can transport you
to place of new wisdom and peace
dwell there
Carol Wilcox
(c) April, 2020
Thursday, April 2, 2020
POETRY PAIRS #2
I've played around with several different themes. I thought about doing "Dog Days Revisited" and writing more dog poems. I thought about choosing a different subject and trying to write 30 different poems, in 30 different formats. I finally decided I would choose 30 poems I like, and try to use them as mentors to write my own poems. Which may be trickier than I thought, given that today I realized that most of my favorite poetry books are in my classroom at school, and I'm not allowed to go in. Hmmmm. Tonight I started reading through favorite poems I had collected on my blog. Irene Latham is a poet I have admired forever. I tried to use her structure. Not sure I was successful but...
"This Is the Hour"
Irene Latham
This is the hour
where sun dreams
when river
sings
its silky song.
This is the hour
Duck wades
into warm
whispery grass
settling
onto its nest
This is the hour
Duck asks:
What is yours?
What is
mine?
River answers
Look how
your wings
glisten.
How my eyes
wink.
Yes, Duck says.
Now I see--
this is the hour
almighty sun
gives itself
to everything.
Irene Latham
*************
“This is the Hour”
This is the hour
where world screams
healthy die
economy is upturned
children are afraid
streets are silent
And this is the hour
where dog climbs onto couch
stretches out next to me
presses head against human thigh
sighs in contentment
and sleeps deeply
This is the hour
Human asks:
Will this end?
Will we hope again?
Dog responds:
We are here together
on this soft couch
our bellies are full
All is well.
Yes, Human says.
Now I see,
this is the hour
when we must
draw close
breathe deeply
and give thanks.
All is well.
Carol Wilcox
(C) 2020
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Poetry Partners- #1
This year, I want to explore the idea of Poetry Partners. I want to take a poem from a published author, and use it as a mentor to write my own poem. My goal is to use some of these with kids.
Today's poem showed up in my email this morning.
"Spring Tonic"
Julie Eger
Listen for sandhill cranes.
Count the robins.
Pick dandelion greens
for Grandma’s spring tonic.
Praise the peepers.
Count the robins.
Open the garden gate.
Till the soil.
Search for asparagus.
Count the robins.
Smile at the first morel.
Catch bluegills with a cane pole.
Count the robins.
Put lounge chairs on deck.
Sit down in the sun.
Roll up pant legs.
Lean all the way back.
Count the robins.
“Spring Tonic”
By Carol Wilcox
rejoice in yellow crocuses
drink in grape hyacinths
worship pink and red tulips and
delight in daffodils
watch lawn green and grow
listen to bees buzz in lavender
smell spring shower sweetness
go barefoot and
delight in daffodils
spend an afternoon on the patio
read, nap, then read a little more
let sun paints health your cheeks and
delight in daffodils
park on a sunny bench
nibble sugar waffle cone
lick ice cream
from sticky fingers and
delight in daffodils
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