Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Kasey's February poem

Hi all,
So much looking forward to reading yours! Here's mine; any comments welcome. Just a note: this should all be one stanza, but Blogger sometimes wants to add white space before the last line when I copy and paste. (Has anyone else had this experience? And if so, do you know how to avoid it?) Oh - and wanted to let you all know I'll probably have to make my comments this month relatively brief since I'll be away some for work. Thanks, and happy Feb.! Kasey

The Tree Inside

To draw the tree, I closed
my eyes. There: redblack
glow of the inner lids where
the sapling’s outline swam.
Girl Scout camp, ten years old, the tree
a child too. One hand held
the pencil and the words
behind my eyes dissolved
that whole time I held
the tree inside. How long? I couldn’t
say. Only that it was years
ago. And that it must have
been spring. Tender leaves, nearly
transparent, starred each limb. Later
real stars bloomed, the night
sky one shade paler than
the forest’s dark, and exactly
large enough. I remember
I wasn’t afraid. Today the tree
might be tall, or crowded out
by others in that woods, deprived
of light. Little girl,
where are you now?
Tell me what you love.

Vasiliki's February Poem

Hi Friends. This is wet paint, started a few weeks ago. Any impressions are welcome.

Daughter after a Detail
            after a detail in Anthony Van Dyck’s James, Seventh Earl of Derby, His Lady and Child



Her plaited hands
her dress is lava
what hardens and is hidden in her lace apron
in lace like ice, frost, flakes

her eyes hold a secret
her pearls are precious,
mouthless teeth ground down to perfection

her mother is satin, is silk, is static, is smooth
a hand for hiding
her own nosegay

the daughter is lava
molten fires form her skirts
or she skirts flaming mire
keeps her head above the fire

her pursed lips will unpurse
in time

Sunday, February 4, 2018

Claire's February Poem: Grackle

I have been playing around with writing short poems that create whole worlds, a la Jean Valentine. This is a longer one of the short poems. Is there enough here?



GRACKLE

It’s there, like the grackle’s
shining eye at my

window upon waking:
this gratitude.

Blessed to take up my world,
hoist it onto my back

move it forward
one more day.

* * *

Hours ahead of here
a woman walks

war’s hungry streets,
the hem

of her ball-and-chain life
dusty and frayed

al-hamdu lillah
her husband, safe at home

al-hamdu lillah
eggplants at the market

* * *

Follow this day
further

to its far end
and find it, nested

in the night sky,
not dead and empty

as we like to believe
but pulsing within

ever on the verge
of bringing forth.




al-hamdu lillah (Arabic: الحَمْدُ ِلله' ) means "Praise be to God", sometimes translated as "Thank God! 

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Shannon's February Poem


Hi Everyone, I am trying my hand at some formal poetry (mostly to expand my range but also because of the feedback I received on my manuscript that I could do more with form). I'm concerned as to whether this poem: a) makes sense b) isn't just a formal exercise but that it's emotionally compelling. c) are there areas that could be smoothed over/made stronger?

Why My Father Left

Because I know only one story, I invent so many others.
I was left on a doorstep, in an open-air market by the fish,
or cheese or blueberries for someone else to love and foster.

My father was a prince, a businessman, a magician, a tailor
with orange handkerchiefs, a sous-chef.  Always so accomplished.
Because I know only one story, I invent so many others.

Maybe those versions are wrong. Maybe this one is better:
I’m a modern day miracle made possible by a petri dish,
by cheese & blueberries. By someone who could love and foster

me unconditionally. By a penguin, an egret, an orangutan, or an otter.
Humans need to get better at love. Isn’t this a good wish?
Because I know only one story, I invent so many others.

Like the one where it doesn’t matter if you have a son or a daughter.
Where it’s possible to convert sadness into big, delicious
blueberries, and sweet cheese. Or where someone can love, can foster

the assurance that being oneself is enough. Where doors
open onto other doors here, where everything is possible. Relish this.
Because I know only one story, I invent so many others:
about cheese & blueberries. About how to foster love: for myself, for my father.

Thursday, February 1, 2018

Dargie's February Poem(s)



Hi guys -

Hope this is okay - I thought I'd go ahead and post for Feb 1. I'm trying to get some poems together for a March 1 residency deadline, and "Parking Garage Poem" is a little weird.  Separately, to provide a little more context for what I'm trying to do with the Kansas poems, I've  included "New Commute," the opening poem.  No need to comment on "New Commute" here; it's just for context. Since everyone has a full plate and we haven't decided on cadence yet, I totally understand if folks don't get to commenting this  month, just thought I'd give it a shot for anyone who has the time.  Happy February!   

NEW COMMUTE


Today, there are whitecaps peeling across the Kansas River and a bald eagle,
and, even at eighty miles an hour, I am starting to be able to tell the difference
between the dark clumps in trees that might be hawks
and the others—rotely reappearing
in the same places every day—
that are only caught plastic bags. 



PARKING GARAGE POEM





SUNFLOWER:
In general, Kansas is subtle.  A horizontal scene of greens and silver greys, large in scale, and not readily accessible.  You can understand why local marketing people would latch on to the sunflower.  When I could make it out of the house in the mornings in time to park my car on Sunflower, I was having it all. 

MEADOW: 
In real life, aren’t meadows just uncut grasses, and don’t they make you sneeze and make your legs itch, and you worry about stepping in a yellowjacket nest?  For Kansas, wouldn’t prairie have been more accurate, or better yet, plain?  Yet the concrete box of Meadow did enjoy the prettiness of the word. 

LAKE: 
Throwpillows in Kansas gift shops read, What happens at the lake, stays at the lake. Lake of the Ozarks and Table Rock and El Dorado and Lake Wabaunsee.  Some of these lakes have fields of dead trees sticking up above the surface, but when it’s ninety-five degrees out with ninety-five percent humidity, it’s always better to be swimming.

WHEAT:

On our puzzle map of America, Kansas is emblazoned with a wheat stalk, and at the wedding, the men wore wheat stalks as boutonnieres.  The boutonnieres punctuated that groomed hillside overlooking Lawrence, a quarter mile from where I would, six years later, live with my wedding-met husband and our young children.  Shake a little wheat on everything, I can’t get enough.

LIGHTNING:

The Lightning level was so far off the deck of earth that you had to drive through an additional automated gate to get to it, and then park uncovered, risking, depending on season, sleet, rain, grit, the roasting sun.  However, there was a view of the city to the south and you got a good rush of sky and an accurate read on what the light was doing.  In Kansas, oh was there lightning, actual, blue-white lightning cracking the sky. I loved the lightning for bringing brewing background tumult into immediate, foregrounded crisis.  If we could have collected it, we would have a barnful of forked, bone-white implements like giant coral pieces to hand down to our kids.  Then there was the lightning that struck us and our wedding-family.  It left a painful, blackened streak; it twisted all the silverware and burned up all the old photographs and started a fire that still smokes, if it does not smolder.  Our leaving Kansas was at once noiseless and excruciating.