Thursday, October 09, 2025
Poetry Friday: October 10 by Wendell Berry
Thursday, September 25, 2025
Poetry Friday: Writing tritinas
Tanita Davis* shared the latest Poetry Peeps challenge:
Poetry Peeps! You’re invited to our challenge for the month of September! Here’s the scoop: We’re going to take up the challenge of tritina. Invented by poet Marie Ponsot, this less restrictive younger sibling of the sestina uses three repeated words to end three tercets. The order of word-endings for the tercets are 123, 312, 231, with a final line acting as the envoi, featuring all three words in the 1-2-3 order used in the first stanza. Additionally, we’re continuing with our theme of poetry in conversation, in whatever way that is individually defined. Sound a little tricky? Maybe? Are you still in?
I'm in!
I'd never written a tritina, and had no idea what I wanted to focus on. I sat down with my notes (123, 312, 231...) and thought, "But what kind of conversation?"
An image of a young student and teacher came to mind, so I rolled with the idea of a literal conversation about poetry. Here's the draft I came up with this week:
Making Room
“I do not like this stuff — poetry!” said
the boy in the back of the room.
“It’s stupid, so I don’t read it.”
The teacher nodded. “But if you never read it,
how do you… know?” she said.
Reticence in the room.
Then shifting. Glancing. A crackling room.
“I read a poem once, okay? And I hated it.
But, I could, I guess…try again?” he said.
“I mean, maybe,” he said softly, “there’s room for it.”
~~~~~~~~~~
* Tanita's newest book, Berry Parker Doesn't Catch Crushes, just landed in the world! (And it's sitting on my nightstand, right now, waiting for me to start reading it tonight. Huzzah!) It's the latest in a long line of middle grade and YA goodness from Tanita, and I can't wait to dive in.
Photo thanks to Pixabay.
Thursday, September 18, 2025
Poetry Friday: "The Patience of Ordinary Things"
The Patience of Ordinary Things
by Pat Schneider
It is a kind of love, is it not?
How the cup holds the tea,
How the chair stands sturdy and foursquare,
How the floor receives the bottoms of shoes
Or toes. How soles of feet know
Where they're supposed to be.
I've been thinking about the patience
Thursday, August 28, 2025
Poetry Friday: I’m Hosting, and we're having conversations with poems (or in my case, with a poet)
Poetry Peeps! You’re invited to our challenge for the month of August! Here’s the scoop: If poetry is a love letter to readers, this month, we’re writing back. Using Nikki Giovanni’s “Talk to Me, Poem, I Think I Got The Blues” as a mentor verse, we’re writing poetry directly in conversation with a poem. Whether you talk back directly to Ms. Giovanni’s work, or choose another poems to pass notes to is up to you, as is length and form. Are you in? You’ll have a month to craft your creation(s), then share your offering on August 29th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We hope all of you will join the fun!
I cheated a little and broadened the rubric: I'm in conversation with a poet (and a smattering of her poems) rather than addressing my plea to a single selection. I couldn't wait to talk to Emily Dickinson and ask her to reveal her secrets. Even though I'm nobody, I knew she would indulge me. She hasn't written me back, but I'm a patient correspondent.
(The lines in italics are either taken directly from Dickinson's poems, or are a rearrangement of her words.)
Talk to Me, Emily D.
(with thanks to Nikki Giovanni)
"In this short life that only lasts an hour
How much—how little—is within our power."
~ Emily Dickinson
I have a few questions, Miss Dickinson.
(May I call you Emily? I’m nobody, but
I feel like we’re friends.)
I have questions, Emily.
The first is the easiest
and also impossible.
How do you do it?
How much—how little—do you do?
Do you dream a poem?
Does it waft in, fully formed,
gorgeous in its shape and complexity? Or,
does it hover tantalizingly near you,
a shape-shifting cloud
informing image and imagination?
Or is it baking that inspires
the rising of precise words?
While your hands are kneading,
is your inscrutable mind churning?
Cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, cloves—
Is the secret, instead,
in the scent of gingerbread?
You dwell in possibility but in
the impossibility of this world too,
its planks of reason broken.
Still.
Still, you conjure
that Stop-sensation on my Soul,
and Thunder in the Room.
Talk to me, Emily D.
How much—how little— do you do,
do you know?
Dazzle me gradually with your truth.
~ Karen Edmisten
References:
- "How much—how little—" (from "In this short Life that only lasts an hour," 1292)
- "I’m Nobody" (from "I'm Nobody! Who are you?" 260)
- "I dwell in Possibility" (466)
- "planks of reason broken" (adapted from “I Felt a Funeral in My Brain," 340: "And then a Plank in Reason, broke,")
- "that Stop-sensation on my soul and thunder in the room" (from “I got so I could take his name,” 293)
- "Dazzle me, gradually, with your truth" (adapted from “Tell all the truth but tell it slant,” (1263): "The Truth must dazzle gradually/Or every man be blind—")
Mr. Linky awaits your dazzling contributions this week. Thanks for sharing in the conversation.
Thursday, August 14, 2025
Poetry Friday: "Tonight I Am In Love" by Dorianne Laux
by Dorianne Laux
Tonight, I am in love with poetry,
with the good words that saved me,
with the men and women who
uncapped their pens and laid the ink
on the blank canvas of the page.
I am shameless in my love; their faces
rising on the smoke and dust at the end
of day, their sullen eyes and crusty hearts,
the murky serum now turned to chalk
along the gone cords of their spines.
I’m reciting the first anonymous lines
that broke night’s thin shell: sonne under wode.
Thursday, August 07, 2025
Poetry Friday: "Reading to My Kids" by Kevin Carey
Reading to My Kids
by Kevin Carey
When they were little I read
to them at night until my tongue
got tired. They would poke me
when I started to nod off after twenty pages
of Harry Potter or Lemony Snicket.
I read (to them) to get them to love reading
but I was never sure if it was working
or if it was just what I was supposed to do.
But one day, my daughter (fifteen then)
was finishing Of Mice and Men in the car
on our way to basketball.
She was at the end when I heard her say,
No, in a familiar frightened voice
and I knew right away where she was.
Friday, August 01, 2025
Poetry Friday: "Four Directions to the Zoo" by Lizbeth, age 10
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Poetry Friday: "Great Things Have Happened" by Alden Nowlan
by Alden Nowlan
We were talking about the great things
that have happened in our lifetimes;
and I said, "Oh, I suppose the moon landing
was the greatest thing that has happened
in my time." But, of course, we were all lying.
The truth is the moon landing didn't mean
one-tenth as much to me as one night in 1963
when we lived in a three-room flat in what once had been
the mansion of some Victorian merchant prince
(our kitchen had been a clothes closet, I'm sure),
on a street where by now nobody lived
That night, the three of us, Claudine, Johnnie and me,
woke up at half-past four in the morning
and ate cinnamon toast together.
"Is that all?" I hear somebody ask.
(Read the rest here, at The Writer's Almanac.)
~~~~~~~~~~
Marcie Flinchum Atkins has the Poetry Friday round-up this week.
Thursday, July 17, 2025
Poetry Friday: "Fireflies" by Frank Ormsby
Do you call them lightning bugs or fireflies?
Glow worms?
Something else?
Whatever you call them, they've probably provided you with a little wonder and a lot of enchantment. I've always been charmed and intrigued by these tiny summer lanterns. As poet Frank Ormsby asks, "What should we make of fireflies, their quick flare/of promise and disappointment, their throwaway style?"
And just in case you want to know more than you ever thought you'd be able to learn about lightning bugs, I'll point you (just follow the glowing lights) to one of my favorite podcasts, Alie Ward's Ologies. This episode is all about lampyridology. As always happens when I listen to Ologies, I had no idea that I wanted to know this much about the subject at hand. I'm always completely sucked in by each episode and end up sharing fascinating factoids over dinner. ("You will not believe how disgusting baby lightning bugs are! They basically hunt in packs!"*)
* See page 7 of the transcript for the horrifying, funny, interesting conversation about these predatory babies.
And now, back to something not disgusting and not horrifying: this week's poem.
Fireflies
by Frank Ormsby
The lights come on and stay on under the trees.
Visibly a whole neighborhood inhabits the dusk,
so punctual and in place it seems to deny
dark its dominion. Nothing will go astray,
the porch lamps promise. Sudden, as though a match
failed to ignite at the foot of the garden, the first squibs
trouble the eye. Impossible not to share
that sportive, abortive, clumsy, where-are-we-now
dalliance with night, such soothing relentlessness.
What should we make of fireflies, their quick flare
of promise and disappointment, their throwaway style?
....
(Read the rest here, at The Poetry Foundation.)
Photo courtesy of Pixabay.
Thursday, July 10, 2025
Poetry Friday: “Old Man Eating Alone in a Chinese Restaurant” by Billy Collins (and other thoughts on aging)
This one makes me think about how much we get wrong about “old people.” The older I get, the more I see (and experience for myself) the way we lump people of a certain age into a supposedly homogenous group. Elderly. Aged. Retired. Senior citizen.
From my own experience of getting older, I know that “old people” are just people. People who have been on the planet for a particular amount of time. People who are funny, interesting, boring, grumpy, effervescent, insightful, ignorant, and all manner of wide-ranging personalities. They are people whose bodies keep surprising and betraying them, and believe me, they don’t like it anymore than anyone else does. (Not that I’d know this from personal experience, except, yes, I know this from personal experience.) In August of 2022, when we adopted our kitty, Maisy, the young woman at the animal shelter said, “And since you are over 60, you get the ‘elderly discount’ on the adoption fee.” This is me in 2022:
by Billy Collins
I am glad I resisted the temptation,
if it was a temptation when I was young,
to write a poem about an old man
eating alone at a corner table in a Chinese restaurant.
I would have gotten it all wrong
thinking: the poor bastard, not a friend in the world
and with only a book for a companion.
He'll probably pay the bill out of a change purse.
So glad I waited all these decades
to record how hot and sour the hot and sour
soup is here at Chang's this afternoon
and how cold the Chinese beer in a frosted glass.
Thursday, July 03, 2025
Poetry Friday: "There are No Kings in America" by Aileen Cassinetto
This week, Mary Lee Hahn, at A(nother) Year of Reading, is hosting an "Independence Day Roundup of Protest and Praise for This Complicated Country We Call Home." Mary Lee shares a powerful original piece entitled "America."
I didn't get any new writing done this week, but I'm sharing a powerful and timely poem from Aileen Cassinetto, "There are no kings in America," which was first published in 2020.* I've included some excerpts here but be sure to read the whole thing. (Link below.)
There are no kings in America
by Aileen Cassinetto
we are not that kind of country.
We are sanctuary for the hungry,
the homeless, the huddled,
held together by an idea
our immigrant fathers believed in.
recognize the sacrifice
of the widow and the orphan;
it is to understand the weft of tent
cities expecting caravans,
and the heft of a child in a camp
not meant for children, or sitting
before a judge awaiting judgement.
What do we say to the native
whose lands we now inhabit?
What do we say to our immigrant
fathers who held certain truths
to be self-evident?
Thursday, June 26, 2025
Poetry Friday: The Poetry Peeps are writing Raccontinos! (And so am I!)
Poetry Peeps! You’re invited to our challenge for the month of June! Here’s the scoop: We’ll going to write a couple of couplets and make a Raccontino. Never heard of the form? No worries. If you can count to two, you can play with this delightful form. Of course, we’re turning our faces to the winds of ‘conversation,’ as always. Are you in? You’ll have a month to craft your creation(s), then share your offering on June 27th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We hope you’ll join the fun!
- be composed of any number of couplets
- have even-numbered lines sharing the same end rhyme
- have the title and final words of odd-numbered lines telling a story
We're having another conversation
and this is how it goes.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Poetry Friday: "The Summer You Read Proust" by Philip Terman
The Summer You Read Proust
by Philip Terman
Remember the summer you read Proust?
In the hammock tied to the apple trees
your daughters climbed, their shadows
merging with the shadows of the leaves
spilling onto those long arduous sentences,
all afternoon and into the evening—robins,
jays, the distant dog, the occasional swaying,
Thursday, June 05, 2025
Poetry Friday: Hayden Carruth, "I Could Take"
Last week I mentioned Wendell Berry's poetic tribute to Hayden Carruth, so this week I'm sharing some Carruth poetics. This one's for Atticus, because we are indeed "two imperfections that match."
by Hayden Carruth
I could take
two leaves
and give you one.
Would that not be
a kind of perfection?
But I prefer
one leaf
torn to give you half
showing
Thursday, May 29, 2025
Poetry Friday: I'm Hosting!
by Wendell Berry