I'm pleased today to participate in a photo-poetry exchange hosted by Margaret Simon over at Reflections on the Teche. Back in April, Margaret got excited by a photo posted on Molly Hogan's blog, wrote about it, and wanted others to enjoy the challenge.
I love writing about art, particularly photographs, so even though I missed Margaret's sign-up, I was so thrilled to join in and even out the numbers.
My exchange partner is Ruth Hersey of the blog There is no such thing as a God-forsaken town, who lives in Haiti. She sent me the below photo of her local geography, which prompted me to do quite a bit of reading about Haiti and its history. I found myself with very mixed feelings about the photo, my reading, and what I know to be true about Ruth's experience of her adopted country. I hope my poem captures some of that.
Journey over to Margaret's today where she's rounding up all the photo-poetry exchanges, and enjoy. We have such brave talents in our midst, cycling inspiration round and round to whomever might need some! Thank you, Margaret, and thank you, Ruth.
Greetings from the sodden mid-Atlantic, where on Mother's Day I looked at my weather app and saw something I truly thought was some kind of misprint, user error, data glitch.
Alas, this ten-day forecast has been pretty much accurate, and although my class got lucky with outdoor recess on Monday and Tuesday, today will be our 3rd straight day of indoor recess--in May!
May, of all months, the most voluptuous and enticing of all months,
the month when April showers are to have brought swathes of flowers, when a young person's fancy turns to thoughts of
I CANNOT SPEND A SINGLE 'NOTHER MINUTE INSIDE THIS CLASSROOM EVEN IF TODAY IS THE DAY THAT OUR CHRYSALISES CRACK OPEN & BECOME BUTTERFLIES.
I personally will not be sodden and down-trodden (even as I think with respect and compassion on those of Muslim students and colleagues who are navigating this dreary gray week of AP's and exams WHILE FASTING) because I will be playing this poem on repeat. I posted it in April of 2016 as part of my "Lyrics as Poetry" series, but it was a Monday and no one was paying attention...
No fancy introduction today; just the glory of sensory poems
inspired by one "little slice of earth," composed by 7-8's!
the
clover by Caleb
three
leaves
smooth
stem clover
blowing in
the wind very
fragile
purple flower
by Eldana
purple bulbs
light scent
lemon orange
very peaceful
smooth and
hairiesoft
and greenie!
Black cracked stick by Eric Its smooth wood
makes me slow like a sloth, I hear nothing. it’s peaceful like a mouse.all I smell is grassy dust.that’s right.
clover
by Max
cloverround3
circlessoftgreen
hole
plant by Ines
green like a pillow long and skinny smells like strawberries a little blue very good for me!
purple poem
by Xavier
a smooth stem
and
green and brown
quiet
airpurple flowers
green
leavesthe colors
are
green
and purple
A Different Stick
by Patrick
Browny Broken Dusty Jagged Grassy Pointy Cracked looks like
bamboo
dandelion by Sophia
A
hairy soft dandelion smells
like raspberries looks
like a lion from
the top. Root
is smooth and smells
like a soggy wet
dog!
Rocky
Mountain by Elena
Gray
and sparkly rough
and bumpynothing butblank! It’s
just a thing peaceful
and quiet
Nothing
to be heard
but something to
seek
clover
by Kathy
bright
clover
light
green
silent
and fuzzy
smells
vegetabley and
cucumbery
Beautiful purple flower
by Tyler
Purple flower smooth and U purple flowe R. green smooth leaves Purple leaves smooth & soft Like dog’s fur. Elegant purple flower
Two Rocks
by Ziva
Piece by piece broken
and clean slowly chipping
away.Clanking four
sounds, bink, chip, clip and pip.
white and light gray
building together
look like waves from an
ocean’s weather.
dandelion by Henry
fluffy
dandelion
white
and green
smells
like vanilla
and
gasoline its
fluff
is like
a
lion’s mane
soft
like fur
purple flowers by Arya purpleflowersgreenleaveswildbreeze
rootsleavesslowly growing
windblowingrootsgrowing
rainpouringsungrowing
And there you have it! I guess it's hard to bemoan my own slow pace of writing when I'm busy helping this happen. Jama is helping us happen today by rounding up at Jama's Alphabet Soup. See you there!
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MORNING ADDENDUM! I forgot while wrangling all these poems and photos that my TLD Anthology Poem "A History of Your Voice" is featured at Michelle Kogan's Mother's Day blog post! Please enjoy it, and a beach-day photo of me and my dear, delightful mother HERE! In fact I will be with my mother and father this weekend helping them get ready for a move nearer to us--hooray!--and so my comments will be scarce, I'm afraid. But thank you for yours!