Friday, February 6, 2026

brief and to the gentle point

Merry February, everyone. There are lots of ways of giving advice: in the form of a command, by demonstration, through constant nagging or subtle suggestion, precisely with details, broadly with general encouragement. For this month's Inklings Challenge, Molly (also our host today!) offered us a prompt she found among those at Audrey Gidman's December Poetry Advent Calendar. It reads:

Write a poem after Wendell Berry’s “Like Snow” — word for word. Choose a subject: rain, a butterfly, granite, the ocean, anything. Berry’s poem is three lines long. Break down each line. In line one, replace the word “suppose” with something else: what if; in spite of; imagine etc., replace the pronoun and the verb, replace “snow” with your chosen subject. Do the same with the second and third lines. Be sure to write an epigraph that reads “after Wendell Berry."

To that Molly added advice in the form of permissions: "I'm not sure if this is easy or not, but it is short! I'd also add that you can just be inspired by this poem and not go word for word in your substitution. Or go rogue and feel free to interpret the prompt in any way that you want! Write about snow! Get inspired by another Wendell Berry poem! Or even choose a totally different prompt from the list."

And then, interestingly, Berry's poem is a kind of advisement, quite gentle; musing, even; a conjecture:


                    LIKE SNOW

Suppose we did our work
like the snow, quietly, quietly,
leaving nothing out.

            Wendell Berry from “Leavings,” (Counterpoint, 2009)


What if indeed we did our one job, just that thoroughly, humbly, and then...were done with it? How might that change things? I found it a soothing challenge to transform Wendell's nugget of wisdom into something of my own. 


                       Like Progress
       after Wendell Berry

Suppose we flowed forward
like the path, curvingly, curvingly,
leaving straight lines by the wayside.

              draft ©HM 2026



What if indeed our progress is not fighting but flowing, is not a road but a path, is not straight and smooth but curved and not always clearly visible, and requires us to leave some of our driving behind? (Oh yeah: longanimity.) Sometimes you write the poem you yourself need without realizing it until ten days later. Also, didn't someone once say that "the personal is political"?

Furthermore, on the topics of snow and advice, here's a poem from this time last year, before I knew of Wendell's poem....



Many thank to Molly for her choice of prompt, and for hosting us today! Check out the takes of all the Inklings below.

Catherine @Reading to the Core
Molly Hogan @ Nix the Comfort Zone
Linda Mitchell @ A Word Edgewise
Mary Lee @ A(nother) Year of Reading
Margaret Simon @ Reflections on the Teche


16 comments:

  1. Heidi, your progress poem makes me think of a little snail, winding and sliming its way...thank you! xo

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  2. I love the word curvingly and imagine that my retirement path is just like that!

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  3. Heidi, so interesting to think of Wendell Berry’s poem as an advertisement! I love the imagery of your interpretation in Like Progress. I immediately envisioned a snake moving through the world. And Snow’s whistle of satisfaction – beautiful!

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  4. Wowser. Our poems do sort of "rhyme." And look at that poem you wrote last year! The long form of this week's poem! And that your poem turned out to accidentally (or as on purpose as the other connections) illustrate your OLW! I agree with Margaret. Your poem is what retirement is like.

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  5. Our one job, done well and with purpose. Yes.

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  6. Mitchell.hubeimom@gmail.comFebruary 7, 2026 at 8:04 AM

    Ooooooh, that Purpose poem lands even more beautifully today. The "whiting out" is lovely...and the waiting, being more like the sun. I don't remember this poem. But, I love it. And, that word curvingly...my favorite this week. I like a curved path instead of a road any day!

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  7. Having been someone who has favored perhaps too many straight lines, I'm appreciative of your appreciation for the curving. I also really like your follow up questions. I'm so glad you enjoyed writing to the prompt, and that your poem served as nourishment for you as well as for us.

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  8. Sometimes, it's good to go "curvingly". One learns so much more than taking the straight & narrow, right? It can be more progress! I love both, Heidi, and at least both means "moving"!

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  9. I would love to give a kiss of thanks to snow's service. It has given me a little bit of margin to write these few weeks.

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  10. Heidi, what a wealth of treasure you have given us. Your snow poem is one of my favorites. Great description of what Snow, Sun and we should do: "lie back on a cloud of rest and wait." I love the questions you ask about life and flowing forward about your after Wendell Berry poem. There is some wisdom here: "leave some of our driving behind." Yet always flowing forward...

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  11. Heidi, as someone who has always tried to stay within the lines, I truly appreciate (and will try to heed!) your advice to flow forward curvingly. Thank you for the reminder!

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  12. One day while walking after a snowfall I thought about how delightful it may have been to walk 100 years ago when perhaps there were no sidewalks so shoveling wasn’t a city requirement… Thanks for your curvy, winding path!

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  13. Heidi, wow, the synchronicity of your earlier poem and Wendell Berry's is wild. Nice. And I love "leaving straight lines by the wayside." Amen to that.

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  14. Spoken (written?) by one who is in it for the long haul. Flow. A canyon is carved steadily.

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  15. Heidi, curvingly reminds me of the Olympic path for speed and staying within lines on curvy path. Your poems were worth reading a couple of times. Thanks for sharing your "always amazing" voice through writing.

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  16. The word cadence - "slippingly/slantingly" is beautifully lyrical in each of these & the messages are so Right-On. And to have written before knowing the W.B "Like Snow' piece is more than prescient, it's a miracle of a creative poet. Much strength to your. pen arm!

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Thanks for joining in the wild rumpus!