Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
April Musings - 26. NaPoWriMo 2019 Week One
NaPoWriMo Week 1
Poem 1
April
Robin redbreast paints a song
As it hops along green stalks
Waiting to erupt into a replica of
Feathery rainbow iridescence.
Poem 2
When the last fires will wave to me
As they leap and dance in celebration
Around my funeral pyre
May my words live as legacy
and ash and dust return to loam
Poem 3
What is there beyond knowing
That keeps calling to me?
Urging me to write these characters’ story,
Type without conscious thought
As words spill onto the screen.
Stay away from this person,
They’re bad news.
Take a different route home,
Turn now to avoid the accident
Around the corner.
Dream this moment and remember
When it happens again.
Be at peace,
Knowing there’s more beyond.
Poem 4
Only one life to live.
What comes after?
Drawing Chinese cats in Heaven,
And laughing.
Poem 5
Janus Glass
One pane simultaneously
lashed by elements
and warmed by hearth fire
Allows what's in to see out
and what's out to peer in.
Poem 6
Pyrus
In spring, oval leaves form an opalescent rainbow.
Orange, red, purple, blue
Leaning branches jut from brown, prickly bark
Sharp, but not menacing
And bear green, delicious fruit
Tasting of lemonade
Sweet with a hint of sour
Perfect for dripping down chins
As fresh-picked delights are devoured
Or simmering on the stove with added sugar
And poured into a jar
Then spread on toast
When leafless branches bear the weight of winter.
Prompts used:
Poem 1: Write a poem of not too many words about April or perhaps a poem that simply praises spring.
Poem 2: W.S. Merwin died on March 15, 2019 at age 91. A beautiful soul indeed! Bounce off an idea or a line from one of his poems below or from any other of his poems. Try writing a poem without punctuation in the style of Merwin’s later poems. If you’re stuck for a subject, just write about a door.
Poem 3: While rereading Mary Oliver poems, I pulled out some lines that resonated with me that I thought we could use as jumpstarts or poem epigraphs.
Poem 4: Is an almost verbatim comment from one of my individuals during a therapy session.
Poem 5: Your poem will involve a window. As poet you may look into an interior through a window or look out through a window at an exterior vista. You might write an ode to a window or become the voice of a window speaking.
Poem 6: Write a poem to or about a tree you have loved in your lifetime, one that has meant more to you than most. Or write another sort of poem —a more general observation or imagination about a tree or trees. This particular poem is about a tree in the backyard of one of the individuals on my caseload, described by her, but embellished by me.
- 4
- 4
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.