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Poetry posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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. 

Calliope's Carousel - 2. April 10th - April 18th

Here's the product of the last nine days. As is ever the case, all the errors you find were created by me. Thanks especially to @Mikiesboy for the idea of attempting a Senryu.

10. Awake at Night

I listen

to the rain on the roof

murmur soft words of reassurance

while the brook outside my window sings lullaby

to smooth-skinned adolescent beech trees

which toss and turn mutely

in their sleep.

 

11. Openings in the Woods

Through the decayed leaves,

tiny purple spring beauties

open to the sun.

 

Wood chips lie scattered

about the long-broken ash,

beneath birds at work.

 

Huge tangled grape vines

hang draped over a poplar,

urging it to bed.

 

Speckled spears rise

in the shady woods to call

the trout lilies out.

 

A new-fallen beech

lies stretched on the forest floor

still trying to bud.

 

 

12. What’s for Dinner

My cupboard’s full of virtues long expired

and graces past their printed sell-by dates

when things gone rancid ought to be retired

to landfills where the rubbish congregates.

With vices fresh the fridge still overflows;

green envy and indulgence share a drawer,

above do lust and anger juxtapose

while rage and vanity sit on the door.

But on the rack there hangs a shining trove

of nuances, each in its clear glass jar

which alter leftovers upon the stove

no matter what their former flavors are.

I beg you not to judge me when we dine

for I will serve you savories divine.

 

 

 

13. Three Attempted Senryu

During the weekend

rain poured down from livid skies,

but Monday dawned clear.

 

My computer screen

is full of bright images

I cannot handle.

 

The moon blocked the sun;

my neighbor set off fireworks,

ignoring the wonder.

 

 

14. Spring Runoff

The rivers with ten thousand voices shout

and celebrate the pouring rain

in tumbling, chocolate-colored tossing heads

which yearn to tread upon the plain

and cry defiance to chill winter’s rule,

that monarch striving all in vain.

 

From every hill the waters hurry down

with riotous recruits to meet,

In ever-growing numbers they parade

and to the valley they compete

to be the first to reach the flowing mass

assuring icy frost’s retreat.

 

Before them, every barrier is breached

and every bar is swept away

through rising rampions, last year’s littered leaves

and saplings dressed in April grey,

no fallen log, no boulder can withstand

the raucous newborn streams at play.

 

Yet by the spreading meadows are they calmed

enough to wander with a sigh

as they climb out beyond constraining banks

and rest awhile, till by-and-by

return they to the acquiescent ground

until next spring shall call them nigh.

 

 

15. Four Aphorisms

There is no requirement

(to state it with lucidity),

that cognitive attirement

be costumed in stupidity.

 

It’s established as a fact,

the world revolves, as Foucault knew,

yet, if our findings are exact,

it doesn’t ever circle you.

 

If assertion you’d anoint

without the need to be a bore,

use brevity to make your point,

by talking less and saying more.

 

Happiness is not for sale

upon the supermarket shelf,

but if contentment will prevail

it’s something that you make yourself.

 

 

16. April in Alliteration

Kingfishers

calculate calories

counted in catching crustaceans that

congregate, quietly crouching contentedly,

cool in the quickening current, yet

camouflaged, conning the

kingfishers.

 

Peepers pipe

plangently, piercingly

publishing prurient protocols,

possibly promising pleasure and pillow talk,

pressing promiscuous partnership,

pleading to profligate

passersby.

 

 

17. First Thing in the Morning

In the low spot

where the green lawn turns to marsh grass

and tall cattails turn fuzzy and brown in the summer heat,

I heard the white-throated sparrow sing

for the first time this spring,

tuning his song early

before dawn could color the sky

enough to distinguish forest from fog;

yet that simple, plaintive tune

pierced the shadows

and silenced the waking blackbirds

to turn a grey world green

with promises of love and companionship

in a simple home

where the reeds rise.

 

 

18. Crush

See me waiting, restively by the window,

anxious, checking time on my wind-up wristwatch,

pacing, wearing holes in the shiny lino,

dancing a hopscotch;

 

while I wonder when you might walk by, strolling,

all unconscious that you could cause such turmoil,

carefree, clueless: can you hear my bells tolling

or feel my gut roil?

 

Would I, could I, possibly crack the portal,

step outside and maybe catch your attention?

Just one glance transforms me to an immortal,

in my invention.


Thank you for taking time to try out these NaPoWriMo offerings. They're a chance to try new things and see if they work. I always welcome thoughts, reflections and comments, of whatever sort or variety.
Copyright © 2024 Parker Owens; All Rights Reserved.
  • Love 8
Poetry posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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. 
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Chapter Comments

Where to begin?  Each is wonderful in its own right.  Two especially speak to me:  Nos. 1 and 15.  Number 1 elicits times of camping in the outdoors, sleeping in an old farmhouse and lying in a feather bed with the sounds of the trees and of the night playing through the open window.  Number 15 is a very poignant description of the current state of our crazy divided society at the moment. 

You have an ability I truly admire.  With words, you create such rich images that I love to read but couldn't write in any way!  Thank you for sharing your rich talent!

  • Like 1
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21 minutes ago, pvtguy said:

Where to begin?  Each is wonderful in its own right.  Two especially speak to me:  Nos. 1 and 15.  Number 1 elicits times of camping in the outdoors, sleeping in an old farmhouse and lying in a feather bed with the sounds of the trees and of the night playing through the open window.  Number 15 is a very poignant description of the current state of our crazy divided society at the moment. 

You have an ability I truly admire.  With words, you create such rich images that I love to read but couldn't write in any way!  Thank you for sharing your rich talent!

I’m glad you liked the reworked aphorisms in Number 15. They seem almost quaint these days. There is something immensely comforting about the sound of rain on the roof. Thanks for reading these, and for your very kind comments. 

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11 hours ago, weinerdog said:

II agree with what @pvtguy said about No.15 and No.18 IMO was perfect I think every reader would agree with that. I wonder if you have been to my house because the first couple of lines of No.12 describes my cupboard perfectly😄

The spice rack full of nuances redeems my kitchen, I hope. There’s a common experience with having a crush, yet being to bashful to do anything about it; I’ve been there many times. I’m glad you liked the four aphorisms, which were fun to write. Thank you very much for reading these and for sharing your kind thoughts. 

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2 hours ago, Mikiesboy said:

Such lovely work—as @chris191070 says, wonderful. I'm glad you tried the Senryu. The alliteration poems made me smile, as did day 15. Thank you for all of these.

Thank you for showing me a senryu. It was fun to attempt. The alliteration poems were pure fun to play with, and I’m very glad you liked them. I may try additional aphorisms another day - you can tell they were fun, too. Thank you for your reactions and for reading these!

  • Love 3
1 hour ago, AC Benus said:

Another accomplished week’s worth of poems, but the first . . .

Wow. Awake at Night is such a purposeful Skyscraper. It’s beautifully weighted at the end, but subtly so. Wonderful.

 

That skyscraper speaks to so many nights in March and April, when a cold rain blows in from the northwest. I sometimes wonder what the trees are saying to the rain and wind, even as the sound of the brook comforts me and them. Thanks so much for your kindness in responding to these. 

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