Poems I love by Cynthia Sharp

Taste of the Wind

How I miss

What we would have been

The ghost I finally

let go from my side

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Untitled Tanka

Lips tingling citrus

in the last days of summer

your ghost vanishes

as the moon aches for the night

circling the earth to come back

Each poem discusses loss using powerful imagery to evoke about the sadness of the situation. I love how poetry gives a writer the means to share something personal without disclosing the intimate details.

Featured Writer

Midnight Resolutions©Carolyn Lukas

Midnight approaches with dizzying speed
As find myself amidst a party of strangers
Drinking champagne
And trying not to get tipsy.
I look for a man worthy of my kiss.
Gone are the days when a knight in shining armor
Would ride in on his white horse
And sweep you off your feet.
Now I search the faces marred by time and experience
They mirror my own;
Which I have wrapped in resolutions
That can only grasp at the hope of becoming….
That healthier woman
Who has lost those stubborn 20 pounds.
That adventurous woman
Who has shaken off the chains of fear and anxiety
And found happiness in her heart’s desires.
That beautiful woman
Who has escaped the ravages of time
And seems to shine with an inner light.
It all seems so out of reach…
But the New Year approaches with promise
And one must rise to the occasion
Letting hope and dreams dance
In the limelight of possibility.
Carolyn is a dear friend of mine on Writing.com. I enjoy reading her poetry, short stories and her blog entries. This poem won a recent contest on WDC.

 

Two Cigarettes later

I was so excited reading January and February’s edition of Poets and Writers and saw Craig Morgan Teicher’s article about Writing Badly. He discussed his approach to creativity. One of the authors he mentioned was Norman MacCaig, and he featured one of my favorites Impasse. I included it below along with one of my other fav’s Sounds of the Day. Great minds think alike!  I decided to share him with you too!

Two Cigarettes! That’s what Norman MacCaig once told an interviewer about how long it takes to write a poem. By the time he died in 1996, he had written 3,897 poems.  I hope I can accomplish as many in my lifetime. MacCaig wrote poetry, mostly lyric and often short but very profound.  I loved his lack of self-censorship. He wrote good honest poems about life’s conflicts that still apply today. I love his use of clunky words, it reminds me imagery is possible by improvising with language. Poetry to me is best when it’s inhibited. I find Maccaig inspiring when I need to be reminded to trust my mind… the words will come. I recommend you spend some time reading his collection, you won’t be disappointed.

Impasse by MacCaig

Everything’s different now from

what

everything was. Good.

But I like it too when I look 

at a thing I’ve known for years,

like a landscape, and you, think

they ‘re just the same,

they haven’t changed a bit.

I know that’s nonsense.

Do you hear my voice faltering?

Do you see the moistness in my

eyes?

Time loves one child-difference,

and kills another-sameness,

and torments us all

who love both.

Sounds of the Day
When a clatter came,
it was horses crossing the ford.
When the air creaked, it was
a lapwing seeing us off the premises
of its private marsh. A snuffling puff
ten yards from the boat was the tide blocking and
unblocking a hole in a rock.
When the black drums rolled, it was water
falling sixty feet into itself.

When the door
scraped shut, it was the end
of all the sounds there are.

You left me
beside the quietest fire in the world.

I thought I was hurt in my pride only,
forgetting that,
when you plunge your hand in freezing water,
you feel
a bangle of ice round your wrist
before the whole hand goes numb.

http://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poetry/poets/norman-maccaig
Poets & Writers--Inspiration January-February 2017

Celebrate a Poet

Poetry books typically sell a couple thousand copies at best.  So why would a writer choose poetry if it only reaches a limited market, instead of jumping onto the bandwagon of authors writing books in every genre imaginable? Why write at all?

The answer to me is my intimate moments, the fearful and joyful ones that touch me with the barest of words while remaining true to the origins of language. I’ve sought poetry when my children were born, when a friend married, for a eulogy when a family member or a friend died. I wrote poetry to help me stay sane during my darkest moments. I’ve read numerous poems looking for the perfect one for my wedding vows for my second marriage. It’s something most of us have done at some point in our lives. Poetry thrives in those privileged moments. It gives meaning to those jumbled emotions running rampant in our minds. “There is not a particle of life which does not bear poetry within it” Gustave Flaubert

Poetry can’t be generalized or even reduced it to a mere trend because it satisfies an essential need.  Emily Dickinson says, “If I read a book and it makes my whole body so cold no fire can warm me, I know that is poetry. If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry.” Robert Frost says, “A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. Poetry is what gets lost in translation.”

Poetry is emotion. If you consider some of the works written by Thoreau, Emerson, Wordsworth, Hass, Whitman, Bukowski, Rash, Frost, Dickinson, Plath, Sexton, Ginsberg, Kerouac, and Dylan poetry is a powerful expression in times of celebration and crisis that give people a way to live in their lives by filling in the words we need, in just the right moment. You could ask a poet to explain his poem but you would lose the joy of the discovery and lose sight of the meaning. Charles Bukowski sums it well “Poetry is what happens when nothing else can.”

“All that is gold does not glitter,

Not all those who wander are lost;

The old that is strong does not wither,

Deep roots are not reached by the frost.

From the ashes a fire shall be woken,

A light from the shadows shall spring;

Renewed shall be blade that was broken,

The crownless again shall be king.”

― J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring

“The Road Not Taken

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,

And sorry I could not travel both

And be one traveler, long I stood

And looked down one as far as I could

To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,

And having perhaps the better claim,

Because it was grassy and wanted wear;

Though as for that the passing there

Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay

In leaves no step had trodden black.

Oh, I kept the first for another day!

Yet knowing how way leads on to way,

I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh

Somewhere ages and ages hence:

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—

I took the one less traveled by,

And that has made all the difference.”

― Robert Frost

As you enter this new year, read a poem or write one to heal the wounds inflicted by reason as Novalis suggests. “Poetry heals the wounds inflicted by reason.”

-Novalis.

Now that I am older, I realize only I can write the page before life ends and I will have lost my chance to engage. Happy New Year to you and yours. Celebrate a poet in 2017!

Sharing  poems I love

Ron Rash is an amazing poet, there are very few like him in our time. His work gives haunting imagery of life in rural America. I am sharing his work with you, hopefully you will find the same joy I do in his writing!

The Day The Gates Closed

We lose so much in this life

shouldn’t some things stay she said,

no human sound, the populars

and oaks cut down so even

the wind had nothing to rub

a whisper from, just silence

rising over a valley

deep and wide as a glacier.

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Wet Moon

Come look, my grandmother said,

the moon’s shed its skin, see how

big and bright, and when I asked

where the old skin was she laughed.

Later that night I waked,

looking out the window,I found

moon glow draped on the barn roof

like clothes on a line,and

wished for a tall ladder to lean

against the wood slats and raise

a finger, brush the cool skin

that had once been cloaked with stars.

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These two poems are written by Ron Rash from his book Ron Rash Poems {New and Selected} Copyright 2016 Harper Collins Publisher