shredding old bank statements
I still know
where the money went
++++
dog licks my feet
with fervor;
they're his drug of choice
++++
a loud whine
wakes everyone on the block;
sound of alternator dying
++++
last night's glass of wine
left by the open window;
pollen floats on top
.
.
.
Showing posts with label "one poem a day". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "one poem a day". Show all posts
Friday, April 2, 2010
Poem # 2: Three Senryu, One Haiku
Labels:
"one poem a day",
alternator,
dog,
feet,
haiku,
poems,
senryu,
shredder
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Poem #1: What This Poem Is Not
This writer would like to get a few things straight,
right off the bat, about this first poem, this
first poem of a month of poems.
This is not an exercise in strained rhyme.
No holiday will be mentioned, with its attendant emotional baggage to build on.
No pets, alive or dead, will appear, as a metaphor for attachment,
loss or impermanence.
No shaking of a fist at the government, television news,
the current state of pop music or the weather.
No moon will slowly rise over the third stanza, imparting an image of cold loneliness.
No reference will be made to specific movies released in the 1930s,
or quotes from their dialogue used.
No names of famous personages will be dropped, or picked up.
No essential secret about the meaning of life will be divulged,
as the writer really never had any in the first place.
All the writer wants to do for this first poem
is to describe how he's looking out his second-floor window;
the neighbors are having their first garage sale
and already people are picking through boxes of shoes, children's clothes,
bad art and mismatched coffee cups.
But I am taking my time with my own coffee, in my own mismatched cup--
not to rummage through what others no longer need,
but to instead clear away the dead
(there, I've used the word)
from last year's garden, and make room
for those rising from the ground
(and there is a holiday reference, which snuck in)
All I want to do is clear my garden.
The rest, dear reader, is for you to figure out.
right off the bat, about this first poem, this
first poem of a month of poems.
This is not an exercise in strained rhyme.
No holiday will be mentioned, with its attendant emotional baggage to build on.
No pets, alive or dead, will appear, as a metaphor for attachment,
loss or impermanence.
No shaking of a fist at the government, television news,
the current state of pop music or the weather.
No moon will slowly rise over the third stanza, imparting an image of cold loneliness.
No reference will be made to specific movies released in the 1930s,
or quotes from their dialogue used.
No names of famous personages will be dropped, or picked up.
No essential secret about the meaning of life will be divulged,
as the writer really never had any in the first place.
All the writer wants to do for this first poem
is to describe how he's looking out his second-floor window;
the neighbors are having their first garage sale
and already people are picking through boxes of shoes, children's clothes,
bad art and mismatched coffee cups.
But I am taking my time with my own coffee, in my own mismatched cup--
not to rummage through what others no longer need,
but to instead clear away the dead
(there, I've used the word)
from last year's garden, and make room
for those rising from the ground
(and there is a holiday reference, which snuck in)
All I want to do is clear my garden.
The rest, dear reader, is for you to figure out.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Let's Begin: A Prologue
This is a 30-day blog. Beginning April 1, I will attempt to write one poem a day. Short, long, serious or funny, worthless or worth reading--it will depend on what I feel like writing. Generally, they will be written within two hours of my waking up. Or around lunchtime. Or just before I go to bed.
You're welcome to comment.
Now, for my first trick ...
.
.
.
You're welcome to comment.
Now, for my first trick ...
.
.
.
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