Showing posts with label Fire Poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fire Poems. Show all posts

Friday, September 15, 2023

Wishes & Fires & Sharing

Tabletop Fire for Writing Time
Photo by Amy LV


Students - It is a coincidence that last week's poem begins with "You asked..." and this week's begins with "You ask..." Perhaps I am thinking a lot about wishes these days? I invite you to do the same.

This poem grew from my love of fall, my love of staring at fires, and my love of seeing how one thing (wood) changes to another (flame, ask, smoke, heat). 

It also grew from the meter of a different poem, "Faults" by Sara Teasdale. It begins:

They came to tell your faults to me,

They named them over one by one;

Read the rest of the (six line) poem HERE.

Each line of Teasdale's poem has 8 syllables, and the rhyme scheme is ABBCAC, which means that line 1 (A) rhymes with the line 5, line 2 (B rhyme) rhymes with line 3. And line 4 (C) rhymes with line 6. I began with keeping her strict meter but then veered off toward the end...on purpose. While I am able to continue such a tight rhyme, I wanted a little of a drifty imagining feeling, just dreaming of those old oaks.

Go ahead and borrow something from another writer this week. Maybe borrow from me who borrowed from Sara and write a six line poem with 8 syllables in all or most lines. Or maybe read something by a different writer and borrow a way to repeat or a way to find a topic or a way to end your poem. Remember, borrowing is not stealing. I never copy others' poems and call them my own. But I DO notice their writing techniques and borrow those. This is one way to learn to write.

If you would like to enjoy a fire with me...here you go. I wrote by its light.

Rose is hosting this week's Poetry Friday roundup today at Imagine the Possibilities with a neat reverso about fall. This is a form that, to be honest, scares me a little bit, and I admire what she has done with it! Each Friday, all are invited to share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship in this open and welcoming poetry community.

Warm and cozy, toasty and crackly wishes to you, my friends....

xo,

Amy

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Flames are Horses - Metaphors

Heat


 
Click the arrow to hear me read this poem to you.

Students - Here you can see another partnership between Diane Mayr and me. I regularly participate in Amy Souza's SPARK, a regular way for artists, musicians, and writers to share work and inspire each other.  This is a poem that I wrote quite a while ago, and I have come back to it again and again...making changes here and there.  Diane's art above was inspired by today's poem, and I think that the way she layered words and images over each other is just hauntingly lovely.

Sometimes we all look at objects or places and think, "This looks just like...."  or "This makes me think of...."    or "This is a...."  When we compare two things in such a way, we are thinking metaphorically, allowing one thing to become something else in our minds.  In today's poem, you can see that the flames really do become horses: galloping, cantering, riding night, leaving hoof prints.  That is so because in this poem, I wanted to hold one comparison in my hand (flames are horses) and carry it all of the way through every stanza.

You might wish to try this sometime. Stare around the room you sit in right now, or out of your bus window, or into the night sky.  Does something make you think about something else?  Is the connection strong enough that you might weave a whole poem around it?  Your class might like to try this together first.  If you do, please let me know!

Our other pairing (with Diane's photograph inspiring my poem) is posted here at SPARK, and I also posted it last Poetry Friday. I thank Diane for our collaboration and look forward to SPARK 18!

Today is National Punctuation Day!  Here are a few poems from the archives to help you celebrate: Inky Flyers, Emily Apostrophe, and Nolan the Colon.

This week over at my other blog, Sharing Our NotebooksBarry Lane shares his notebooks and offers a generous giveaway of two of his books about writing and a CD.  A winner will be drawn on Sunday, September 30...the beginning of Banned Books Week!

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