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

Please share a comment below if you wish.
Know that your comment will only appear after I approve it.
If you are under 13 years old, please only comment 
with a parent or as part of a group with your teacher.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Wallow in Wonder Day 19 - Eat It - Advice Poems


Welcome to Day 19 of Wallow in Wonder!  For my 2016 National Poetry Month project, I will celebrate learning and writing from learning, writing poems from each daily Wonder at Wonderopolis.  As I did with my Dictionary Hike in 2012, I am looking to surprise myself with new inspiration daily.  This year, such inspiration will show up in my inbox each morning.  I will print it and carry each Wonderopolis Wonder around all day...and in the afternoon or evening, I will write and post the poem for the next day.  

I invite anyone who wishes to take this challenge too.  Just read today's wonder over at Wonderopolis, and write a poem inspired by it for tomorrow.  Share it tomorrow at your own site, and if you wish to link in my comments for others to find (or share your poem there), please feel free to do so tomorrow, the day after the Wonder is published at Wonderopolis.  If you would like to share any ways you have used Wallow in Wonder or your own site (safe for children only please), please feel free to do so in the comments.

My April Poems Thus Far

April 1 - So Suddenly - a poem inspired by Wonder #1659 
April 2 - Thankful Journal - a poem inspired by Wonder #1660
April 3 - The Storm Chaser - a poem inspired by Wonder #779
April 4 - A Jar of Glitter - a poem inspired by Wonder #641
April 5 - To Make Compost - a poem inspired by Wonder #1661
April 6 - Deciding Now - a poem inspired by Wonder #1662
April 7 - Hummingbird's Secret - a poem inspired by Wonder #1663
April 8 - Limits - a poem inspired by Wonder #1664
April 9 - Sundogs - a poem inspired by Wonder #1665
April 10 - Perspective - a poem inspired by Wonder #128
April 11 - At the History Museum - a poem inspired by Wonder #115
April 12 - Seventy-Five Years Ago Today - a poem inspired by Wonder #1666
April 13 - Homer's Poem - a poem inspired by Wonder #1667
April 14 - The Right - a poem inspired by Wonder #1668
April 15 - 5:00 am - a poem inspired by Wonder #1669
April 16 - Writing - a poem inspired by Wonder #1670
April 17 - Sometimes - a poem inspired by Wonder #194
April 18 - Once - a poem inspired by Wonder #192

And now for Day 19!


A Friend in a Bowl
by Amy LV




Students - Greetings from Houston, Texas!  I usually write to you from Holland, NY...but I am at the Texas Library Association Annual Conference this week.  I am very thankful to Scholastic for bringing me and to Pomelo Books for inviting me to be part of this panel with some of my favorite poets.


Today's poem came at a good time for me, right on the day I was suggesting that my own child eat some chicken noodle soup. It's been a sicky winter for our family, and so soup has been a good food to have around.  

Reading the Wonder about chicken noodle soup, I was interested by the fact that it really does seem to have healing properties.  I am a fan of comfort foods, and it's neat to think about how both the ingredients and the love in a food can help us to feel better...in so many ways.

Can you see how I have woven just one rhyming word through this poem.  It took a bit of time to make it work, as I always insist to myself that my rhyming poems make total sense...but I think I did it.  And as I do like to do sometimes, I did bring that first line around to the end again.

Today's poem is an advice poem, trying to convince someone to do something. Have you ever written an advice poem?  If you're not sure what to write about today, you might make a little list in your notebook of pieces of advice you might give - to a person, or to an animal, or to something else.  Perhaps a poem idea will spring from this list!

It is my privilege to host teacher and librarian Stefanie Cole and her students from Ontario, Canada at Sharing Our Notebooks this month. This is a fantastic post full of notebook inspiration, a video clip, and a great book giveaway from Stefanie. Please check it out, and leave a comment over there to be entered into the giveaway.

Happy Day 19 of National Poetry Month 2016!  

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, January 2, 2015

A Box of Snow - Wish Poems



Present for a Faraway Friend
Photo by Amy LV




Students - We have snow again!  Here south of Buffalo, NY where I live, it has been a snow-free couple of weeks.  And now the snow is back.  Today I am thinking about all of you who live in snow-free places, wishing I could send you some snow (but not too much) to play with.

Do you have a wish for someone else?  Is there something you have that you would like to share with others?  If yes, then you might enjoy writing about it.  What better way to begin the new year than with a wish for a friend?

Today's poem does have a bit of rhyme and a bit of meter.  What do you notice about the syllables in this poem?  What do you notice about the rhyme?  If you ever feel stuck getting started with your own writing, you might find a poem with a simple rhyme and syllable count - such as this one - and try writing with the same number of syllables per line or with the same rhyme scheme.

Teachers and Adult Readers - For those of you who might not know, I also keep a Poem Farm Facebook Page.  This page is full of regular links to poems I love as well as poetry news I find.  If you choose to "like" it, please click on the arrow to "get notifications" if you would like to see the posts in your feed.

In publishing news, I am excited to share that I have signed a contract with Crown/Random House for a picture book currently titled ALL I KNOW. No date yet, but lots of happiness over here!

At this time of year, we have the fun of peeking at some 2014 favorites lists.  Don't miss the 2014 Nerdy Awards for Poetry and Novels and Verse and the 2014 Cybils Poetry Finalists.  Many congratulations to one and all.

Tricia is hosting this first Poetry Friday of 2015 over at The Miss Rumphius Effect.  Stop by and gobble up all of the wonderful offerings from poetry friends near and far.

Happy 2015 to you and yours!  Many wishes for a year full of poems and favorite new words!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Doll School - Writing About Play


Doll School
by Amy LV



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

Students - The idea for this poem came first from a conversation with a work friend.  She told me about her daughter Melanie who plays school with her dolls.  Hearing about this, I was immediately transported back to my childhood home in Vestal, NY, remembering how I played school for so many years with neighbors, animals, stuffed animals, dolls, everyone. I always wanted to be a teacher, and now I am lucky to be a writing teacher.  Our play helps determine who we will become when we grow up.

If you look at the rhyme scheme in this poem, you will notice that except for the italicized teacher voice stanza, each odd line rhymes with its next even line.  The line breaks, however, do not line up perfectly with the rhyme.  It just seemed better to me this way, seemed like it made more sense.  If you listen to the recording, you will see what I mean. The way I read the poem is the way that makes sense to my ear, something very important for poets and all writers to consider.

What do you like to play?  What did you once play?  Our play lives are important in so many ways, one of which is that they are storehouses of joyful writing ideas!  I so wish that I could sit down with Melanie and some cocoa today, just to talk about this.

Robyn is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup over at Life on the Deckle Edge. Visit her place to take a tour of all of the poetry goodness in the Kidlitosphere today!  And if you are doing some literary holiday shopping, don't miss Robyn's etsy shop, artsyletters!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Monday, January 21, 2013

A Poem for the Birds

Celebrate with Seedy Fare!
by Amy LV



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

Students - We have bird feeders outside many of our windows, and my husband Mark keeps them full of bird goodies!  This means that our family gets to see little chickadees, cardinals, woodpeckers, and all sorts of other birds flying around as we read, do dishes, or just walk from room to room.  As I type this, my two daughters are standing behind my shoulders, peering out at the feeder in front of this window.  "Is that a female goldfinch?  It looks like there are two of those!  See the yellow on her chest?"

The way you live influences the things you write about. The more interesting things you do, the more interesting things you have to write about!

Today's poem has many things in common with a sonnet.  It has fourteen lines in iambic pentameter (daDA daDA daDA daDA daDA) with the even lines rhyming.  Then, at the end, the final couplet rhymes too.  My poem does not rhyme every alternate line, though, so it's not a true sonnet.  I enjoy playing with form; it feels like solving a puzzle when you try to find just the right place for just the right word.

Today we are home from school for Dr. Martin Luther King Day, a day celebrating a great man who bravely stood up for his beliefs and the rights of others.  You can read a poem I wrote in Dr. King's honor here.

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes!

Friday, August 10, 2012

Hands - What is Your Favorite Feeling?

 

Holding Hands
by Amy LV


Students - Last week I was working at Sprucelands horse camp, and that is why I was not here for Poetry Friday.  One bright afternoon, as campers rested after lunch, the "hill moms" (camp adults) decided to walk out into the mud with a flag we'd made out of an old t-shirt and some duct tape.  Well, one thing led to another after we planted the flag, and suddenly it was an all-out mud war.  All of us were covered in mud and laughing both evil and joyful laughs.  We washed off by lying in a stream, letting the cold wash over us as we sang songs together.

After rinsing, we sat in a circle holding hands, just talking about friendship.  Then, still hand-in-hand, we put our feet into our circle and laid back into the warm day, forming a circle of friendship that looked just like a sunshine.  

Later this week, as I sat with my neglected notebook, that day's feeling of holding hands with friends came right back to me.

What is one of your favorite feelings? Can you think of a time when you felt very connected to other people?  Jot a little list in your notebook of such feelings and times, because these are food for your writing life.  I am starting such a page in my notebook today.

Muddy Hill Moms - How Grateful I Am to You!
Photo by Joy Warren

Speaking of notebooks, this week I am so happy to welcome Alan Wright over at my other blog, Sharing Our Notebooks.  Alan shares his interesting insights into notebook-keeping along with a great suggestion for all of us to try.  Please stop by and leave a comment to be entered in the giveaway of a surprise notebook.  (I have not yet chosen it!)  Teachers - I am pleased to say that Sharing Our Notebooks is filling up with excellent resources for your teaching with notebooks...plus it holds ideas for grown-up notebook-keepers too!

Violet Nesdoly is hosting Poetry Friday for her first time today over at Violet Nesdoly/Poems.  If it's your first time visiting Poetry Friday, please know that all you have to do is head to her blog and enjoy the treats.  And of course you are always more than welcome to link to your own blog.

Here's wishing you a week full of friendship and silliness!

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes!