Wednesday, April 17, 2013

NaPoWriMo #17: Good Morning, Chloe!

Good morning! Yes, it seems to be,
When joyfully greeted by a puppy,
Who leaps like a carp on top of my lap
And, ignoring the keyboard's tap, tap, tap,
She licks my fingers, one by one,
muffing my efforts to write this poem.
So I pet her ears and she snuggles in deep,
and just when I think she's fallen asleep,
Up! She springs lightly and bids me to play,
though I've barely yawned last night's sleep away.
Good morning!  Yes, it seems to be:
Laughing while chasing a peppy puppy.

--April 17, 2013
Prompt: a poem of greeting.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

NaPoWriMo #16: Dragon (Fake Translation Poem)

Dragon

Rumors stolen from a sleeping poet.
The sky passes slowly.

She lies in patient slumber.
She dreams of drowned rowans.

Literary ambitions grow wild.
The worm chews at deft delicacy.

Precision turns shaky.
Haikus cannot be helmed.

Problems arise
And so does the dragon.

Heart's truth
Whored by opium.

Worm's Victory. Originality's Widow.
Pyres made of coffee.

--April 16, 2013
Prompt: Find a poem in a language you don't know and write a fake translation of it.

Actual Poem

DRZAZGA
Ewa Lipska

Lubię panią pisze do mnie dwudziestoletni poeta.
Początkujący cieśla słów.

Jego list pachnie tarcicą.
Jego muza drzemie jeszcze w różanym drewnie.

W literackim tartaku ambitny hałas.
Czeladnicy okładają łatwowierny język fornirem.

Przycinają nieśmiałe sklejki zdań.
Wystrugane heblem haiku.

Problemy zaczynają się
z wbitą w pamięć drzazgą.

Trudno ją wyjąć
jeszcze trudniej opisać.

Lecą wióry. Ogryzki aniołów.
Pył do samego nieba.

Splinter
Ewa Lipska

I like you, a twenty-year-old poet writes to me.
A beginning carpenter of words.

His letter smells of lumber.
His muse still sleeps in rosewood.

Ambitious noise in a literary sawmill.
Apprentices veneering a gullible tongue.

They cut to size the shy plywood of sentences.
A haiku whittled with a plane.

Problems begin
with a splinter lodged in memory.

It is hard to remove
much harder to describe.

Wood shavings fly. The apple cores of angels.
Dust up to the heavens.

Monday, April 15, 2013

NaPoWriMo #15: Still Lovely is the Dying Rose

Still lovely is the dying rose.
Old petals grow a deeper red.
Grandma, face stilled by sleep's repose,
Lies cat-like curled upon her bed.

--April 15, 2013

Prompt: A Pantun, a Malay poem with four lines, abab rhyme scheme, and 8-12 syllables per rhyme.  The first two lines and the second two lines should not have a logical, straight-forward connection.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

NaPoWriMo #14: The Stepmother's Tale

Why should I grant an interview
To one who chides me on my sin
And revels in my current squalor
As you heap judgement on my kin?

For my abuse of Princess Ella,
Call me wicked.  I'll forgive.
But if you dare to call my daughters
That unsightly adjective

I will fly into a rage
And box your ears full with my broom.
Cinders fall upon your face
As I eject you from my home.

But speak to me as once I was:
a noble woman filled with pride
Who loved a captain foreigner
And sailed the ocean by his side.

Two lovely daughters I bore him
And no one called them hideous.
In far lands their dark complexions
Were considered quite beauteous.

Alas, for them, my husband died.
Bereaved, I married his first mate.
The fortunes my love willed to me
Twice doubled his modest estate.

And yet upon our wedding night
His true nature was shown.
He made my daughters servants
In their very own home.

When they cleaned the fireplace,
He said, "Does it not suit them
For who can see the ashes
Smeared upon their swarthy skin?"

Three years they toiled, 'til his death.
I watched helpless all the while.
My daughters bore his mocking
and forgot how to smile.

After his death, the chimney
Still needed to be swept.
Time had come for justice.
Rose-white Ella paid the debt.

Innocent of wrong, perhaps,
But she could not disguise,
The lightness of her figure
Nor the laughter in her eyes.

Three girls suffered the same fate,
Only one wins the reward.
The plain ones live as paupers
While the beauty gets the lord.

I won't send my apologies
To her or any other.
To my own daughters I regret
They had so poor a mother.

--April 14, 2013
Prompt: Persona poem.  (Write from the point of view of a larger-than-life character.)

Saturday, April 13, 2013

NaPoWriMo #13: Walking the Dog in 5 Haikus

Lupine from Father's
garden.  Yellow blossoms rise
like bricks of butter.

Saturday sprinklers.
Pitbull canters through wet grass.
Paw prints seem so small

Pebbles cannot form
a garden.  It may be art,
but gardens must live.

Dandelion stems
rule the yard.  It makes me think
of sad-eyed children.

A thirsty puppy
gulps down water. Bi-bi-bi birds
sing in my back yard.

--April 13, 2013
Prompt: Take a walk and write your observations into a poem.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Weekly Update: 4-12-13

I guess some things don't go as you plan.  When I wrote up my schedule for the spring, I didn't plan on my grandma being diagnosed with terminal cancer.  But that's what happened.  This is the time for me to take a close look at my life and figure out what has to change.  Writing accounts for only a small portion of that change.

This week is spring vacation for my school.  At the beginning, I planned to use the extra time to get work done, namely to continue with NaNoWriMo and NaPoWriMo as planned and to try and sneak in another draft of my chapter.  I also had some social engagements.  As everyone does, I tried to schedule in too much during my vacation time and got stressed out.  Then my mom called and asked me to come home.

My grandma was in surgery.  She got out of the hospital on Thursday.  I arrived Wednesday night.  Now spring breaks are not well coordinated, so although I'm on break now, my mother and my aunt (who both work as aids) are not.  They had to take time off work.  At the same time, my grandma is being admitted into hospice.  I was there to keep Grandma company and help out.

They asked me to take off next week to help take care of my grandma, as she recovers from surgery and adjusts to these end-of-life changes.  Since my work is spotty at best, I agreed.  I'm not quite sure how next week will go, but I'll deal with it when it comes.

As for my writing, well, I stayed on track Monday through Wednesday, not so much on Thursday and Friday--for obvious reasons.  I'm struggling to do NaNoWriMo and NaPoWriMo.  If I keep up with those, it will be a miracle.  All other writing is currently on hiatus.  Whatever gets done gets done.

NaPoWriMo #12: Two Flowers

I sigh to see a violet
Solitary iris
Standing still and quiet
In a pool of twilight.

But when I glance at scarlet flax,
Black-centered, dancing,
Stems blown back,
I don't know why it makes me laugh.

--April 4, 2013

Thursday, April 11, 2013

NaPoWriMo #11: Childhood Home

In the morning hush,
the garden appears faded,
like the couch cushions.
I wait to visit Grandma
in the hospital, alone.

--April 11, 2013
Prompt: A tanka, a Japanese poem with 5-7-5-7-7 syllables.  It should have a surprise at the end.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

NaPoWriMo #10: Monarchs

When I see your skinny legs
Poking from your gaudy robes
My belly roils like scrambled eggs.
I want to scream and run.

You taste nectar with your toe
Oh, how you disgust me.
You can't travel alone, no, no.
You bring along your family.

Others praise your noble grace
I just see fragility.
Corpse lie in every place
Waiting to surprise me.

Why do people who display
Your dead body under glass
Always look to me and say,
"Becky, you're one strange lass!"

--April 10, 2013
Prompt: An Un-Love Poem.  Anyone who knows me knows I have a deep hatred/ disgust for butterflies, especially Monarch Butterflies.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

NaPoWriMo #9: Dance, Princess, Dance

Dance, princess, dance
Under starlit canopies:
Golden trunks, silver leaves.
Clover made of amethyst.

Twirl, princess, twirl.
Scent of peaches, apples red,
Cherries resting in their bed.
Wine-filled goblets set in pearl.

Lurch, princess, lurch
Near a pool, but don't look in
If you dare not see your sin.
Revel only in your mirth.

Pant, princess, pant.
Snake-filled branches, rotting fruit,
Demons gnashing teeth at you.
Spells you cannot disenchant.

Fall, princess, fall
to your pillow, sleep's your friend.
We will find you soon again.
Tattered slippers fill the hall.

--April 8, 2013
Prompt: Noir.  This is a fantasy poem, but I think it has a Noir undertone.  I wrote it last night.