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POETRY PUB: EMOTIVE. READ AND BLEED.****EDIT*****MORE ON THE POEM GRIEF! - Cyndi Macmillan's Blog

About Cyndi Macmillan
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Cyndi MacMillan lives in a small town in Ontario that is home to North America’s largest working waterwheel. Her writing has appeared in notable Canadian literary journals and local newspapers. 

A Cruel Light is her debut gothic mystery (4/4/2023). She has been a Jill-of-all-trades, but for as long as she can remember, she has dreamt of being a novelist.  Hard work and the wonderful team at Crooked Lane Books have made that dream a reality.  Please note that her husband and daughter kindly keep her coffee mug filled when she is wrestling with a suspenseful chapter.   During a pandemic lockdown, the family adopted a rescue cat who chirps. 

When not writing, Cyndi enjoys reading Gothics, scrapbooking, and losing horribly at board games.  Works-in-progress include the second (and third) Annora Garde Mystery, a Canadian noir series, and a standalone horror mystery, so more often than not, Cyndi is writing.  She is a member of Crime Writers of Canada.

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POETRY PUB: EMOTIVE. READ AND BLEED.****EDIT*****MORE ON THE POEM GRIEF!

Blog Posted:3/20/2017 11:32:00 PM

            

Hello, there. The others are at the back, oddly quiet tonight.  Poets!  All moody and going on and on about emotion and the human condition. 

Well, you know the rules.  If you’re only popping in to badger Eugene, off you go.  If you are earnestly interested in the poetry discussion, want something to chew on and don’t mind a few hip and hobbity trolls who like to bandy about, who will freely comment as often as they like, who may have an actual sense of humour and and who believe in the ART of poetry, then seat yourself. 

 (We do not count comments in the pub. And comments do not have to stay on topic, as long as respect is shown.  No eye poking, beard pulling, slap and tickle or insult slinging.  Also, no cunningly disguised free verse attacks or out-and-out anti-publication cattiness.  However, chummy teasing is --- of course --- allowed, even encouraged.  My bouncers are lazy, but they are very big.) 

So, let me know if you liked anything at all about any of the poems that are being shared tonight.  It’s a buffet tonight.  Tuck in.  There’s more to come...

(****all poems are being posted here for study and review purposes only and will be removed from this blog in the very near future.**** )

 

PS-- sorry about the odd line spacing!  Grrrr...

 

If you want an example of patience

by Casey Patrick

 

imagine drowning, or

the desert’s thirsty ground.

The Penelopes of history, every Aegeus

throwing a stone down an empty well.

The whole idea of fishing. The fact of glue and tape.

Any of these will do.

A mirror. A beetle. God

or whatever’s out there kicking its small legs.

Or a three-year-old trying to sit still for a lifetime of

five minutes.

That work. Lucifer chained to a lake of fire.

The first time anyone heard that. How long they

imagined

they could stand it.

 

Don’t forget your mother

and how you’ve grown to resemble her. Consider

the infinite groping of tongues,

how many languages there are to get through.

 And our hands. And our teeth. Our skin.

The heart with no murmur. The eye

with the right balance of moisture, not too dry. It

seems

 

we are endlessly patient, then.

The countdown to the explosion.

The slow work of aiming. Shining our flashlights

at night that swallows

our callused feet. And our skulls,

fusing by age two. The way we love someone

from a distance. And the way love rips out

the seams of us, stitch by stitch in the night.

 

http://composejournal.com/articles/want-example-patience/

 

 

 

Caritas

by Rachael Boast

 

(St Andrews Cathedral)

 

These stones speak a level language
murmured word by word
a speech pocked and porous with loss
and the slow hungers of weathering.

 

And there, in the broken choir, children
are all raised voice, loving the play of outline
and absence where the dissembled god
has shared his shape and homed us.

 

At the end of the nave, the east front stands
both altered and unchanged,
its arch like a glottal stop.

 

And what comes across, half-said
into all that space, is that it’s enough
to love the air we move through.

 

http://www.griffinpoetryprize.com/caritas/

 

 

Unlike objects, two stories can occupy the same space

By Charles Peek

 

Out along the last curve in the brick walk

the grass has begun to green,

with the freezing cold and coming snow

its certain fate.

 

The cranes make the same mistake,

fields of red capped heads attest their arrival

just before the worst blizzard of winter

makes it impossible to tell the field from the river.

 

And we, too, have known these mortal mishaps,

miscalculated our time, found ourselves out of step,

arriving too early, staying on too late,

misjudging the nearness, the vengeance of the storm.

 

The cranes, the grass, they tell us:

this can go on for millions of years.

 

 

Grief

By Barbara Crooker

 

is a river you wade in until you get to the other side.

But I am here, stuck in the middle, water parting

around my ankles, moving downstream

over the flat rocks. I'm not able to lift a foot,

move on. Instead, I'm going to stay here

in the shallows with my sorrow, nurture it

like a cranky baby, rock it in my arms.

I don't want it to grow up, go to school, get married.

It's mine. Yes, the October sunlight wraps me

in its yellow shawl, and the air is sweet

as a golden Tokay. On the other side,

there are apples, grapes, walnuts,

and the rocks are warm from the sun.

But I'm going to stand here,

growing colder, until every inch

of my skin is numb. I can't cross over.

Then you really will be gone.

 

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poems/detail/88766

 

**************edit*****************

 

Because this poem spoke to so many, I decided to read more of Barbara Crooker's poetry and found a poem called, "Demeter,"  which shares her anguish at losing her daughter to a head injury that sent her into a coma.  She developed pneumonia and died.  It is almost as though the two pieces belong together  (and I wonder if they do so in her book.  She's written several.  I've decided to add a link to the poem)

Reading the two together is heartwrenching.

https://superstitionreview.asu.edu/issue2/poetry/barbaracrooker

 

_____________________

*****Edit*****

 

I decided to add one of my own, published this winter in the Prairie Journal (Issue 67).  Ruben had commented he liked the idea of going gung-ho on a subject, a concentrated focus.  I'd seen this approach to poetry and decided to try it on the theme of colour blindness.  I enjoyed the single-mindedness so much that I will do this again.  I encourage you to give it a go, yourself! 

 

Taupe Fireworks and Anemic Kaleidoscopes

By Cyndi MacMillan

 

                           Deuteranopia: a red/green colour vision deficiency

                           which can interfere with the ability to recognize the colours

                           red, green, purple, gray and some turquoise hues.

 

 

Winter cardinals wear plainest trench coats.

Every jade Buddha is recast as bone.

Monet’s lilies float their driftwood pads

            upon sandstone waters.

 

Pasty balloons announce the birth of daughters.

A red stoplight glows frigid cinders

while eggshell-ivy twines

                        upon oatmeal bricks.

 

Unseen, the green fairy in the cup —

absinthe ferments into Swedish bitters.

Grapes ripen, become sweet, granite clusters.

                        Volcanos erupt such drab, beige heat.

 

A prick of the finger bleeds liquescent cardboard 

and lipstick dimly marks you with a khaki kiss.

All Christmas wreaths: wheat or ecru.

            Each Valentines:  doilies and concrete.

 

 



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Date: 3/26/2017 12:08:00 PM
Have bought Barabara's Gold collection.She is at her best on life's personal themes, check her Sustenance for example
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Date: 3/26/2017 12:16:00 AM
Thank you Cyndi!! I'm going to go read some Barbara! I've been standing in the same river for a long time...anniversary storms raise its banks... but I'm still standing...in the same place... Big Hugggs and love you big bunches!!! -"Firefly"
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Date: 3/24/2017 10:20:00 AM
Barbara has had a number of life's problems in her family.I can't say I have experienced grief to the extent she quotes in her poem.But that last quatrain is full of empathy for those who have.Some say it is not helpful to dwell too long in this 'river' but Barbara's last line explains why some do.Happily for us she has shared hers in this lovely poem
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Date: 3/24/2017 10:11:00 AM
just looked her up on amazon, and she's prolific, several collections in print...i now see why she speaks to me...ah well, bang goes my resolve to stop buying so many books! lol
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Date: 3/24/2017 10:00:00 AM
thanks for that link, i took a gander, and i love her 'demeter' poem...wonderful lines such as "freckles stood out like stars" and pomegranates as "bleeding garnets tart on the tongue"; she's a very good writer, i enjoyed her ghazal, too; she's a poet who definitely speaks to me
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Brian Strand
Date: 3/24/2017 10:22:00 AM
Sorry link should read barbaracrooker.com
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Brian Strand
Date: 3/24/2017 10:13:00 AM
Cyndi you have introduced us to great human talent.For those who want more try her barabarcrooker.com for reviews/interviews/poem links etc.Also one of her collections is available quite cheaply on Amazon kindle (well in Us and Uk).
Date: 3/24/2017 8:24:00 AM
Hey guys, not sure if anyone will come back... but I decided to do a follow up on "Grief" by reading what I could find on Barbara Crooker. Her biography is solely professional. But I did find more of her poetry... including a poem called Demeter which is about the loss of her daughter... just before she left for college. If you read that one first, and then read "Grief" it tells the whole story.. even about her usage of holding her grief like a child she can not let go of. Beautiful and painful at the same time... wanted to share with you .... especially those who were deeply touched by the poem.
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Doug Vinson
Date: 3/24/2017 3:44:00 PM
'Demeter' is very sad but a kick-A$$ poem.
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Brian Strand
Date: 3/24/2017 11:07:00 AM
Sorry Cyndi my reply jumped tto above comment
Date: 3/22/2017 7:46:00 PM
I liked the bataboom ending & all of the verse titled Grief.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/23/2017 9:13:00 AM
I like when a poem grips you in those last lines and hold you there. I can forgive a poem almost anything, if every line that proceeds the ending becomes a necessity ... as if it was all leading to its conclusion. xoxoxo
Date: 3/22/2017 2:54:00 PM
I quite like Rachael Boast's 'Caritas.' I read it too fast the first time, and thought, "Oh yes - I know that feeling," because even as much a secular person, there's been rather a faint roaring in my ears in some cathedrals, a pleasurable vibration. Yet upon re-reading it seems that the cathedral's lesson is about loving the air we move through in a larger sense, not restricted to being in a church.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/23/2017 9:23:00 AM
But, yes, it all comes down to those last two lines and its about LIFE. Canitas is latin for "charity." And that does not live under a steeple, but on the streets and in the cold. Okay. NOW I'm off. Must WRITE!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/23/2017 9:18:00 AM
Caritas is a study in all the sound devices, as well... we tell children to "shhh" in church. Look: "ssshhhhared his ssshhhhape." Lots of alliteration. And the connotation I so love is there, too. The intentional use of the word: alter/ed.
Date: 3/22/2017 6:36:00 AM
and re the tokay wine...i don't think we need to know the significance of every single word in a poem; a bit of mystery, a few question marks, is a good thing!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/22/2017 8:11:00 AM
It's hers, isn't it? Like the grief. I suspect that two people sat and talked while they sipped that wine, and it was a special moment to her. Mystery can linger, too...
Date: 3/22/2017 6:31:00 AM
hey cynders, i love your poem! knocks spots off the others imho, but i would've called it simply 'anaemic kaleidoscopes'; i don't think you need the taupe fireworks bit because anaemic kaleidoscopes covers it all...now i've read the others properly, i like the first one the least, and probably the last one the most...she loves the sound of words - look at that 'sun', 'numb', 'gone' at the end of the poem! it could equally be about the death of a relationship, grieving that loss...love the poetry pub, it's a great way to learn!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/22/2017 8:08:00 AM
@Keith. YES! The poem is much broader than grass and crane, but in the way all creatures plod through their existence, try and try and try, but still make those judgement errors and it has always been that way ... and it will always BE that way.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/22/2017 8:04:00 AM
I, too, loved the mouth music in Crooker's. I'm still stuck (like she is) on that one "I can't cross over." Because it turns the whole "crossing over" 180 degrees. I'd never thought of it that way. Mourners (or those left by someone) cross over, TOO!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/22/2017 8:00:00 AM
:D I am still learning the 'less is more' lesson. You're right! The title could have definitely been trimmed. There is a year between submission and the actual publication of work (if accepted.) And in that year, poets learn much. At fifty, I'm still in my juvenilia stage, beak out of egg, but still pecking away ;)
Date: 3/21/2017 6:56:00 PM
Ooops! Sorry wrong room ...
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Anthony Mark
Date: 3/22/2017 5:36:00 AM
Your write is unusual ...
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 8:03:00 PM
Was that a streaker? Egad. We don't bite. I know I know, you can't stand when a poem has exploratory surgery. But I swear we treat them kindly.
Date: 3/21/2017 3:22:00 PM
hi, soul sis... i ran through these gems and i like 'em all.. quite partial to rachel's work : it is subtle yet the power of her diction is immense--i enjoy that kind of assault, the study of contrast as well ...ohh your poem is grand!... quite tactile using colors and fabric to define your theme... proud of you, dearie... hello to our growing girl.. huggs
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 3:44:00 PM
Rachel is astute enough to not overplay the piece, to leave some room to insert ourselves. I had no intention of including my poem, but I wanted to show Ruben the idea is a good one of piling on the images! Cheers. Gotta fly!
Date: 3/21/2017 2:20:00 PM
Cyndi your poem has a wistfulness that captures the regret of those like me who do not see some shades of colours as the majority do.With me it is not that I dont see reds and greens but it when they merge and are no longer vivid.Happily I did not want to be a train driver but green traffic lights can be a problem in low direct sunlight.I loved the common imagery you used to illustrate this issue.Your title says it all and confirms the truth of our other blog
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 8:22:00 PM
Brian, I am so tired today that I totally forgot what inspired this write!!! There are corrective glasses now! Check this out, I swear it is beautiful and I cried. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwg1avFOYHo This knocked me flat.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 8:16:00 PM
Thank you so much, Brian! I think those who see the whole spectrum of colour take it for granted and that, too, was my goal with this piece. I saw something incredible... WAIT A MINUTE!!! OOOH BRB!!! CAN'T WAIT TO SHOW YOU..
Date: 3/21/2017 11:29:00 AM
Cyndi I have a variety of red/green colour blindness.So Fall is a bit of a waste on me and some of my paintings often create comments from the family.It probably accounts for why I like Van Gogh and your poem gets to the gist ofthe problem Congrats on its publication I'm sure hits a chord with many like myself
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 12:37:00 PM
Brian, I am deeply touched that my poem struck a cord! I was worried that it might do the opposite. I do not have colour blindness, but I learned about it and was moved by what I read. My eyes aren't what they were... I need stronger glasses and miss what I used to be able to see. Thank you for your comment!
Date: 3/21/2017 8:12:00 AM
Casey Patrick's taught me to LET GO of my concern for line length. It's all about the stress of words, for him, and I love it. "Five minutes" "seems" the way the break in lines first mystifies and then sharpens the message! I've always loved contrast in a poem, the extremes (lol. ya think??) I love it's first two lines of too much and then not enough and it takes a mighty fine hand to juxtapose drowning against a desert and carry it off! I have an obsession with "of." Seriously, I weed them out, try to leave my best lines to "of." Each "of" in this work is perfect. Five in all. I'm glad not a one was taken out in revisions.
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Date: 3/21/2017 7:05:00 AM
cyndi, whenever you post these kind of poems in your pub i can only admire the use of language from afar, beat myself round the head and resolve to improve! i've only skimmed them so far, though, i haven't read them in depth; i like to skim poems first of all, like running my fingers over them...lol
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 8:01:00 AM
I do that, too! First readings are like a light mist in the distance, aren't they? We just take in the lovely view, let that mystic haze speak to us. As we read more, walk closer, we both gain something and lose something else. Hugs to you!
Date: 3/21/2017 5:03:00 AM
My favo(u)rite one is 'Grief 'by Barbara Crooker...I can really feel her words..Not wanting to let go of sorrow...because that sorrow is somehow attached to the one..who is so very special to her.She doesn't want to move on..Even if to a better life...She is still stucked there not letting go...I love it...Its so human..So real...Guess we all pass from such moments.Interesting blog Cyndi.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 7:29:00 AM
Thanks, Suncatcher! I like the simplicity of her language leading us on to that last line. I don't usually use words in their dual meanings in the same poem, dislike it, but she did it and I like it. "Rocks" and "rocks" verb and noun.
Date: 3/21/2017 4:22:00 AM
Cyndi,Especially liked Barbara's offering.The integral title with the first line.There is much reality in this poem amongst a stunning image'October sunlight wraps me in its yellow shawl'.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 3/21/2017 7:34:00 AM
I think it is so relatable. What we identify with is a kind of loyalty(?) I know from experience that sometimes healing feels like betrayal. Also, the ambiguity is so light as in "getting colder" and all the meanings of what cold feels like...

My Past Blog Posts

 
Ekphrastic Writing Within Fiction. An Article published in CRIMEREADS
Date Posted: 5/10/2023 10:26:00 AM
Publishing News, a Dream Come True, and an Article on Ekphrastic Writing
Date Posted: 4/15/2023 5:52:00 AM
A WRITER'S DREAM COME TRUE
Date Posted: 7/19/2022 7:17:00 AM
My novel will be published by Crooked Lane Books
Date Posted: 3/21/2022 12:16:00 PM
HOW THE POSITION OF POET LAUREATE HAS CHANGED
Date Posted: 11/6/2017 3:12:00 PM
WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THIS? OPEN DISCUSSION.
Date Posted: 10/24/2017 7:59:00 PM
Emotion in poetry: laying it on heavy by leaving it to the reader, a response to Brian's Blog
Date Posted: 9/1/2017 5:00:00 PM
POETRY TOOLBOX SERIES: CONNOTATION
Date Posted: 7/12/2017 8:51:00 AM
RESOURCE LINKS TO POETRY JOURNALS & EXCELLENT POETRY ARTICLES. HELP YOURSELF :)
Date Posted: 6/12/2017 5:27:00 PM
A HAIKU SHABU SHABU PUB - SHOP TALK & SMALL TALK.
Date Posted: 6/9/2017 8:07:00 PM
THE POETRY PUB: SMORGASBORD
Date Posted: 5/26/2017 9:14:00 PM
THE POETRY PUB: CONTEMPORARY RHYME & THE NEW FORMALISM
Date Posted: 5/5/2017 12:19:00 PM
***EDIT. ALL FIVE MOSIACS COMPLETE. THANKS FOR PLAYING THE WORD PAIRING GAME. THE PAIRINGS WERE AWESOME!
Date Posted: 4/20/2017 2:06:00 PM
POETRY PUB: EMOTIVE. READ AND BLEED.****EDIT*****MORE ON THE POEM GRIEF!
Date Posted: 3/20/2017 11:32:00 PM
POET PUB: LET THERE BE LIGHT... (and poetics, friendly disagreements, shared observations and hot apple cider...)
Date Posted: 1/15/2017 9:11:00 AM
5 PROOF BLOG. IF YOU ENTERED A POEM, PLEASE READ THIS. JOIN IN ON THE DISCUSSION.
Date Posted: 2/25/2016 11:16:00 AM
POET PUB, TONIGHT'S SPECIAL: EXTRA TENDER, EASY TO DIGEST
Date Posted: 1/25/2016 9:40:00 PM
THE POET PUB, GRAND OPENING, NO WIFI, WARM SEATS
Date Posted: 1/11/2016 9:28:00 PM
CONTEST: 5 PROOF: FREE VERSE THAT SHOWS IT AIN'T NO PROSE
Date Posted: 12/23/2015 6:30:00 AM
A CLOSER LOOK AT PUNCTUATION. SOME, PLENTY, NONE.
Date Posted: 5/25/2015 10:05:00 PM
WORK WORK WORK! WAY TO GO! AND HOW TO USE AN ELLIPSIS.
Date Posted: 5/16/2015 8:51:00 AM
FARMHOUSE: Uncommon word pairings poem #2
Date Posted: 4/9/2015 6:02:00 PM
WHATTA PAIR YOU GOT THERE: A WORKSHOP ON IMAGERY AND WORD PAIRINGS
Date Posted: 4/7/2015 9:30:00 PM
MEMORIAL TRIBUTE ON THE CONTEST PAGE: A WORD COLLAGE FOR CHAN. PLEASE, Take up the challenge. <3
Date Posted: 11/10/2014 9:30:00 AM
A LOVE-IN & WAKE FOR CHAN. ALL SOUPERS WELCOME. PLEASE ADD SOMETHING.
Date Posted: 11/9/2014 10:03:00 AM

My Recent Poems

Date PostedPoemTitleFormCategories
7/25/2023 The Library's Book Sonnetemotions,feelings,poems,p
9/20/2018 The Yield Free versemoving on,peace,sleep,
10/20/2017 Dinner Guest: Me Free verseemotions,longing,rude,
9/20/2017 Toothsome Free verselife,poetry,writing,
9/5/2017 The San Antonio Night Crossing Free versechange,death,immigration,
8/23/2017 Turning the Other Cheek Free versechristian,hate,people,
8/16/2017 Whatever Happened To the Real Poets Free versepoetry,political,society,
6/18/2017 Fetal Position In the Er Sestinadeath,heartbreak,my child
6/7/2017 Well Understood Free versefeelings,language,people,
6/4/2017 I'D Rather Write About Free versepoetry,writing,,memorial,
5/19/2017 The Palm-Chats of Jalousie, Haiti Free verseanalogy,bird,humanity,lif
5/4/2017 Water, Water Free verseafrica,sympathy,
11/18/2016 We, Nasty Women Ekphrasisallegory,history,politica
5/22/2016 The Chronicles of a Phonophobic Free versefear,life,people,
5/6/2015 Tail Spin, Revised Free versecourage,fear,love hurts,
11/10/2014 Chan Free versefriend,goodbye,
1/31/2014 Journey Companions: the Friend Sonnets Part Ii Sonnetfriend,hero,places,poetry
1/29/2014 Divine Steeples Sonnetfriend,love,places,poetry
1/26/2014 Muse Sonnetfriend,love,places,poetry

My Photos


Fav Poems

PoemTitleFormCategories
The Sowing Free versedevotion,
Ten Little Toes Rhymedaughter,lifeold,old,gran
Woodland Rhapsody Quatraininspirational,
Contradicting Keats Sonnetintrospection,life
Surrender To Love Rhymeloveme,
A Totum Pole Ode Concretenative american,people,
More Dreams To Row Rhymeinspirational,life,
When the Tab Comes Due Free verseinspirational,introspecti
Lighting My Candle From Within Quintain (English)caregiving,introspection,
The Kirk By the Sea Coupletnostalgia,religion,love,
Moonlight on the Ward Chokahealth,life,
Nocturnal Poetry Rhymeimagination,life,poetry,
Slumber Epicdedication,slam,
Frosty Night Stroll Coupletinspirational,seasons,
Our Thanksgiving Light Verseholiday,
My Country 'Tis of Thee Ethereepeace,
A New Star Shines Above Hawaii Rhymededication,music,
Monarch of Summer Haibunanimals,devotion,inspirat
Untouched Rhymeforgiveness,me,me,
Beaucoup Blooms Terza Rimanature,spring,spring,
On Heaven's Doorway Narrativeinspirational,life,care,c
Walking On Faith Versefaith,children,
Sleepless Nights Narrativeangst,imagination,mystery
Another Face Rhymelost love,
Paired Parings Balladchildhood,
Friend To Friend Haikupeople,philosophy,
Calligraphy Verseon writing and words,
Cyndi Sonnetdedication,
Night Comes Rhymetime,
Without Hope's Gleam Terzanelleflower,hope,joy,paradise,
Chamber Music Chopped Blank versemusic,
When Your Dead Your Dead Rhymefriendship,love,wife,
Down Fall Italian Sonnetbeautiful,miracle,nature,
After My Prayer Haikuinspirational,
God Forbid Coupletangst,devotion,write,life
To Kashinath and Cyndi Rhymededication,devotion,frien
Cherished Sonnetlove,peace,
Bliss State Quatrainfaith,
Onward Christian Soldiers Rhyme 
A Tribute To Leonora G Dramatic Versedeath,deep,evil,sorrow,st
In the Mood Light Verseadventure,woman,
Westward Movement Free versedevotion,love,peace,
Release Free verseencouraging,grief,hope,st
The Rocking Chair Rhymechild,christmas,sister,
Beyond Tears Rhymechild,encouraging,hope,,L
In Stillness Free versechange,life,
Dewberry Cobbler Haibungrowing up,
To the Rescue Rhymesnow,
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis Epicabuse,analogy,art,corrupt
To Love Myself Sonnetlove,new year,self,
The Byway Rhymecare,
Within Reason- Maurice Yvonne and Seren Roberts Verselife,
Candles of Your Fingers Light Versedeath,memory,missing you,
Softly Sonnetpoetry,
The Skeletons and Songs of Samsara - 1 Crown of Sonnetsbirth,death,life,
Inner City Free versecity,
My Own Way Free verseadventure,life,self,

Fav Poets

PoetCountry 
Debbie Guzzi United States Flag United States Read
Caryl Muzzey United States Flag United States Read
Joe Flach United States Flag United States Read
Nette Onclaud Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Poet Tacito United States Flag United States Read
Elizabeth Wesley Canada Flag Canada Read
Rhonda Johnson-Saunders United States Flag United States Read
Carrie Richards United States Flag United States Read
Kathryn Collins United States Flag United States Read
David Williams United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Charmaine Chircop Malta Flag Malta Read
Francine Roberts Canada Flag Canada Read
Faye Gibson United States Flag United States Read
Hannington Mumo Kenya Flag Kenya Read
Lora Robinson United States Flag United States Read
John Lawless United States Flag United States Read
Kabuteng P.Ink K. Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Roy Jerden United States Flag United States Read
Anthony Mark United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Brian Strand United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Olive Eloisa Guillermo - Fraser Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Charlotte Puddifoot United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Joann Grisetti United States Flag United States Read
Painted Hunter United States Flag United States Read
Connie Marcum Wong United States Flag United States Read
Tim Ryerson United States Flag United States Read
Olusegun Arowolo Nigeria Flag Nigeria Read
Becca Teagan United States Flag United States Read
Royal Ninja United States Flag United States Read
Justin Bordner United States Flag United States Read
Garth Von Buchholz Canada Flag Canada Read
Jim Howe United States Flag United States Read
Shronda Wilson United States Flag United States Read
Sneha Rv India Flag India Read
Agnes Krampe United States Flag United States Read

Book: Shattered Sighs