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THE POETRY PUB: SMORGASBORD - 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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THE POETRY PUB: SMORGASBORD

Blog Posted:5/26/2017 9:14:00 PM

 

Hello, there.  Well, you look a bit ragged.  Hard week, I take it.  

Looks like you need something with zest to fill you up, tonight, something sharp and tangy or something savory.  We’ve got plenty to choose from. 

I’d recommend the Friday Night Sunday Roast.  Cook’s done a right fine job with the pastys, too.  And there’s treacle and bakewell tarts if you’re craving something sweet.  The poets are out back, boisterous as usual.  They are talking about tone and depth, tonight.

Seems they think you’re one of ‘em.   One is calling you over.  Hold on!  Patience you lot!

Let me know when you’re ready to order. 

You are welcome to come in and discuss poetry, life, the news, weather and gardening, almost anything that comes to mind  (I believe in open discussion and freedom to discuss what’s on your mind or what COMES to mind as you read.)  

Please, keep in mind the new Terms and Conditions as you relax in the pub, sip whatever, but you may get as goofy as you want.  Food fights are fine.  You know where the broom is and how to clean up after yourself.  Horse play is permissable  Darts are for the boards.   No knife throwing, eye gouging or fisticuffs.   Noogies and wedgies allowed under certain conditions. 

Arm wrestling: ENCOURAGED.  Poetry talk would be good, too.  haha!

(All poems are shared for review and study purposes only and will be deleted in the near future.)

 

Winter 30

by Patrick Lane

 

The brightness around him in the garden

where he stands with his hands outstretched

to the sparrows.  They descend to the rich grain

he holds, quarrelling between his fingers, pecking each

other, especially the crippled one who lifts away

from their beaks and flutters in the air

just above their greed.  The cold

climbs into her as they drive her into the trees.

 

This is what God must have felt

on the eighth day, he thinks, cruelty

everywhere around him, the omnipresence of knowing,

feeding even the least of his creatures, listening

to a bird as it dies

give itself to a song in the garden

he has made out of snow.

 

 

The Still River of Horse

By Marlene Grand Maitre

 

Float in the galvanic pools of his eyes.

Fluent in hurricane, cyclone—in all that uproots.

you are in awe of his stillness, its heart volatile.

 

Tuned to the currents of your errant life,

his mane and tail speak sirocco, chinook.

Float in the galvanic pools of his eyes,

 

travel the long river of neck to find

home, his hoofbeats your refuge.

In awe of his stillness, your heart volatile,

 

rappel the rippled wall of flank, climb

the mountain of shoulder, his legs your roots

as you float in the galvanic pools of his eyes.

 

In you he finds tornado, typhoon—a dark spiral.

Always ready to bolt, you will be spooked

by your awe of his stillness.  His heart volatile,

 

he will test you, your desire

to be untethered, your need to subdue.

Float in the galvanic pools of his eyes,

in awe of his stillness, its heart volatile.

 

 

Little Villain

By Kayla Czaga

 

Mother said, sickness

is the first indication of children, and the clouds

 

peeled back like loose skin.  Bright enough

to magnify ants, August hung in sticky strips.  Air orangish,

sidewalk scented.  I put caterpillars in pickle jars and poked

 

no holes.  I drank fruit punch

to excess. Inside, mother reclined on the floral couch,

books alphabetically beside her.  She swallowed

 

vitamins with ice cubes and said, when children visit,

slingshots are forbidden.  So, I constructed a catapult

from popsicle sticks and loved

 

the boy who twisted until birds broke, filled his pockets

with small bodies, filled my body

with bruises, a pleasant swelling.  His name

 

was William.  A jump rope looped

around his dog’s neck, blood in the rope and blood

puddling on the back porch under Mother, as she watched us,

 

a small scream falling from her.  The heat

fell with it.  Her stomach unrounded.  Sirens sliced

the air into little jellos and a set of gloved hands sewed her back

 

onto the couch where she stayed.  After me, she had problems

conceiving.   She named him John of the smallest

coffin.  After him, she stopped completely.

 

 

La Luna  Asoma

By Federico Garcia Lorca

Translated By James Deahl

 

When the moon comes out

the silent bells

and the impentrable paths

appear.

 

When the moon comes out

seas sweep over the earth

and the heart feels

like an island in the infinite.

 

No one eats oranges

beneath a full moon.

One must have fruit that’s

green and cold.

 

When the moon comes out

the hundred identical faces

on one’s silver coins

sobs in deep pockets.

 

A Fine Line

By Christopher Levenson

 

Mirrors do not discriminate

show only surface, moonscapes.

It takes clearer eyes

to see how the pangs of experience

dredge ulluvial skin,

whittle us to inscribe

our own fine lines upon

forehead, cheekbones, neck.

 

Even archaeologists,

whose carbon counters prise

well-deserved jaw-bone fragments

out of the African dust,

resetting the human time scale

half a million years further back,

cannot yet reconstitute

one fugitive glance or smile.

We look in the glass and wonder

where has the taut skin vanished,

what made the vein collapse?

 

Lots to like, not too esoteric, but some GOOD imagery...

 



Please Login to post a comment
Date: 5/29/2017 11:31:00 AM
Oh this time I am finding it a bit difficult about which my favourite is...I loved 'The Still River Of Horse'-I didn't think I would from the title,but I did.I loved the last one so much...it speaks to me..Oh what lies beneath that polished surface reflecting in the mirror...when one digs deep between the lines..and digs deeper into life. All of them have something I liked. I think I read about the caterpillar in a jar somewhere..and couldnt help myself remembering the previous blog about caterpillars :).In a jar it will be safe..Lol :).
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Macmillan Avatar
Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 6/4/2017 12:55:00 PM
I am so glad you have left YOUR poetry in Soup. Soup is empty without its lady-lights, and its gentleman-rogue. I'm regretting listening to him. I should have put up the biggest stink in the history of Soup. Respect his request or go Braveheart to the max? Which was right? Love you...xoxoxo
Chircop Avatar
Charmaine Chircop
Date: 5/29/2017 11:33:00 AM
Love the -La Luna one .Who wouldnt? :)
Date: 5/27/2017 4:56:00 PM
Hey guys, I should say that Winter 30 is from a book of poetry by Patrick Lane called WINTER And La Luna Asoma is one of many poems in James Deahl's book of poetry entitled "When Rivers Speak." I also goofed. The Luna poem is a translation (thank you, Ruben!!) it does not say its a translation poem ON the page... but it does say in the table of contents that it is one of eight translations in his book. OOPSY!
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Date: 5/27/2017 2:36:00 PM
I do like La Luna Cyndi but the level of ambiguity is too strong (for me). I like Little Villain but I dislike the "too creative" 3 line presentation spoils it. Not real keen on the Horse poem. My two favorites are Winter 30, just enough ambiguity to leave one to their own dream; I was envisioning him like the "Bird Girl" in Bonaventure Cemetery (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil) yet my mind raced elsewhere as well--still not to settle. But, my favorite was A Fine Line (a double entendre) Like peering through a glass at bones from the past--what were their true expressions, were they like ours for similar experiences and what was their "end" without a mirror to advertise their demise.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:39:00 PM
:) Something for almost everyone. I liked aspects of them all, but I get how several Soupers have picked the "A Fine Line," because many of us have looked into that mirror and felt exactly what he is describing. We tend to enjoy something we can personally relate to.
Cornish Avatar
Craig Cornish
Date: 5/27/2017 3:27:00 PM
Sorry for being late to the pub! But, better............
Date: 5/27/2017 10:02:00 AM
Cyndi,Little Villain is a good poem,spoiled by trying to fit it into a tercet 'form ' to which the content is totally unsuited. Like trying to wriggle into an off the peg suit instead of a made to measure.
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Rodrigues Avatar
Kim Rodrigues
Date: 6/6/2017 12:12:00 PM
I see what you are saying, Brian. It works better as free verse with no limitations.
Date: 5/27/2017 9:47:00 AM
When you do things for effect Cyndi,in free verse. ie where you want the readers mind to rest, then you need the reader needs some guide in that regard otherwise it is the poem becomes a puzzle to solve.An offput to say the least
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:25:00 PM
Gotta fly.. will be back later to chat about Luna with Ruben. I look forward to visiting your blog. We have a special church function tomorrow. Such a busy weekend!
Macmillan Avatar
Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:24:00 PM
If I rearranged the line breaks the poem may feel less unsettling, less eerie but be more "eye friendly" and more 'grounded' but the theme is meant to disturb. The formation matches the theme.
Macmillan Avatar
Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:23:00 PM
The reader may not understand why a poem can make him feel pulled and tugged at... but that is what a line break/stanza break does. It plays with connotation and EXPECTATION... throws us off balance, hits the heart!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:21:00 PM
Again, the poet does this again for that wince factor. The first word of any line can hit us hard, same goes for the last word of a line. Lets look: conceiving. She named him John of the smallest// coffin. After him, she stopped completely. By dividing smallest and coffin, coffin has more weight, makes us FEEL it harder. It stands OUT.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:05:00 PM
It is like an author who finishes a chapter with a feeling of suspense. I'm not saying each line should end with that type of sharp shift-- which startles the reader, makes them uncertain, ill at ease.
Macmillan Avatar
Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:03:00 PM
Let's look at this line: I put caterpillars in pickle jars and poked ///no holes. Now, the reader may be expecting poked holes. All children poke holes in jars to let the insect LIVE. The reader leaves the end of that line and falls not just into another line, but into another stanza... the pause is elongated.. its for that small horror we feel when we realize that NO proceed hole.
Date: 5/27/2017 9:38:00 AM
Yes Cyndi I also enjoy much Abstract art,which of course communicate visually.Published Poetry and free verse in particular has to communicate otherwise it is pointless.Free verse as these examples show can run into difficulty in this regard and the reader can so easily stop and turn off.I had a note that this whole topic needs a separate blog.WHY (and perhaps how)DOES FREE VERSE WORK .There are after all 'rules' that need to be followed to make it intelligible ,'even if the net is down'
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 4:59:00 PM
I'd love to do another blog... I'd like to take that poem and restructure it into different breaks, to show cause and effect. The breaks here are very very purposeful, but the reader doesn't need to understand why the breaks are there, but only feel the effect of them... I'll show you one.
Date: 5/27/2017 9:21:00 AM
Can I reserve a seat for later? It's raining out and the pub seems like a good place to stay but yep, have to finish some other stuff first... Please save me some of that Sunday roast & dessert, if not, beware since I'm invading the kitchen :p. btw thanks for the positive mention, Cyndi-- uh-oh not sure if I can live up to the expectations on the fun quotient though, that's too kind of you. Charma, where are you?!
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K. Avatar
Kabuteng P.Ink K.
Date: 5/29/2017 1:35:00 AM
Hope you had a good weekend, Cyndi! Hugs back to you :)
Macmillan Avatar
Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 5:46:00 PM
:DD You came and I missed you. Busy day, typical Saturday rush with even more going on. Gotta fly. HUGS!
Date: 5/27/2017 9:19:00 AM
Cyndi,I am not troubled that the selections do not have a common theme,rather that the thrust(theme) of each of them is disjointed by throwaway asides that all too often are esoteric
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Date: 5/27/2017 5:32:00 AM
The Leveson offering makes a good point but again presentation spoils by inconsistent use of punctuation (making it unreadable) and inclusion of long asides that blur rather than clarify.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:16:00 AM
? Did I miss typing punctuation? I should check. Did you mean the enjambment is not consistent? I think its an introspective look -- one long aside?
Date: 5/27/2017 5:21:00 AM
Little Villain, is a good poem ,after the reminescent 'talking to myself' style of WCW, but the open form chosen does not fit that style,and therefore reads disjointed and spoils rather than enhances.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:35:00 AM
Can you elaborate on "does not fit the style?" If willing? Are we speaking about one line per breath again, or something different? Do you mean the stanza breaks, how the poem is formatted into three lined stanzas as opposed to a 'block poem' or ONE stanza? I am finding this conversation interesting!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:21:00 AM
I don't think she in any way is styling herself after Whitman. Many poets bring the reader close into their work. She is writing towards the reader, not inwardly, which usually comes across as question after question, "why did I..." while this sounds confessional "I did THIS..."
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:19:00 AM
The line breaks are strong and exact. Gotta fly but interesting chat, Chum. Whitman?
Date: 5/27/2017 4:20:00 AM
you know my tastes, cyndi! yes, the stand-out one for me is 'little villain'; it has the feel of real experience behind it, great use of language and vivid imagery, unforgiving and unrelenting...the horse poem i like for its images and ideas; i'm not usually a fan of repeating lines, but they work well in this particular poem...i have a strange thing for ungulates at the moment! i wrote one on horses, then cows, and now a gazelle is springing around in my mind! lol...oh i like 'winter 30' too, especially the first stanza, though the poem is spoilt slightly for me by a rather predictable second stanza - would've liked to have seen a more unusual direction
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K. Avatar
Kabuteng P.Ink K.
Date: 5/27/2017 12:26:00 PM
Eep, I am going box (table?) hopping here, hope you don't mind, Charlotte & Cyndi (haha even if it's your blog, sorry I'm going to be everywhere here-- taking advantage while I still can)! I found Little Villain intriguing with the touch of disturbing for me, I did enjoy how it seemed like some sort of movie playing out for me as I read it...one of the lines that really stayed with me was "her stomach unrounded". and I like how you interpret the repeating lines, Cyndi.. and yes villanelle also popped to mind as I read that.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:14:00 AM
I think the horse poem is a villanelle? I usually dislike repeating lines, like you, but the emotions in that poem sucked me in... and the repetition is like a galloping horse! So, I think this is why it works on a subliminal level, maybe? The subconscious?
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:12:00 AM
Little Villain is powerful and provocative in a way that hit me hard and deep. I liked it's harshness, brutal honesty, its unusual point of view, the path it took.
Date: 5/27/2017 12:54:00 AM
Cyndi,I admire and some. times applaud 'eclectic ' open poetics, with a 'wow,yes' factor but not those that 'wow, what?'.Disconnects can be much overdone and spoil rather than enhance
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 6:44:00 AM
I liked them all, very much. But its good that we can discuss what poets do NOT like about a poem as much as what they do like... it is just as valuable. Too many can not put into words what has left them unmoved or disgruntled at work. I appreciate you bringing this to the pub! :)
Date: 5/27/2017 12:34:00 AM
Smorgasbord is a good title Cyndi,for much of the poems theselves.A good example of what I mean by 'disconnect' is the third stanza of the Deahi poem.It is so esoteric and is why many folk give up on reading open poetry!( imho of course)
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 6:53:00 AM
open poetry=free verse poetry? I think it depends. Many people who enjoy art also enjoy abstract art. Some readers like poems that are muddier. I loved the orange stanza, though I wasn't sure of what exactly it meant. I was thinking that the poet mean contrast. The orange is like the sun-- and it amplifies that he is saying night (to him) is neither sweet or fulfilling. It is a melancholy place.
Strand Avatar
Brian Strand
Date: 5/27/2017 5:06:00 AM
Chris has made a comment (above)on this ,which rather proves my point.
Date: 5/27/2017 12:23:00 AM
Yes Cyndi,I prefer Winter 30,It is more coherent,(in theme)but the last two lines are superfluous (imho) and is an example of 'a disconnect as well...and the overall format leaves much to be desired as open poetry.,where breath length is a key aspect.(The second sentence just does not work in that regard).As a poem about the realities of sin in human nature,Lanes'parable ' works ,except for the 'eighth day bit',(sin entered at the 'fall' ,in the 'garden') but we'll allow him poetic licence on that point.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 6:58:00 AM
This is one area where we differ. I often break my lines for effect, cut those lines with a purpose that has nothing to do with oral traditions. I consider the weight and significance of each word and where I'd like the mind to rest for a millisecond.
Date: 5/27/2017 12:05:00 AM
Cyndi , generally I like open poetry,(as previous pub nights comments aka Crooker and Steele and my contests (aka Frederic P) results have shown) Usually because of the imaginative imagery(being an imagist at heart)therein.But there has to be a theme.Most of these examples are disjointed ,eclectic and therefore do not flow.That maybe as the poet 'is' ,(and as many open poetics seem to be) which is valid ,but not to my taste.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/27/2017 7:07:00 AM
I get it. But I'm used to reading journals where the styles, voices, themes, subject matter, poetics, lengths, differ from poem to poem. I decided to try a "smorgasbord" on my pub. No connection between each piece. :) Down the road, I'll host a themed one, again.
Strand Avatar
Brian Strand
Date: 5/27/2017 4:36:00 AM
I am as 'left field' as any in poetics and like to see thinking out of the box but some maybe so enigmatic asto be confusing.(I admit of course I am from a much earlier generation than most here,and much of what is now considered OK passes me by)
Date: 5/26/2017 11:29:00 PM
Much imagism Cyndi, but too much disconnect, however that imagery would make for a coherent overall open phrasis methinks .Bringing such poetry to us is one of your giftings , thanks.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/26/2017 11:46:00 PM
Disconnect... do you mean that the poem fizzled? Start strong/end weak? I felt that a bit, too. Or do you mean nothing, including the first, spoke personally to you?
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/26/2017 11:32:00 PM
oooh! Would love you to talk about the disconnect! In Winter 30 (which is the one I'd think you'd enjoy out of all of them.) Disconnect? Fill me in over the weekend sometime, maybe? I'm curious :)
Date: 5/26/2017 11:20:00 PM
I like Winter 30 but it caused me to think of a line from a poem I read awhile ago " to have been the first maggot to have crawled under Christ's skin would be enough for me" " this is what god must of felt" ..for some reason I thought of another poem..maybe the same emotional bonding
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/26/2017 11:57:00 PM
I checked and there were only a few who used that line, none in a song or poetry... but oddly enough, I found a reference to Apollo 10 and them quoting Genesis.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/26/2017 11:37:00 PM
I'll check the net on that Frederic, later... I mean about the "this is what God must have felt... I liked the intimacy of it as well. The poet is feeling both for the tiny bird and for the creator. small to HUGE.

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,
When Your Dead Your Dead Rhymefriendship,love,wife,
Chamber Music Chopped Blank versemusic,
After My Prayer Haikuinspirational,
Down Fall Italian Sonnetbeautiful,miracle,nature,
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
To the Rescue Rhymesnow,
Dewberry Cobbler Haibungrowing up,
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis Epicabuse,analogy,art,corrupt
To Love Myself Sonnetlove,new year,self,
The Byway Rhymecare,
In Stillness Free versechange,life,
Within Reason- Maurice Yvonne and Seren Roberts Verselife,
Candles of Your Fingers Light Versedeath,memory,missing you,
The Skeletons and Songs of Samsara - 1 Crown of Sonnetsbirth,death,life,
Softly Sonnetpoetry,
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: Reflection on the Important Things