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Spirits In Peace Blog » seasonal poetry

Archive for the ‘seasonal poetry’ Category

Just To Write…

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

I recently viewed a contest prompt on a forum I frequent, and it read as follows:

“Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depth of your heart; confess to yourself you would have to die if you were forbidden to write.”
— Rainer Maria Rilke

On reading this, the following poem began picking in my mind, phrase by phrase, which is often how I write. Having gone through a bit of a dry spell, at least as far as free verse is concerned of late, I found the notion of being forbidden to write, if only somehow by oneself, quite easy to relate to. As I so often do, I drew my image, which became the extended metaphor,from nature:

On Sting Of Sleet

I am last lonely leaf, December-desiccated
and shriveled-sere, buffeted and blasted by winter’s
bitter bite, wafting without bond and bend of bough
or link of limb. From trunk I am untethered, of essential
eons’ store and share deprived and dispossessed.

I flutter futilely, no vivid vernal golden-greens to flood
me with forsythia’s inks, nor summer’s softer hues
to saturate with glaucous grace of silver maple-muse.
Nor shall I ever be imbued with wonder-wane
of late September’s charming chlorophyll-cheat,
splendidly infused with scarlet, gold, and bronze.

For I am simply aimless and adrift, from sustenance
 and stylus segregated. My dun and dull demise
is sure and certain as gusty northern gales
wallop-whip my brown hole-riddled lifeless shell
on sting of sleet and fatal flakes of flying snow.

© Carol Knepper 2010

 

The Loss Of A Literary Giant

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Late last evening, I, and many others in the literary community, learned of the passing of poet and publisher Sondra Ball. This is a great loss, and one need only type her name into a web search to gain an inkling of this woman’s remarkable accomplishments.

In a world too often replete with pretension and elitism, Sondra was one of the genuine ones who cared for literature and poets as opposed to mere person gain and advancement.

Sondra lived in New Jersey with her husband, Mario Cavallini, and she and I often exchanged notes about the weather - especially signs of spring and the beauty of autumn, relative  to the nature poetry we both so loved.  Since its inception in 1997, her e-zine, “Autumn Leaves” was an excellent forum wherein aspiring poets could be published. It was published twice monthly and apparently received 300,000 hits monthly, which shows both the magnitude and the quality of this remarkable woman’s undertaking. One might wish to peruse the following link:One final edition of Autumn Leaves will be posted at that site.

http://www.sondra.net/al/

One final edition of Autumn Leaves will be posted at that site.

Recently, Sondra’s breast cancer, which had been in remission for many years, returned, and notes from Sondra became less frequent. Unfortunately, the cancer was found to have metastisized. In the early morning hours of in the first hours of Tuesday, March 16th, Sondra passed away after a difficult illness.

I have written the following piece in memory of Sondra:

As Star’s Eternal Light

She lived and longed for lines and stanzas spun
with autumnal saturation, scarlet-strewn.
She wove tapestries of triolets and tercets
and fantasy-froth fabrics of haiku, such seasons
single-inhalation splendid in vivid, vibrant hues.
She honed and crafted verse’s glowing gems,
each carat carved and honed with conscientious care
that no precious part should evidence dull drabness
of neglect nor pretension’s tawdry-tarnished
pseudo-sheen. She shone as timeless star’s eternal light
on pages sparkling with her genuine gleam.

© Carol Knepper
In Memory Of Sondra Ball

Snowetry

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

As much as I am not a fan of winter, sometimes I must confess that the scenery is downright breath-taking. There is nothing quite like snow on fully-skirted spruces, fresh deer track, or ice crystals on finely-twigged alders to give rise to verse. The name I have coined for this is “snowetry.”

I am a person who tends to get shack-wacky when I am stuck at home, but sometimes being snowbound is not so bad at all. It can provide one with a much-needed change of pace, an excuse to kick back and do whatever one loves best. In my case, that of course is writing. During a recent blizzard, the following piece emerged:

Sometimes Snowbound

Sometimes snowbound satisfies and eases
Sunday soul, with extra hours to stanza-scribe,
spans to laze and loll. Sometimes snowbound
fascinates, filling fancy’s feathered plume
with sonnet and sestina, sijo and senryu.
Sometimes snowbound sparkles with crystalline
clarity, solstice stars more scintillating
than on any August eve. Sometimes snowbound
wins and warms winter-weary heavy heart,
as hearth-fire’s engaging crackle creates
captivating spell. Sometimes snowbound
motivates meditative mind and mood,
musings swiftly scribbled in introspective inks.

©Carol Knepper

photograph courtesty of BigFoto

photograph courtesty of BigFoto

The Energy of Spring - Poetic Inspiration

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

crocuses bigfoto

Photograph Courtesy of BigFoto

There is something about spring that, for me at least, gives rise to quick burst of energy. Winter is long and slow, and I sometime set myself to work on time-consuming tasks, but at the first whiff of spring, my energy level kicks up a notch. I want nothing to do with anything long and labourious, and prefer to work with more speed and intensity. Perhaps I simply want to abandon the computer and head outside, even though the air is still a mite chilly. Perhaps, like the nature I see around me, I am reborn in some sense and more childlike in my attention span.

But, in any case, spring always brings forth a burst of poetry. I like to experiment with forms, and one of my more recent forays has been into the area of tanka, with the assistance of Richard Doiron, a definite expert in such matters. I had attempted this form in the past, but from him I learned a great deal.

The changeable weather and emergence of spring flora together with the inevitable backward glimpses of winter at this time of year inspired some recent tanka.

her poem painted
- tanka x 5-

silently cursing
the apparently endless
blizzards this winter
surely an indication
of a planet in distress

her spirits sinking
on noting the ankle-deep
early spring snowfall
as good as fertilizer
for emerging daffodils

her concept of spring
does not in her books include
unwelcome snowfall
considered an obvious
redundancy in her mind

april erupting
in glorious colours she sees
her poem painted
with saffron of crocuses
staining each verse and stanza

colourful darwin
tulips earning her praises
their scarlet cheerful
unlike bloodstains of battle
wherein darker sides revealed

©Carol Knepper