Posts Tagged ‘Add new tag’

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

 

As A Spirit Shone…

Thursday, February 25th, 2010
Nothing could have been more inspiring than to watch the performance of Joannie Rochette in the ladies figure skating short program of the Olympic Games, just two days after the unexpected passing of her mother. Some may talk about medals, but Joannie transcended beyond the ordinary and into the ethereal, at the end mouthing the words, “C’est pour toi, Maman.”

 

 Shimmering Spirit of Thérèse

She filled sad-stormy eyes, tear-trickled cheeks
awash with shock-sick flood of sudden pass.
She lit perfect turns of landing-luminous lutz
and flared and flashed in flight of triple flip.
She sit-spin sparkled, spiral-sequence shone,
in footwork fantasy-effulgent, warm golden gleam
of mother-glow in edge-work dazzle evident.
And as with every jump Joannie grew in craft
and confidence, all could openly observe at work
within her sweet shimmering Spirit of Thérèse.

For Canadian figure skater Joannie Rochette, whose mother passed away unexpectedly during the Olympic Games.

Adjusting The Balance - A Human Concern

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

For as long as I can remember, I have been concerned about issues of freedom and social justice, those humanitarian issues that always seem to plague our society on a global level. It is from this concern that my humanitarian poetry arises. In this day and age, there is still hunger on a world-wide level even in the so-called “developed” nations. But yet how can any country see itself as “developed” when some of its citizens go to bed hungry, or in fact do not have a bed of their own at all?

A minute percentage of the world’s population controls the vast percentage of its wealth, and therein lies the proverbial rub. Of course, if one is a stake-holder in that wealth, one seeks to protect it. But guarding that status quo is not the way to go, and history has proven that. And history, being the great teacher that it is, will continue to make its point until some perk up their ears and listen.

 

When the world is divided into haves and have-nots, into winners and losers of wealth and war, there will always be imbalance, and therein lie the seeds of further discord and continuing lack of balance. If the G-8 focused on bringing financial stability to less fortunate nations and segments of society, rather than seeking their own political agendas inevitably related to oil interests, what a different it would make.

 

And this amounts to far more than the U.S. or Canada shipping in supplies in emergency situations and to affluent families donating the ubiquitous Christmas turkey. To those who regularly live in hunger, every day is a crisis. “Teach a man to fish…” is a most apt phrase here.

 

Let us share the wealth and teach each other to fish. Let us share our knowledge and skills on a free basis, and rectify that imbalance. Only when we do so will we live in any degree of global prosperity, harmony, and peace. Let the humanistic poets of the world, few of whom live in any degree of luxury, be heard…