Her scrubs are three shades lighter
than inky midnight blue
prepared for an all-nighter
in a bold and helpful hue.
This evening her breakfast was
a cold-cut club on rye,
courage for the next lost cause,
and a sip of questions "Why?"
And in the bleary weary noon
she smiles and laughs and prays
before a shift that comes too soon
where she will do the same.
The "Curiously Poetic Altoids" are a group of poetry lovers at Alta Apartments. This blog is a place for publishing poems composed or shared at club meetings, and perhaps for posting club minutes as well. Anyone who has shared a poem at one of our meetings is invited to the blog and welcome to post!
Friday, April 30, 2010
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Poem in your Pocket
April 29 is national Poem in your Pocket day!
(and just in time for our thursday meetings, too.)
Take a copy of a poem with you to have, read, and share.
(and just in time for our thursday meetings, too.)
Take a copy of a poem with you to have, read, and share.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Yellow Blossoms
Narcissus blooms bow to themselves,
those beauties by the pond,
radiantly rippling
a lovely watery song.
Daffodils in hosts and crowds
all nod the elegance
of flowers smiling all around
and all together dance.
The sunflower looks up instead,
gazing at the sky
and following the glory of
the sun as she glides by.
those beauties by the pond,
radiantly rippling
a lovely watery song.
Daffodils in hosts and crowds
all nod the elegance
of flowers smiling all around
and all together dance.
The sunflower looks up instead,
gazing at the sky
and following the glory of
the sun as she glides by.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Erupty Volcano Girl vs. Bumbly Bee
La la la la la
I'm prancing to the park
Where beneath a storming stormcloud
A daisy has the gall to grow
I am Volcanic Dancing Girl
Fresh off the plane from Reykjavik
I love my polka-dotted skirt-slash-cone
I love erupting from its tip
Along the way I spy a bee
Whose stripes and stinger anger me
So that I spew lava right at it --
It flees, and though floods and ash and doom
And clouds of blackness o'er him loom
The bee escapes
Bumbling victoriously away
From me
The supposedly-mighty volcano
The Tale of Princess Dragonbreath
Young Princess D, a little waif,
wandered off where it's not safe.
She chased a kitten, with giggling laughter,
into a cellar where from the rafters
strings and strings of garlic hung.
She blinked at them, then tasted one.
Before you could have blinked once more
she'd eaten clove seventy-four.
Where e're she went the castle knew it
'cause she carried garlic with her--to chew it.
The smell knocked out the Queen's prize goat
and would not wash off in the moat.
The courtiers fainted, the knights were mad
and took her to the King (her dad)
with clothespins clamped about their noses.
The sentence, just as you suppose, is
Princess D must hitch a wagon
and drive to live out with the dragons.
Their breath is just as bad as hers,
or in some cases even worse.
This fate, a life of dread and horror,
had passed on garlic-eaters before her,
and was a law throughout the land
for any whose breath you couldn't stand.
But Princess D, whom I admire,
found that it was not her desire
to trundle off, like so much meat, and
find the dragons, then be eaten.
"I shall not be a meal," she reasoned,
"for dragons, though I am well-seasoned."
She ran away, and before they caught her
she'd found a stream of running water
with which she scrubbed and rinsed and wrung
the garlic smell from off her tongue.
Her sentence was commuted then,
and none were sent to the dragons again,
for the law was changed that very day.
The kingdom's favorite tale, they say,
is this of Princess Dragonbreath
who brushed her teeth and cheated death.
wandered off where it's not safe.
She chased a kitten, with giggling laughter,
into a cellar where from the rafters
strings and strings of garlic hung.
She blinked at them, then tasted one.
Before you could have blinked once more
she'd eaten clove seventy-four.
Where e're she went the castle knew it
'cause she carried garlic with her--to chew it.
The smell knocked out the Queen's prize goat
and would not wash off in the moat.
The courtiers fainted, the knights were mad
and took her to the King (her dad)
with clothespins clamped about their noses.
The sentence, just as you suppose, is
Princess D must hitch a wagon
and drive to live out with the dragons.
Their breath is just as bad as hers,
or in some cases even worse.
This fate, a life of dread and horror,
had passed on garlic-eaters before her,
and was a law throughout the land
for any whose breath you couldn't stand.
But Princess D, whom I admire,
found that it was not her desire
to trundle off, like so much meat, and
find the dragons, then be eaten.
"I shall not be a meal," she reasoned,
"for dragons, though I am well-seasoned."
She ran away, and before they caught her
she'd found a stream of running water
with which she scrubbed and rinsed and wrung
the garlic smell from off her tongue.
Her sentence was commuted then,
and none were sent to the dragons again,
for the law was changed that very day.
The kingdom's favorite tale, they say,
is this of Princess Dragonbreath
who brushed her teeth and cheated death.
Subtitles
Why doesn't the world come with labels?
They would tell you in convenient closed caption:
"Here is a pinecone,"and
"This is your dog Charlie,"and
"North is that way."
Door hinges would <creak>,
hinting of [ominous music]
to warn of the unexplored, whispering,
"Here there be dragons."
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Metadeath
The scriptures say
Death once had a sting
Before Christ banished that pain
To mortal memory.
Exiled as it is
To short-term attacks,
Death looks with envy on what it lacks,
Ever taking away from the brave and bold,
Death once had a sting
Before Christ banished that pain
To mortal memory.
Exiled as it is
To short-term attacks,
Death looks with envy on what it lacks,
Ever taking away from the brave and bold,
But never gaining, only growing old
Until some day, as the poet once dared cry,
We all will shout, "Death, thou shalt die!"
On that first morning lonely Death,
In the graveyard of forgotten ills,
Will look upon his withered self,
His hands he'll madly wring,
Asking, "Oh where is my old victory?
What happened to my sting?"
And there, with nothing but a memory
Of the ones he killed
Rising from the once-mighty shroud
To the glorious, eternal, and undying now,
Death will die.
Friday, April 9, 2010
Forgiveness
sometimes the world
is full of ugly flaws
and imperfections.
but i forgive you.
Little Lotta?
La Little Lotta Leghead
walked wincing with Woroons,
precisely pocket picking
this thief tried to treblu,
and animals anduvious
saw serious Saltyroons
marauding mini mallots
by bighead Bascaroons
La Little Lotta Leghead
cried crummy cookies coo
envious enter Egghead
wall waiting wonking woo
La Little Lotta Leghead
pushed past perennial Poons
"Be broken bully baxter,
Little Leghead lies lecoor!"
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Poetry Prize!
I couldn't wait to share the good news I just learned.
This month is National Poetry Month! Yay!
And, since it's National Poetry Month, the BYU bookstore will be offering a drawing. Just go to the General Book desk or the Children's Books desk and recite a poem and you will be entered in a drawing for a free poetry book!
Also, in honor of National Poetry Month, the bookstore will be having an Open Mic Poetry Reading night on April 6th and April 13th from 6:30-7:30pm. I think this would be a fun event for our poetry club to attend!
Finally, the bookstore is offering poetry books at reduced prices this month. So, if you want a poetry book, now is the time to get one!
(And no, this is NOT an April Fools Joke. Check out the link above if you don't believe me.)
This month is National Poetry Month! Yay!
And, since it's National Poetry Month, the BYU bookstore will be offering a drawing. Just go to the General Book desk or the Children's Books desk and recite a poem and you will be entered in a drawing for a free poetry book!
Also, in honor of National Poetry Month, the bookstore will be having an Open Mic Poetry Reading night on April 6th and April 13th from 6:30-7:30pm. I think this would be a fun event for our poetry club to attend!
Finally, the bookstore is offering poetry books at reduced prices this month. So, if you want a poetry book, now is the time to get one!
(And no, this is NOT an April Fools Joke. Check out the link above if you don't believe me.)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)