Whether it’s a trip down memory lane, leaping into the future with your imagination, or turning back time to reverse an event, this week I hope you’ll find inspiration in writing poems about time travel. Good, bad, hopeful, foreboding, or even neutral, there are many ways to spin a poem about time travel.
Good luck to all who try, please stop in again next week…
Friday, January 28, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Lilliput Review Haiku Wednesday Open Submissions
Don Wentworth at Lilliput Review will now be posting one original haiku on his blog every Wednesday. You may submit one haiku via e-mail to Mr. Wentworth at:
wednesdayhaikuATgmailDOTcom
Mr. Wentworth promises to respond quickly with a “yea” or “nay” and the winning poet will receive two free issues of Lilliput Review!
Please check out all the finer details using the link below:
http://lilliputreview.blogspot.com/2011/01/wednesday-haiku-issas-untidy-hut.html
Good luck to all who submit, please drop by tomorrow for more Poetry Tips…
wednesdayhaikuATgmailDOTcom
Mr. Wentworth promises to respond quickly with a “yea” or “nay” and the winning poet will receive two free issues of Lilliput Review!
Please check out all the finer details using the link below:
http://lilliputreview.blogspot.com/2011/01/wednesday-haiku-issas-untidy-hut.html
Good luck to all who submit, please drop by tomorrow for more Poetry Tips…
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Poems Found by Poet Hound
http://www.sundresspublications.com/wickedalice/butts30.html
“Poem of the Teenager” by Joshua Butts
http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/16489
“blessing the boats” by Lucille Clifton
Thanks for clicking in, please stop by tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
“Poem of the Teenager” by Joshua Butts
http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/16489
“blessing the boats” by Lucille Clifton
Thanks for clicking in, please stop by tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Women in Praise of the Sacred
Jane Hirshfield is a poet with six collections including After, Given Sugar, Given Salt, has received honors for her work including The Poetry Center Book Award and numerous fellowships. Hirshfield’s collection of women’s in Women in Praise of the Sacred, 43 Centuries of Spiritual Poetry by Women is superb. Published by HaperCollins books in 1994, this collection contains poems from a wide range of women from all over the world throughout the centuries. I was hoping I would have time to request permission to post some poems in their entirety but I was eager to share the book with you and will try to do brief excerpts instead. For each woman there is a brief history of her life and some poems are explained in regards to religious symbols mentioned or which religions they pertain to. The majority of the poems are too short for me to attempt to share with you. It is an excellent read and I am certain I cannot do it justice through excerpts but I will do my best:
I will begin with Kassiane, born in 804, was a Byzantine woman whose work is included in Eastern Orthodox liturgy per Hirshfield’s description. Kassiane founded a convent and was an outspoken defender of her beliefs. Her hymn “Troparion” refers to the “Sinful Woman” from the Gospel of St. Luke:
Troparion
Lord,
This woman who encountered her shadow
Perceives the numinous in You,
leads the women who come with grief
and myrrh to Your grave.
….
You who are limitless mercy—who will trace the results
of a lifetime I’ve done wrong, evaluate
my weakness? I ask, remember me
if nothing else, as one who lived.
(tr. By Liana Sakelliou)
I have given you the first and last stanzas of the hymn, I hope I will be forgiven if I’ve revealed too much. To me, Kassiane speaks of the Lord knowing and understanding her as a woman, her grief, her weakness, and asks him to remember her as a woman who lived her life to the fullest and asks for mercy of her weaknesses.
Ly Ngoc Kieu lived from 1041-1113, she was a Zen Buddhist nun in Vietnam who took religious vows after becoming a widow from Hirshfield’s description, and is the earliest known woman writer from Vietnam:
Birth, old age,
Sickness, and death:
From the beginning,
This is the way
Things have always been.
…
But the one who knows
That there’s nothing to seek
Knows too that there’s nothing to say.
She keeps her mouth closed.
(tr. By Thich Nhat Hanh and Jane Hirshfield)
I have left out just over a half dozen lines of the poem but hope you are able to get a sense of it. I have included the very beginning and the very end. Ly Ngoc Kien describes those who seek answers and explains that the one who knows the answer says nothing because there is now way to explain with an answer. It’s a wonderful poem to contemplate, don’t you think?
I am going to leave this as two shared poems for now, the entire collection is 239 pages and well worth reading slowly and savoring.
If you would like a copy for yourself, you may be able to find one in your local library or you may purchase a copy from Amazon using the link below:
http://www.amazon.com/Women-Praise-Sacred-Centuries-Spiritual/dp/0060925760
To learn more about Jane Hirshfield, please visit:
http://www.barclayagency.com/hirshfield.html
Thanks always for reading, please click in tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
I will begin with Kassiane, born in 804, was a Byzantine woman whose work is included in Eastern Orthodox liturgy per Hirshfield’s description. Kassiane founded a convent and was an outspoken defender of her beliefs. Her hymn “Troparion” refers to the “Sinful Woman” from the Gospel of St. Luke:
Troparion
Lord,
This woman who encountered her shadow
Perceives the numinous in You,
leads the women who come with grief
and myrrh to Your grave.
….
You who are limitless mercy—who will trace the results
of a lifetime I’ve done wrong, evaluate
my weakness? I ask, remember me
if nothing else, as one who lived.
(tr. By Liana Sakelliou)
I have given you the first and last stanzas of the hymn, I hope I will be forgiven if I’ve revealed too much. To me, Kassiane speaks of the Lord knowing and understanding her as a woman, her grief, her weakness, and asks him to remember her as a woman who lived her life to the fullest and asks for mercy of her weaknesses.
Ly Ngoc Kieu lived from 1041-1113, she was a Zen Buddhist nun in Vietnam who took religious vows after becoming a widow from Hirshfield’s description, and is the earliest known woman writer from Vietnam:
Birth, old age,
Sickness, and death:
From the beginning,
This is the way
Things have always been.
…
But the one who knows
That there’s nothing to seek
Knows too that there’s nothing to say.
She keeps her mouth closed.
(tr. By Thich Nhat Hanh and Jane Hirshfield)
I have left out just over a half dozen lines of the poem but hope you are able to get a sense of it. I have included the very beginning and the very end. Ly Ngoc Kien describes those who seek answers and explains that the one who knows the answer says nothing because there is now way to explain with an answer. It’s a wonderful poem to contemplate, don’t you think?
I am going to leave this as two shared poems for now, the entire collection is 239 pages and well worth reading slowly and savoring.
If you would like a copy for yourself, you may be able to find one in your local library or you may purchase a copy from Amazon using the link below:
http://www.amazon.com/Women-Praise-Sacred-Centuries-Spiritual/dp/0060925760
To learn more about Jane Hirshfield, please visit:
http://www.barclayagency.com/hirshfield.html
Thanks always for reading, please click in tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
Monday, January 24, 2011
Red Dragonfly
I found this blog thanks to Don Wentworth’s mention of it on his blog and enjoyed Melissa Allen’s site very much. You will learn about various forms of poetry (Haiku, Haibun, Renga, etc.) and she is very warm and inviting in her writing. Check it out at:
http://haikuproject.wordpress.com/
Thanks for clicking in, please drop by tomorrow for another featured book…
http://haikuproject.wordpress.com/
Thanks for clicking in, please drop by tomorrow for another featured book…