Monday, November 19, 2012

Big Wheels Turning



They turn...
Those big wheels
Fueled by love and passion
By desire and demand
By duty and dreams

They turn
Taking Daddies from their babies
Men from their lovers
But love's sacrifice has no end
it seems

They turn
Kept by prayers
of little girls in flannel nighties
and boys of
 rambunctious lust

Big wheels turning
in the moonlight
as miles cool farewell kisses
and bills keep a-coming...
in God we trust

Janet;  (for hubby) who lives above eighteen wheels turning...

Poetics Aside Prompt: Wheels Poem

Above this Maddened Wheeling and Dealing...





 Poetics Aside Prompt:  Wheels (of any kind) Poem

Above this maddened
Wheeling and dealing
Sighing and crying
Taking and breaking
Of vows
Above time’s perpetual
Turning and yearning
Reeling with feeling
Groping and hoping
Flow
Above this torrent  
Rushing and crushing
Dreaming and scheming
Surreal quadrille
And swoon
God pins His mercy
In a silver sliver
Grace above craze
A gentle mantle
Of crescent moon

© Janet Martin

Cart-wheels in the Sky (edited re-post)





Poetics Aside Prompt:  Write a “Wheel” poem: of fortune, ferris, bike, auto – any kind of wheel. Even a big wheel and wheeling and dealing will do.

Dear little child, you don’t know it yet
A moment to you is simply a breath
A necessary means
To reach The Beckoning ahead

Moments spiral and gleam
A subtly disguised requiem
Wheeling through your thought
To the melody of a dream

You do not hear the rush
Of time moan in the autumn hush
Pushing to an ever-expanding hollow
Disguised by living’s underbrush

   Reels of pleasure and pain
Glimmer through Time’s ephemeral vein
Children become women and men
In its rising-falling refrain

Run, dear little child, run
Your intangible deliverance has begun
Into the vexing arms of life
And the jaws of the waning sun

Nay fly, dear little child, I say fly
Cart-wheel on clouds in a neon sky
Lest your Moment deflates
And your dream-well runs dry

© Janet Martin

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Awesome Artist





He sweeps a dripping brush across the sky
Soundless, beyond the silhouette of trees
The artist spills celestial ecstasies
 Of pink and coral blush, translucent dye


Perplexities and pining ease their grip
 With gentle strokes in heaven-hallowed calm
He feather’s harsher edges with his palm
Beneath twilight’s tender companion-ship


In benediction of purple and blue
 The artist dips his brush into a wash
And flings into the hush a starry sash
Daubing the vivid sky-line from our view


Painter of heaven’s ceaseless canopy
Cool darkness snuffs the burnished tree-lined slope
The Artist fills the endless sky with hope
 In master-pieces of His majesty

...and in the tender twilight growing dim
The Artist reveals but whispers of Him


© Janet Martin

 The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.
Psalms 19:1

(approx. an hour before the sun set I looked up to notice a strange rain-bow tinted blitz in the sky.)

 

The Most Important Day of my Life



Poetic Bloomings Prompt: The Most Important Day of My Life...


...when I said ‘I do’

Blissfully unaware
Of life’s conniving stare
Its concrete walls and hurdles
Because my eyes were fixed on you

When I said ‘I do’
Certain that love
Would be enough
Come hell or higher water
To carry us through

When I said ‘I do’
Hell and high water
Seethed; primed for slaughter
But I guess they forgot
You said, ‘I do’ too

Lord, when I said ‘I do’ to You
My lesser yet equally cherished vows
Are possible to keep, though life blows
It vilest gale from unknowns deep
Love will be enough to see us through

© Janet Martin
 

Saturday, November 17, 2012

How To Love Your Teen-age Child




Poetics Aside Prompt: Take the phrase “How to (blank),” replace the blank with a word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then, write your poem.

How to love your teen-age child;
with much kindness and patience
How to acquire much kindness and patience;
with much pleading in prayer
How to inspire much pleading in prayer;
love your  * teen-ager

© Janet Martin

* a little history on the 'teen-ager'.
 


A Poet is Born





Today 
an older poet's
out-pouring
of passion, fear
love or longing
will ignite
the spark
for she,
A virgin poet
pressing
passion, fear, 
longing
and love
into
her
first poem

...and a poet is born

© Janet Martin

Friday, November 16, 2012

November...a parody in response to the poem September





Poetic Bloomings invites us to attempt a Parody: Simply put, a parody poem is one that pokes fun at another poem or poet. It could “mock” a song lyric (which is basically musical poetry). It can draw inspiration to answer another work. Everything is fair game; the more irreverent, the funnier (or more pointed) it will be.

Mine is really just a response to the poem September by: Helen Hunt Jackson (it always bothered me that she did not share her 'secret' about that day. So, I am sharing November's secret.

The golden rod is brown now
The corn is in its bin
The trees in apple orchards
Are stripped of rosy grin

The gentians bluest fringes
Are shriveled, brittle fray
In broken pods the milkweed
Has flung its silk away

The sedges spill their harvest
In stilted meadow-nook
And asters by the brook-side
Have dropped into the brook

From frosted lanes of morning
The children’s breath-clouds rise
The ditch is all a-flutter
With birch-leaf butter-flies

By all these gilded tokens
November days are here
With autumn’s dismal weather
And autumn’s sullen tear

But none of this gray tinting
Which makes November drear
Can dim November’s hinting
Of Christmas drawing near

And I will share my secret
Of dull November’s guile
For soon it will be Christmas
And that is why I smile

© Janet Martin

September

by Helen Hunt Jackson

  THE golden-rod is yellow;
        The corn is turning brown;
    The trees in apple orchards
        With fruit are bending down.

    The gentian's bluest fringes
        Are curling in the sun;
    In dusty pods the milkweed
        Its hidden silk has spun.

    The sedges flaunt their harvest,
        In every meadow nook;
    And asters by the brook-side
        Make asters in the brook,

    From dewy lanes at morning
        The grapes' sweet odors rise;
    At noon the roads all flutter
        With yellow butterflies.

    By all these lovely tokens
        September days are here,
    With summer's best of weather,
        And autumn's best of cheer.

    But none of all this beauty
        Which floods the earth and air
    Is unto me the secret
        Which makes September fair.

    'T is a thing which I remember;
        To name it thrills me yet:
    One day of one September
        I never can forget.