Friday, April 7, 2017

Near and Dear, The Name of Jesus

Homework Assignment for our Writer's Group; 
write about something/Someone near and dear to you...  

She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, 
because he will save his people from their sins."
Matt.1:21



Near and dear
The grace of Jesus
Life and light and victory
Faithful friend
His Presence eases
Fear, despair, uncertainty

Near and dear
The love of Jesus
What a promise we receive
From death’s curse
His mercy frees us
At the moment we believe

Near and dear
The hope of Jesus
Faith, for sight is far too dim
Still, His whisper
Gently pleases
All who put their trust in Him  

Near and dear
The name of Jesus
As upon His name we call
Satan, his
Darkness releases
Jesus, grace, love, hope for all

© Janet Martin


To the Bedrock of Ballads....Three Sonnets



 Last month, because it was my turn to lead our Writer's Group meeting, it was up to me to choose the homework topic. The assignment: Write about something near and dear to you.
The 'Something near and dear to me' I chose to write about; keeping Rhythm and Rhyme alive in poetry and working at perfecting its art! 





Forbid, that we without remorse stand by
To watch the Bedrock of Ballad decay
Where echoes of Past’s half-mad mortals lie
Preserved in poetry unto this day
…for roar of words that warred within their breasts
They did not choose, but were chosen for this;
To pen, with metered yen, the soul’s requests
While siblings slept in unencumbered bliss
…the poet wrestled with vessels of thought
To tame the tempest as it seared and surged
And sparred with impotence of what was not
Until the will of quill and query merged
To spill, unfettered to the quest of rhyme
And poetry that stands the test of time

***

Forbid the Master-grid of poetry
Should crumble in a noisy corridor
Where groan is not honed into symmetry
But heaped on trays nobody hungers for
As, sacrificed on altars of free verse
The sanctity of poetry is lost
For freedom without law can be a curse
And words reduced to ash, its sorry cost
Because there is no protocol or code
To set off’rings of letter-art apart
They fall, like flower-petals to a road
Where foot-traffic tramples on works of heart
But where the ancient authors gave their all
The poetry of cadency stands tall

***

Forbid we don the popular veneer
Of free speech, forgetful of consequence
Darling, the end of all of us is near
Then, all that will remain is recompense
For ink, in the heaven of passion spilled
Where filament of penmanship, my love
Endures long after heart and hand are stilled
The wherewithal of madrigal to prove
When dust-to-dust reclaims its ordained Must
When love and lust that steers us is annulled
Pray, what will flutter in the wake of trust
After the soul from Frame of Name is culled
I wonder if, in some far yet-to-be
A piece of us will live in poetry

© Janet Martin



Bygone Restored

 PAD challenge day 7; For today’s prompt, write a discovery poem.




The sound tips we ignored
From lips of sage insight
Roars like bygone restored
In ‘aha, you were right’

With tamed belligerence
We follow where They went
A voice of vigilance
For youth’s impulsive bent

Once we thought life was like
A bike ride to the moon
Rather than summer’s hike
That disappears too soon

© Janet Martin

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Sound of the Future

PAD Challenge day 6: For today’s prompt, write a poem about a sound.

Busy day-care day today, so for all the glorious ways this prompt could flow they are not mine for now:) oh...wow! They're here!!! early today.



 With cheerful chatter
And pitter- patter
And freckle-splattered nose
With teddy bears
And teeny cares
And running shoes that glow
With darling grins
And dimpled chins
And wonder, full and free
Our children grow
Their future, oh,
Is up to you and me

The sound of something more
Than dash and dance and play and run
Is passing through our doors;
It is the people they’ll become

© Janet Martin

Excerpt from this month's Rural Route magazine... 

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Zirconium, Vanadium, Ruthenium, Oh My


For today’s prompt, pick an element (like from the periodic table), make it the title of your poem (or part of the title), and then, write the poem. 



The poet prefers worlds
Where war of words attract
Then let the scientist
Explore
The core of -ium fact

The sky is full of gold
The vale, pale amethyst
And when midnight
Is bright with moon
The world is silver-kissed

The earth is like a vault
We scale, scavenge and dredge
We climb a clime
Of emerald
To sit upon time's ledge

Imbibed by common grace
We, common, mortal man
Inhale, exhale
A miracle
Of immaculate plan

The Artist that ordained
The law of gravity
Maintains the wonder
Of it all
In flawless symmetry

The needy deeds of we
With greedy ignorance
Have vexed,
But cannot mastermind 
His kind Omnipotence


© Janet Martin