Showing posts with label hay(na)ku. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hay(na)ku. Show all posts

Saturday, April 20, 2024

Day 20 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2024


Fun little intro from Day 20 in 2013:
Day 20. What's our 20? Here's where we are: exactly two-thirds into National Poetry Month. Using all our fingers and toes.

And now, today's prompts. Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo suggestion: “[W]rite a poem that recounts a historical event.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “[W]rite a poem using at least three of the following six words:”

  • bear • collar • flair
  • hear • praise • ramble

Or for extra credit, use all six words.  Also, as an alternate prompt: Write a six-word poem (doesn't have to use any of the above words).


Today, I offer a hay(na)ku about the recent eclipse I witnessed in totality. The poem is exactly six words (as suggested), and I (almost) used three of the words: "ramble," "collar," and "flair" . . . I cheated with the last one by changing it into "flare." For what it's worth, I did use "flair" in its original suggested spelling as part of the title. The hay(na)ku is a three-line form that uses one word in the first line, two words in the second line, and three in the third line (along with other variations), invented by the poet Eileen R. Tabios.

Anyway, I was successful in combining three prompts today: recount a historical event, use three of the six words suggested, and write a poem that's only six words!


Eclipse Flair

Sun's
collar flares
around moon's ramble.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Eclipse with lens flares (USA Today)


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


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Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Day 9 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2024


Day 9 . . . here's the intro from the 9 April 2017 blog post (like I did on Day 3 last week).
Day Nine. A novena of poems. Triple triple. Number nine . . . number nine . . . number nine . . . (You might need a little bit of age, some mileage, to get that last allusion.)

Now, on to the prompts for the day. Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo suggestion: “Today, we’d like to challenge you to write [an] ode celebrating an everyday object."

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's Two-for-Tuesday prompt: 1) Write a love poem, and/or . . . 2) Write an anti-love poem.”


My poem today is a hay(na)ku sonnet. The hay(na)ku stanza counts words: line 1 one word, line 2 two words, and line 3 three words. Sometimes hay(na)ku can be reversed 3-2-1. The hay(na)ku was invented by the poet Eileen Tabios in 2003, and I am its godfather, having named it. The hay(na)ku sonnet is my invention: five hay(na)ku stanzas with the last one squished to 3-3 in order for the lines to come up to 14. This poem merges all three prompts today!

Ode to my Dragon Jeans

I
do love
these embroidered jeans.

Dragon —
incarnadine, verdigris
— emblazons the seat.

However, I worry
people think,
“Show-off!”

So I don’t
wear them
much.

But today, I
sport them brazenly!

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]



Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


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Friday, April 8, 2022

Day Eight ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2022


Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo suggestion: “Today’s prompt . . . asks you to name your alter-ego, and then describe him/her in detail. Then write in your alter-ego’s voice. Maybe your alter-ego is a streetwise detective, or a superhero, or a very small goldfinch. ”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day prompt: “[W]rite a what they never tell you poem. I'm not sure who 'they' are, but 'they' talk a lot, and there are things people tell you, and there are things you just have to learn on your own, because 'they' (them again) never tell you ahead of time.”

Today's poem merges the two prompts again, though I've modified both of them. With the Thorson prompt, I don't have the alter ego speak. With the Brewer prompt, rather than the generic "what they never tell you," meaning what people never say, I've altered the prompt to something a particular person never said. Also, the word tita in line 3 means "aunt."

In addition, this poem is again an installment in my novel-in-poems about aswang, mythical Philippine monsters. It alludes to, and is a mirror of, an earlier poem in the novel, "Creation of an Aswang," which was written for NaPoWriMo in 2017, and was published in Philippines Graphic a year later. In the chronology within the novel, this goes between the poems I wrote on Day Five and Day One.

Alter Ego

Lucia,
Mama’s sister,
my favorite tita,

never
told me
her clandestine identity —

aswang,
baby killer,
— bequeathed to me.

How
can I
escape my legacy?

I am she.
She is me.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

            "Aswang: Manananggal"
            by experimettle in DeviantArt.

Thia poem is a hay(na)ku sonnet, written in Bruce Niedt's rhyming style. The hay(na)ku sonnet is a form I invented, based on Eileen Tabios's hay(na)ku form: a tercet whose lines contain one word, two words, three words; in the sonnet variation, there are 5 hay(na)ku where the last one is squished to three words per line, in order for the total lines to add up to 14. The very first hay(na)ku sonnet appeared in this blog here. Later, the poet Bruce Niedt devised a way to rhyme the form, with the ends of stanzas one and two rhyming, then stanzas three and four, and finally both lines of the ending couplet. In November 2021, Bruce described this rhyming method in his blog Orangepeel.

Incidentally, tomorrow I am teaching "Writing in Short Forms" in Writers' Digest University's Poetry Writing Virtual Conference. I will be talking about hay(na)ku and curtal sonnets, forms I use quite a lot, as you may know if you follow my work in this blog and elsewhere.

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


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Friday, April 10, 2020

Day Ten ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2020


Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day prompt: “For today’s prompt, take the phrase ‘The (blank) Who (blank),’ replace the blanks with a word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then, write your poem. Possible titles include: ‘The Runner Who Walked,’ ‘The Scientist Who Decided to Make a Monster,’ ‘The Poet Who Loved Me,’ and/or ‘The Teacher Who Couldn’t Learn.’ If you’d prefer to write about a thing instead of a person, feel free to replace the word ‘who’ with the word ‘that.’”

I'm honored that today Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt mentions me: “Today’s prompt (optional, as always) is another one from the archives, first suggested to us by long-time Na/GloPoWriMo participant Vince Gotera. It’s the hay(na)ku. Created by the poet Eileen Tabios and named by Vince, the hay(na)ku is a variant on the haiku. A hay(na)ku consists of a three-line stanza, where the first line has one word, the second line has two words, and the third line has three words. You can write just one, or chain several together into a longer poem. For example, you could write a hay(na)ku sonnet, like the one that Vince himself wrote back during NaPoWriMo 2012!”

I played with Robert's title prompt by removing the blanks! And, of course, since the NaPoWriMo prompt talks about me and the hay(na)ku sonnet, which I invented as a refinement of Eileen Tabios's basic hay(na)ku, I've written a hay(na)ku sonnet for Day 10.

The Who

scruffy
Pete Townshend
power chord windmill

crazy
Keith Moon
machine gun drummer

tasselled
Roger Daltrey
spinning microphone mandala

granite
John Entwistle
bold bass bedrock

pinball wizard quartet
rock's almighty hurricane

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]





Alan's hay(na)ku today is a necessary satire for our times.

The Man Who Ran

His
bonespur diagnosis
kept him home.

His
father’s money
started his business.

His
reality show
made him electable,

“Leaning[-]
together headpiece
filled with straw,”

his
secret obligations
make us vulnerable;

his
public declarations
make us vulnerable.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Brilliant poem, Alan. The use of "his" as a repeated refrain in the one-word line is a testament to you-know-who's narcissism. Everything is "his" and everything is about him.

Finally, I'd like to give a shout-out here to my friend Bruce Neidt, who wrote a hay(na)ku sonnet today on our current moment, titled "The Man Who Went to the Supermarket During a Slow Apocalypse." Click here to read it. Serious and fun poem.

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. To comment, look for a red line below that starts Posted by, then click once on the word comments in that line. If you don’t find the word “comments” in that line, then look for a blue link below that says Post a comment and click it once. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


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Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Day 30 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2019


Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “I’d like you to try your hand at a minimalist poem. What’s that? Well, a poem that is quite short, and that doesn’t really try to tell a story, but to quickly and simply capture an image or emotion. Haiku are probably the most familiar and traditional form of minimalist poetry, but there are plenty of very short poems out there that do not use the haiku form. There’s even an extreme style of minimalism in the form of one-word and other “highly compressed” poems. You don’t have to go that far, but you might think of your own poem for the day as a form of gesture drawing. Perhaps you might start from a concrete noun with a lot of sensory connotations, like ‘Butter’ or ‘Sandpaper,’ or ‘Raindrop’ and — quickly, lightly — go from there.”

Given that today is the last day, Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day prompt is a perfect Two for Tuesday: “a stop poem” and/or “a don’t stop poem.”

In merging these two prompts, I've realized that I haven't written a hay(na)ku all month. So here goes:

The End?

Stop.
Wait, what?
Don't stop? Uh . . .

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]


Thanks for reading, friends! It's been a great National Poetry Month. Keep the faith!


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. To comment, look for a red line below that starts Posted by, then click once on the word comments in that line. If you don’t find the word “comments” in that line, then look for a blue link below that says Post a comment and click it once. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


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Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Trilingual Blue Bravura


I recently had the pleasure and the honor of one of my poems appearing in translation: Spanish and Romanian.

In February 2017, Eileen R. Tabios — my "poet sister" and "verse kumadre" — published Your Father Is Bald, a history and collection of the hay(na)ku form, which Eileen invented in 2003. I happen to be the namer of the hay(na)ku . . . a portmanteau pun on "haiku" and the Philippine expression "hay naku" (kinda like "oy vey" or "oh my god").

Your Father Is Bald, put out by PIM Publishing House in Romania, is trilingual — in English, Spanish, and Romanian — and Eileen invited me to be a "guest poet" in the book. So my hay(na)ku poem "Blue Bravura" appears there, my first time being translated into other languages.

If you're not familiar with the hay(na)ku, it's basically a tercet with one word in the first line, two words in the second line, and three words in the third line — a deceptively simple form that is amazingly flexible and expressive. This 1-2-3 patterning produces the book's title. "Your Father Is Bald" comes from the Philippine nursery rhyme "isa, dalawa, tatlo, and tatay mo'y kalbo"; in English this translates into "one, two, three, your father is bald." Much more fun in Filipino!

Here is my poem next to the Spanish and the Romanian versions.

Blue Bravura
For the
Griffin Lit
sixth graders
and their teacher
Ms. Filas
poems
like gems
in my pocket

gleam
and glisten
in the dark

glowing
always with
their blue light

saying
hey you
pay close attention

bluebirds
blueberries sky
blue blue blue

blue
egyptian jewels
sapphire tanzanite turquoise

blue
lapis lazuli
azurite aquamarine topaz

blue
jade dragon
breathing carnelian flames

blue
steel blades
crocodile kampilan swords

blues
blazing rock
guitar bass timbales

blue
prophecies ballads
in yours mine

our
blue pockets
brilliant breathtaking words
      Coraje azúl
Para los niños
del sexto grado
de Griffin Lit
y su maestra,
Ms. Filas
poemas
como diamantes
en mi bolsillo

brillan
y alumbran
en la oscuridad

brillando
siempre con
su luz azúl

diciendo
oye tú
pon atención aquí

azúlejo
arándano cielo
azúl, azúl, azúl

azules
joyas egipcias.
zafiro, tansánito, turquesa

azúl
lapislázuli
azúl celeste, aguamarina, topacio

azúl
dragón de jade
llamas de cornalina

azúles
hojas de acero
espadas kampilanes

blues
rock explosivo
tímpanos de guitarra

baladas
profecías azúles
reencuentro en ti

nuestros
bolsillos azúles
brillantes palabras abrumantes
      Curaj albastru
Pentru copiii din
clasa a şasea
de la Griffin Lit
şi profesoarei lor,
Doamna Filas
poeme
ca nestemate
în buzunarul meu

strălucesc
ş􀀙i luminează
în acest întuneric

strălucind
întotdeauna cu
lumina lor albastră

spunând
hei tu
fii atent aici

albastru
cer albăstriu
albastru, albastru, albastru

albastre
bijuterii egiptene
safir, tanzanit, turcoaz

albaş􀀁tri
lapis lazuli
azur, acvamarin, topaz

albastru
dragon jad
flăcări vii cornalină

albastre
lame de otel
săbii kampilan

blues
rock exploziv
timbale chitară bas

balade
preziceri
albastre regăsesc în tine

buzunarele
noastre albastre
strălucitoare cuvinte copleş􀀁itoare

—Vince Gotera, from Your Father Is Bald by Eileen R. Tabios (PIM Publishing House, 2017).

This poem goes back to April 26, 2012, when I featured on the blog the Griffin Lit wiki where Danielle Filas and her sixth graders at Village Academy Schools in Powell, Ohio, were posting NaPoWriMo poems. That day was The Academy of American Poets' "national poem in your pocket day" and I wrote this poem in tribute to that inspiring class of young poets. Those kids are now juniors in high school. I hope some of them are still writing poems!

By the way, the Spanish translation is by Diana Dragomirescu; the Romanian by Gabriela Apetrei, Elena Țăpean, Ioana Agafiței, and Irina Secărescu. I love their work except that both translations, strangely, leave out the word "crocodile" in line 27.


Won’t you comment, please? I'd love to hear what you’re thinking. To comment, look for a red line below that starts Posted by, then click once on the word comments in that line. If you don’t find the word “comments” in that line, then look for a blue link below that says Post a comment and click it once. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Poems Eligible for a Rhysling (Part 3)


On Friday, I posted a list of my 2016 speculative poems that are eligible for a Rhysling Award. Of those poems, these are the ones that appeared only in print in Popcorn Press's Halloween anthology Lupine Lunes: Horror Poems & Short Stories. Available at the press and also on Amazon.

This first poem has to do with the aswang: a mythical Philippine monster. The specific kind of aswang featured here is the manananggal, a woman who can sever herself at the waist: the top half grows wings so she can fly in search of prey, leaving her bottom half wherever it is standing when she transforms out of her human-appearing form.

Encounter on Good Friday
— Cutud Village, north of Manila, 1936
On his straw mat, his banig, under the inky susurrus
of the mosquito net hung from the walls of his nipa hut,

a bachelor farmer named Santiago de la Cruz lounges half asleep,
half dreaming of the Easter sunrise mass day after tomorrow

and of today’s penitentes flogging their own backs into bloody
crosshatch, a couple crucified for a handful of long minutes.

Tiyago gazes up toward the now charcoal-tinged underside
of his thatched palm-leaf roof and starts at an indistinct

shadow above, shaped darkly like a crucified person. What?
Tiyago rolls out of the net and fixes his eyes above. Yes,

there is something there in the pitch black. Wait, is it
a dark brown woman with her arms outstretched, gripping

the almost invisible bamboo supports of the roof? A ghost?
A hallucination? Tiyago rubs his eyes and looks again. Her eyes

are dark red like dying coals. He crosses himself quickly,
notices a rippling behind her like a mourning-dress curtain.

Susmariosep, Tiyago whispers, she got wings like a bat!
He slowly realizes there is nothing below her waist

but a few brackish red loops of, what, guts, torn intestines?
Wait, it’s not a whole figure. She has no legs. No legs!

O my Jesus, an aswang . . . putang ina, she’s a mananananggal!
The aswang smiles, teeth a dingy slate gray, and from her mouth

slips a dingy blood-red thing like a snake or maybe more like
a thick dark earthworm that writhes wildly, closer and closer

to Tiyago. It’s her tongue, a ten-foot-long tongue.
Hold on, she’s trying to suck my blood, the black harpy!

He clenches his arms, his fists, shuts his eyes hard.
The aswang’s tongue slinks, inches, nearer to his neck.

His body in the shadowy center of the room seems to sprout
fur, arms and legs thinning and crackling into wolf-like limbs.

Tiyago is growing taller and bulkier, T-shirt and boxers
ripping apart like tissue. He growls, dark yellowish fangs

flashing out of the lengthening snout of his face. Tiyago
is also an aswang, a shapeshifter churning into a huge

black dog, larger than a man, standing wide on hind legs.
The two monsters growl and snarl at each other, a tableau

carved into the dusky sweaty air of the room. Then it stops.
Both of them laugh, they snicker and snort, convulse in dark

shrieks and screams of black humor. The manananggal pulls in
her slimy tongue, waves at Tiyago, and swoops out of the window,

her pterodactyl wings sighing velvety tik-tik, wak-wak sounds.
Tiyago lifts his noble black head to the heavens and howls.

— Vince Gotera, Lupine Lunes: Horror
Poems & Short Stories (Popcorn Press)

In this next poem, the two aswang from the last poem have fallen in love. Clara, the manananggal, has been under suspicion by her fellow villagers of being an aswang. One night, they attack — almost like in the first Frankenstein movie, when people with torches and pitchforks hunt Boris Karloff's character. Santiago, the shapeshifting farmer from the previous poem, changes into his aswang form to rescue Clara.

Villagers at Clara’s House, After Dark
— hay(na)ku
Ay, dios ko,
malaking aso!
Giant

black dog attacked,
rabid, rending . . .
Aswang!

. . . jumping up toward
our necks,
faces.

Threw our torches,
bright fangs.
Aswang!

Swung bolos against
black fur,
useless.

Guns, no good,
too fast.
Aswang!

We scattered, scared
for our
lives.

Next day, Clara
was gone.
Aswang!

— Vince Gotera, Lupine Lunes: Horror
Poems & Short Stories (Popcorn Press)

In case you weren't able to figure it out from the context, the opening sentence of the previous poem, "Ay, dios ko, malaking aso!" means, in Tagalog, "Oh my god, a huge dog!"

Aswang Wedding: Early Saturday Morn

The aswang lovers held each other’s hand,
kneeling at the teakwood communion rail
of La Iglesia de San Agustin,

the simple granite-walled Spanish chapel
not far from the shores of Manila Bay.
Heads lowered, the humble country couple

waited while the parish priest, Padre Rey,
drowsy, wished he was asleep in his bed.
Raising his hand he droned, In nomine

Patris et Filii . . . Dawn, a faint red,
kindled stained glass the deep dark shade of blood
draining from a body torn and shredded.

Rings, sign of the cross, yes, but Padre would
later tell how his heart sank at the end:
fangs glinting in the bride’s smile, the groom’s mouth.

— Vince Gotera, Lupine Lunes: Horror
Poems & Short Stories (Popcorn Press)

The three poems above are part of my novella-in-poems, currently in progress, telling the story of these two aswang in their attempt to live a normal life — normal if one is a human, that is. After marrying, Santiago and Clara emigrate to the US, feeling they won't be persecuted there because most Americans don't know about aswang.

In this next poem, the priest is not the same priest in the wedding poem directly above. Some readers have thought they were the same person, perhaps because in Lupine Lunes, these two poems are next to each other.

The Good Father

The folks at St. Mary’s Church thought well of their priest, Father
Joseph Paolo. Every Sunday, after each of the masses, he would
stand in the narthex and greet every person, shaking their hands,
while above in the tower, the church bells would sonorously ring.
The parishioners often recalled, our last priest would be damned
rather than greet anyone. Father Joe was at his best with weddings,

so friendly, so accommodating, so gracious, and each wedding
couple felt genuinely special. Yup, no one better than Father,
everyone always said. But Father Joe had a secret so damning
some days he could hardly believe his vocation. His secret would
send him to hell, he frequently thought, to the deepest, darkest ring
of the Inferno. Sometimes, unable to sleep at night, his hands

would burn and sting, and he wondered how his flock’s hands
couldn’t feel the hot guilt in his grip. Every week, on Wednesday
evenings, he would hold Bible Study and his voice would ring
with authority and wonder, but inside his soul, he’d feel farther
than ever from God. And truth. Because his own truth would
keep him exiled forever from heaven. His secret? He’d damned

someone to hell. Not just someone, his beloved. She was damned
to perdition as if he had killed her, body and soul, with his own hands.
In his last year of college, Joe Paolo had fallen in love. He was just wild
about Francesca. And she adored him. Often they talked about a wedding:
a silver dress, champagne, a four-tiered cake. Joe even went to her father
and asked for Francesca’s hand—truly old-fashioned. He bought a ring,

a lovely one with three diamonds, got down on one knee, and put the ring
on her finger. But Joe got scared. And ran. Ran all the way to the damn
seminary. And Francesca hanged herself. Even after he became a Father,
Joe never told anyone, not even during confession. He ached for her hands
to give him absolution, cool water from God’s font. With every wedding
he hoped for peace. Then, one evening in the church, she came. It wouldn’t

be as he thought: Francesca floating above, in a silvery gown, and she would
forgive him. No. She appeared as an angry ghost in the dark chancel, ringed
by fire, glowing chains of molten iron holding her down, apparition wedded
to blackness and stinking filth, the smoke-heavy shrieking of the damned
wafting around her. Francesca was whispering. She held out flaming hands
and beckoned. Come to me, come to me. He fell to his knees, the poor Father.

That night Father Paolo felt the closest ever to being eternally damned:
an imprint appeared up on the cross, a woman’s hand burned into the wood,
sweet Francesca’s softest caress, with an unburned gap for a wedding ring.

— Vince Gotera, Lupine Lunes: Horror
Poems & Short Stories (Popcorn Press)

Apropos of the next poem, I hope there won't be a full moon during the upcoming Presidential inauguration.

Lupine Lunes, Starring Donald Trump

Donald Trump, werewolf,
turns in wash of moonlight,
presidential, with fangs.

Donald Trump sprouts
wolf fur in tailored shirt,
fresh from China.

Donald Trump’s canines
glow like radioactive little fingers,
fluorescent plastic teeth.

Donald Trump’s tail
wags while he whines, howls
at harvest moon.

Donald Trump: “I’m
The most handsome werewolf ever,
believe me. Handsomest!”

Donald Trump’s paws
fumble in the voting booth,
no opposable thumbs.


“Donald Trump, President.
And also Wolfman, so what?
Everyone loves me.”
                               
"Here's Donny," Daily Mail, 16 October 2015

— Vince Gotera, Lupine Lunes: Horror
Poems & Short Stories (Popcorn Press)

I got the idea for this poem from the anthology's title "Lupine Lunes," announced in the book's call for submissions of poetry and fiction. The phrase is a truly witty title by the editor, Lester Smith, founder and editor of Popcorn Press, because of course werewolves are turned by the moon — la lune in French — when full. "Lune" is also the name of a poetic form, invented by Jack Collom: a three-line stanza with three words in line 1, five words in line 2, and three words in line 3.

Friends, do check out Popcorn Press. For a number of years now, Lester Smith and the press have published a Halloween anthology. Always fun. Popcorn Press has published many wonderful collections and anthologies. And pick up a copy of Lupine Lunes at the press or on Amazon.


Won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. To comment, look for a red line below that starts Posted by, then click once on the word comments in that line. If you don’t find the word "comments" in that line, then look for a blue link below that says Post a comment and click it once. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   

If you got here from my list of Rhysling-eligible
poems, please click here to go back to the list.



 
P.S. I just realized today (11 May 2017) that I left a poem off.

All Zombies, Coming and Going
—  a somersault abecedarian ...
read first down left column
and then down right column
same words, new punctuation
All
Bury
Caskets.
Doom’s
Exhausted.
Forever
Green
Horrific
Inside
Jujubes
Kissing
Lips,
Miniature,
Never
Oblique.
Plan
Quiet
Reveries,
Secure
Trees.
Under
Visible
Wound,
eXit
Your
Zipper.
                    Zipper
Your
eXit
Wound,
Visible
Under
Trees’
Secure
Reveries,
Quiet.
Plan
Oblique
Never
Miniature
Lips
Kissing
Jujubes
Inside
Horrific
Green.
Forever
Exhausted,
Doom's
Caskets
Bury
All.

— Vince Gotera, Lupine Lunes: Horror
Poems & Short Stories (Popcorn Press)

(Added 11 May 2017)

Monday, April 27, 2015

Day 27 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2015


Day Twenty-Seven. As a child, I found 27 enchanting, as I said about 24 recently. The number 27 is equal to 9 x 3, and the digits 2 and 7 in 27 add up to the 9 that's a factor of 27. I'm sure there's something about the number 9 and base 10 that makes 9 so interesting: 9 x 2 = 18 and the digits 1 and 8 add up to 9;  9 x 4 = 36 and the digits 3 and 6 add up to 9;  9 x 859,472 = 7,735,248 and the digits 7, 7, 3, 5, 2, 4, and 8 add up to 36, and then the digits 3 and 6 add up to 9. So 27 is not alone in that adding-up-to-9 thing. I'm sure a mathematician could explain those cool 9-effects clearly. To me it's all glorious mathematical magic.

Maureen Thorson's NaPoWriMo prompt: Write a "hay(na)ku [which] consists of a three-line stanza, where the first line has one word, the second line has two words, and the third line has three words. You can write just one, or chain several together into a longer poem. For example, you could write a hay(na)ku sonnet." Thanks so much for suggesting the hay(na)ku today, Maureen, and also for the shout-out to me. I appreciate it!

Robert Lee Brewer's PAD prompt: "write a looking back poem. Of course, some people just glance over their shoulders, and others stop and turn all the way around. Some look back in time and weigh their successes and failures, evaluate things they could do better. Some claim they never look back. Whatever your stance on looking back, capture it in a poem today."

Since I wrote a hay(na)ku sonnet on Day 15, I'll write a longer hay(na)ku poem today, of course looking back to combine the two "official" prompts.

Looking Back to the Stars

My
child eyes
adored starships, SF,

anything
space-oriented:
Mercury, Gemini, Apollo.

1969:
Neil Armstrong’s
astounding moon landing.

Edgar
Rice Burroughs’
visionary Barsoom novels.

2001:
Space Odyssey.
Flash Gordon
cliffhangers.

Comics
utopias, dystopias:
Magnus, Robot Fighter,

Thor’s
Marvel debut
battling space aliens.

Cartoons:
Duck Dodgers
in the 24½th

Century!
The Jetsons,
Termites from Mars.


Plus,
always nonpareil,
matchless . . . Star Trek.

Now,
grown up,
I ask you,

Where’s
my jetpack?
My commuter spaceship?

Where’s
Penny Robinson,
my spacegirl crush?

We
were promised
a space future.

Instead,
we got
runaway climate change.

Repubs
fighting Demos,
progress always retrograde.

Ah,
Dale Arden,
Princess Dejah Thoris,

Yoeman
Janice Rand,
let’s fly away.

Theremin
eerily undulating,
let’s fly away.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

I realize it's overly sentimental, even mawkish. But where are our Jetson flying cars? To my girlfriend Kathy . . . they're all fictional women!   

Marvin the Martian and Duck Dodgers
in Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century.
Okay, on to Alan's offering for the day. "I have written a hay(na)ku 'looking back' poem," Alan tells us, "matching both prompts and finally writing one of Vince's favorite forms."



P O E M   R E M O V E D

while being submitted for publication.

 

Please come back later. The poem may
return at some time in the future.

Thank you!

 
 
 


That's both haunting and lovely, Alan. Since it's a sonnet — a hay(na)ku sonnet — the connections to love and human desire are unavoidable, simultaneously sweet and sad.

Friends, won't you comment, please? Love to know what you're thinking. To comment, look for a red line below that starts Posted by, then click once on the word comments in that line. If you don't find the word "comments" in that line, then look for a blue link below that says Post a comment and click it once. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


NAPOWRIMO / PAD 2015 • Pick a day in April: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30


Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Day 15 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2015


Day Fifteen. We're at the tipping point, the proverbial hump! Or, using the roller coaster theme from yesterday's blog post, it's all downhill from here and the real fun parts are just getting going!

Maureen Thorson's NaPoWriMo prompt: "Today, I challenge you to write a poem that addresses itself or some aspect of its self (i.e. 'Dear Poem,' or 'what are my quatrains up to?'; 'Couplet, come with me . . .') This might seem a little meta at first, or even kind of cheesy. But it can be a great way of interrogating (or at least, asking polite questions) of your own writing process and the motivations you have for writing, and the motivations you ascribe to your readers."

Robert Lee Brewer's PAD suggestion: "For today's prompt, pick an adjective, make it the title of your poem, and then, write your poem. If you're feeling stuck on this one, go back through your poems earlier this month and find adjectives you used — if any. Or crack open a dictionary. Or scan other poems for ideas."

At first, these two prompts didn't really work for me. But all month I've been trying really hard to use both prompts each day; I've quietly committed to myself that I will not deviate from the prompts. After putting the prompts on back burner for several hours, it occurred to me that the hay(na)ku sonnet, a form I created, might be worth writing to. And of course, as you can see by the title of the blog, the adjective blue was a foregone conclusion.
A little set-up. The hay(na)ku is a form the Filipino American poet Eileen Tabios invented: a tercet with one word in the first line, two in the next, and three in the last. A deceptively easy form, it is most challenging and also most rewarding when one tries to get good, productive line breaks, rather than simply breaking up groups of six words into three lines.

Eileen had originally wanted to call the form "The Filipino Haiku." I came up with the name "hay(na)ku," a pun on the Filipino exclamation, "hay naku," which is a bit like "oy vey" in Yiddish, or "oh my gosh" in English. The "na" in being in parentheses is part of the punning: if you remove it, you get "hayku." (Notes: 1, 2, 3)

The hay(na)ku sonnet, which I invented for NaPoWriMo/PAD in 2012, is made up of four regular hay(na)ku stanzas (adding up to 12 lines) plus a fifth hay(na)ku that's been made into a couplet with three words per line. (Note: 4)
Here's my poem combining the PAD adjective prompt with the NaPoWriMo "speak to your poem" prompt.

Blue
—a hay(na)ku sonnet
   (a form I invented)
Dear
Hay(na)ku Sonnet:
Since your birth,

you’ve
covered midnight,
morning glory blooms,

supertyphoons,
both oceans’
aquamarine and teal

waters,
acetylene blaze
lighting shattering sky.

Blue on, child.
Sail cerulean air.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Here's Alan's intro for his poem today: "I would like to find the person who decided that the busiest month of the academic year needed to be the month of celebrating poetry by writing a poem every day. I have something to say to that person."

Alan, you can blame someone (or more likely, several someones) at the Academy of American Poets, which established National Poetry Month in 1996. It's modeled after Black History Month and Women's History Month, and it occurs in April because those other celebrations were in the preceding months of February and March. You can also blame the Academy of American Poets for the idea of writing a poem every day during April; the Academy established Poem-a-Day in 2006.

Friends, here's Alan's poem for today regarding this topic.

Fixed

Why anyone would pick a form
to exercise creative storm
or exorcise creative swarm
                of stinging thought
and hope fixed form keeps image warm
                when it will not,

is far beyond my ken. What drought
of life could possibly have brought
me to this point? I haven’t got
                a single clue
why bloggers’ prompts somehow are what
                I have to do

these April weeks to make it through
my “sacred” obligation to
write poetry each day. And who
                will rat me out
if I should miss a day? It’s true
                sometimes I doubt

I’ll find a thing to write about,
and worry about online clout
of viewers who might read and shout
                out their alarm
and drive me offline in a rout.
                I mean no harm.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Wow, Alan. Double wow. Alan's using a now-little-known form called the Burns stanza, a sestet with the rhyme scheme aaabab, where the b lines are shorter. But that's not all. Alan has also interlocked his rhymes. The second rhyming sound of the first stanza (-aught) becomes the first rhyming sound of the next or second stanza. Then the second rhyme of that stanza (-ooo) is the first rhyme of the next or third stanza. The pattern continues like this throughout. At the end, the second rhyme of the last stanza (-orm) comes full circle because it was the first rhyme of the first stanza. Triple wow.

Friends, won't you comment, please? Love to know what you're thinking. To comment, look for a red line below that starts Posted by, then click once on the word comments in that line. If you don't find the word "comments" in that line, then look for a blue link below that says Post a comment and click it once. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   


NAPOWRIMO / PAD 2015 • Pick a day in April: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30


Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Day Nine ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2014


Day Nine. Number nine, number nine, number nine. I wonder who owns that song now? Maybe Michael Jackson's kids? Anyway, on to today's official (but optional) prompts.

Robert Lee Brewer suggests a "shelter poem" (Poetic Asides). Maureen Thorson's prompt comes from Bruce Niedt: "take any random song play list (from your iPod, CD player, favorite radio station, Pandora or Spotify, etc.) and use the next five song titles on that randomized list in a poem" (NaPoWriMo).

Incidentally, Bruce Niedt, who suggested today's NaPoWriMo prompt, has been mashing up Thorson's and Brewer's prompts like I do. Might be fun to check out his blog Orangepeel.

Okay, here's my mash-up of Maureen's and Robert's prompts: a "shelter poem" incorporating five song titles gleaned, in order, from Pandora. The poem uses the hay(na)ku tercet form: one word in the first line, two words in the second, and three in the third, with good, productive line breaks, one hopes.

Oye Como Va

Listen,
my friends,
how it goes.

Above
the jardin
of lonely lovers,

fairytale
moon rises,
yellow blemished black.

Tower
points up,
purple-bruised sky.

Granite
and iron,
tower braves storms.

Imprisoned
blonde princess
cries there softly.

Silence
between tears:
she scrapes fingernails

against
harsh stone,
unyielding, no shelter.

Unfettered
wind whistles
through open windows.

Princess
shivers, waits
desperately for rescue.

You
know it:
typical cartoon ending.

Arrives
Prince Charming.
Scales jardin walls.

Hacks
through thorns,
climbs the tower.

Kiss.
Ride away
on noble stallion.

But
there’s more.
The tower’s not

happy
ever after.
As wind blows,

tower
keens, wails
through windows, gaping.

Princess,
sweet beloved,
stolen, kidnapped, gone.

Tower,
I speak
your language, wordless.

I
have wept.
Nobody to shelter

anymore.
Nothing remains
but scraggly jardin.

Tower,
you sob,
and I understand.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

The song titles from Pandora were "Between Tears" by Johannes Linstead, "Oye Como Va" by Santana, "Jardin" by Strunz and Farah, "Fairytale Moon" by Armik, and "I Speak Your Language" by Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers. The phrases "fairytale moon" and "jardin" (Spanish for "garden") set the tone and scene. The Spanish sentence "Oye como va" (listen how it goes) took the place of the customary "once upon a time." At first, I thought the princess and the prince would say "I speak your language" to each other until I got to thinking about the aftermath of a fairy tale: who is devastated by the ending? Cinderella's stepmom and stepsisters, for example. The wolf, in many tales. Witches, often.


And now Alan's intro to his poem for Day Nine: "I decided to attempt today's 'official' writing prompt from the NaPoWriMo.net site — where you take the titles of the first five songs on a streaming site and incorporate them into a poem. I tuned into my "Steve Earle" station on iRadio, and the five songs I got, in order, were Alexi Murdoch's "Orange Sky," The Avett Brothers' "Heart Full of Doubt / Road Full of Promise," Gillian Welch's "Look at Miss Ohio," Bruce Springsteen's "Human Touch," and Jamestown Revival's "California (Cast Iron Soul)." Did I panic? Nearly, given my tendency to write narrative poems, but I was working hard, and some ingenuity helped me to think of a situation where I could put these titles together, and, then, once I found a voice for that situation, I came up with something. I hope you all will enjoy.

Kerouac Goodbye

A moment, I approached
my loaded car with heart
full of doubt. A road full
of promise ahead, old
On the Road thumbed with spine
broken, I searched each face,
Mom and Dad, finally
convinced I was ready
to cross the continent.
"Be sure to stay awake
out west when there's nothing
to look at. Miss Ohio
if you can on the way
to California.
Cast iron soul food cooking
in Memphis might save you
from too much homesickness.
Stop in Arizona
only if it's human.
Touch base all that you can."
Orange sky behind me,
I waved and drove away,
open window catching
Dad's last shout of goodbye,
"Be sure to check your oil!"

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes     [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Wonderful, Alan. I particularly like how each of the phrases "look at Miss Ohio" and "human touch" got split, each ending up in different sentences. And also how "Miss Ohio" became, rather than a title, a verb and a noun. Brilliant! I especially liked Dad saying "Be sure to check your oil!" I don't remember my dad saying that but it is my mantra — learned the hard way, in several cars.

From NYC, missing Ohio, stopping in Memphis and Phoenix, then LA and SF.

Won't you comment, please, friends? To post a comment, look for a blue link below that says Post a comment; if you don't see that, look in the red line that starts Posted by Vince and click on the word comments.

Ingat, everyone. And be sure to check your oil!  


POEM-A-DAY 2014 • Pick a day in April: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30





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