ANNOUNCEMENT:
J. Patrick Lewis is back tomorrow (Monday) with another poetry challenge. I’ve already tried it. It’s addictive! Be here!
Hi everyone,
I’m pleased to feature four poets today, Catherine Johnson, Julie Krantz. Charline Profiri,and Steven Withrow. They were the first to volunteer poems for me to share with you. If you haven’t heard about Poetry Sunday, it’s my day to feature poems by you. Word of the Month Poetry Challenge will continue as always. The only thing that has changed is that I’m easing away from publishing one of my own poems every Sunday to make way to feature the poems of others.
I have no hard rules. I’m sure it goes without saying that this is a family-friendly site that is often visited by young people. Some of them contribute their own work, which is always a special treat. You can write verse or free verse. It can be on the subject of your choice. It seems prudent to suggest a limit of one poem per poet per week. Unless I become swamped with poems, I’ll do my best to post on Sunday all the poems I’ve received through Friday of that same week. If the job becomes too much for me, I’ll cry on your shoulder and moderate accordingly.
Now! Here are our first featured poets!
Catherine’s poem will be published in an anthology called ISLAND WONDERS by The Poetry Institute of Canada in January 2013.
Never Go Picnicking With Elephants Loose
by Catherine Johnson
Mrs. Peabody arrived at the zoo
with a hat and a smile and a picnic for two.
She laid down her blanket, a nice gingham red,
“What a beautiful day for a picnic,” she said.
She picked up a sandwich of lettuce and ham,
while hubby preferred to eat pickles and spam.
They munched on some carrots and sipped cranberry juice.
Little did they know there’s elephants loose.
If only they’d sat just a few feet away
their beautiful picnic might’ve lasted the day.
Mr. Peabody glanced up at the sky,
thinking that thunder was sure to pass by.
Little did he know, that wasn’t the case.
No thunder today just an elephant race.
The warnings went out but neither could hear,
their hearing aids needing a tweak twice a year.
The elephants brrrrd a huge elephant sound,
In shock they dropped all of their food on the ground.
Now up on their knees, arthritic and slow,
a teeny bit faster they needed to go.
Oops they’re too late, here comes the stampede.
Knocked over, surprised, the poor dears weed.
Squish went the sandwiches, spilled went the juice.
Never go picnicking with elephants loose.
Catherine Johnson
http://catherinemjohnson.wordpress.com
www.twitter.com/CatherinePoet
Mr. Moon
by Julie Krantz
Mr. Moon
in purple sky,
see your moonlight
riding high.
slipping under
clouds of snow,
feel your magic
in my toes.
can you see
my starry face,
as you glide by
leaf and gate?
did you know
I’m hiding, too,
catching moonbeams
just like you?
Julie Krantz
https://www.amazon.com/author/juliekrantz
http://www.facebook.com/juliekrantzbooks
THE BIRDIE’S CAFÉ
A review by Robin Redbreast
By Charline Profiri
This café offers roomy nests,
Made especially for their guests.
The food is sure to make you tweet.
It’s now my favorite place to eat.
The menu’s amazing at this café.
These items are offered everyday:
Worm and Berry Oatmeal
(Free refills. What a deal!)
Sandwich on Birdseed Bread
(With your choice of buggy spread.)
Spaghetti ala Worm
(Super fresh. These worms squirm!)
Freeze Dried Ant Canapé
(Sure to please a real gourmet.)
Feathered friends, the food’s divine.
The Birdie’s Café is the place to dine.
Charline Profiri
www.cprofiri.com
Counting Little Geckos http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=on97re8Wyn0
Guess Who’s In The Desert forthcoming from Rio Chico Books for Children, Spring 2013
Rain, Rain, Stay Today: Southwest Nursery Rhymes forthcoming from Rio Chico Books for Children, Spring 2014
CASSOWARY
By Steven Withrow
I wish I were a cassowary,
a double-wattled cassowary
roaming lowlands of New Guinea,
and if you ask me why
I’ll tell you that the cassowary,
the spongy-crested cassowary
hiding away from town and city,
did not evolve to fly
but runs top-speed on sure and steady,
sprints full-tilt on strong and steady
legs forever at the ready
to leap two meters high.
Although he’s almost ostrich heavy,
though he’s nearly emu heavy,
and his middle toe is dagger-deadly,
the cassowary’s spry,
so you’ll seldom spy a cassowary,
a deep rainforest cassowary,
eating laurel fruit and myrtle berry
beneath a southern sky.
How I wish I were a cassowary,
a legendary cassowary
who flees through trees because he’s very
shy—and so am I.
www.cracklesofspeech.blogspot.com
www.poetryatplay.org
My thanks to Catherine, Julie, Charline, and Steven, our first featured Sunday poets! I hope their good example will attract many more poets over the coming weeks and months.
David