Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Monday, September 2, 2013

Day 6.235: Day of labor

Well, if I'm honest it wasn't that much work, but I did start cooking our dinner as soon as I'd finished breakfast.

After a whole day of hickory smoke and charcoal heat, I'd produced this:


(pulled pork of course!)

And after dinner cooked on the grill there has to be:


s'mores!  "It's the law!" as Exile #4 told us as she was tucking in.

And so, Labor Day - the unofficial end of the summer - was a rather stormy and rainy day, but we did use the grill and do some eating outside: s'mores indoors are not good for floors (I rather like that!).

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Day 6.230: A riddle

My first is in grain but not in winnow.
My second is in the wind but not in the throw.
My third and my fourth are in seed but not chaff.
My fifth is in silly more times than in laugh.
My sixth can be magic and also by-gum.
And here is my picture - my riddle is done.


Did you know because I didn't until our visit on Saturday?

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Day 6.026: Matt or gloss?

Exile #3's dolphin now has a wet-look sheen thanks to a coat of Mod Podge Gloss.


I'll be quite sorry to see him/her go!

The title is the second line of a piece half-remembered from a Radio 4 broadcast by Ivor Cutler and Phyllis King.  The line was delivered -wonderfully - by Phyllis in response to Ivor's "Phyllis, I'd like to paint you."

Friday, November 16, 2012

Day 5.311: Where Exile #3 is from...

Exile #3 gave us this at the 5th Grade Thanksgiving Feast this afternoon:


I guess that counts as fan mail for this blog!

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Day 5.200: I won a pillow (visit)!

We were back at Jacob's Pillow tonight for the third consecutive Saturday.  The first visit was Exile #2's birthday present and my parents stayed home with the kids.  The second was our mad dash over there with the kids to see the free early-evening performance by the dance summer school.

Tonight we were there, thanks to babysitting services by E & C, to catch the last performance by the summer school (sadly moved inside from the beautiful Inside/Out stage due to the weather) and then to see another performance in the large theatre venue.  The tickets for that I had won by playing "Trivia for Tickets" in the Jacob's Pillow email newsletter.

Here is an edit of the exchange I had with them on email:

-------
Congratulations! You were the first person to respond to our Trivia for Tickets question with the correct answer, which means you have won tickets to Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company on Saturday, July 28 at 8pm.
-------
Thank you - that's awesome! My wife and I were at the festival on Saturday to see the school performance and Borrowed Light both of which were excellent - probably our best night-out in twenty years of going to dance performances together.

Here is my wife's emailed response when I forwarded your email to her:

"Squeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!"

so I think it's safe to say that she's pleased too! Last week's tickets were her birthday treat - so we'll consider this an extended celebration.

Thanks again!
-------
We are very happy to be able to extend your wife's birthday celebration!  Have a fabulous time and thank you so much for the enthusiastic reply.  We enjoy hearing when patrons have a wonderful time.
-------

The work pretty much defies description.  My attempt is that it was 70 stories chosen in a random order, each read in exactly one minute by Bill T Jones, while dancers danced around him and avant-garde electronic music was made live to accompany it all.

This might give you a slightly better idea.



There was a technical problem early on and after the first three minutes, the performance had to be stopped because the clocks that allow the musician, reader and dancers to keep there one minute pieces  to, well, one minute were not working.

Bizarrely, several people left during the two minutes or so that the house lights came on before the performance was restarted.  It does make me wonder what they saw in those few minutes that convinced them not to stay for a performance that they had either bought or been given tickets to go and see.

For my part I thought it was challenging but thoroughly enjoyable and it gave us plenty to talk about on the drive back through the Berkshires.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Day 5.115: Learning something - in school!

I visited Exile #4's class again yesterday morning. However, I was just there to be an audience for a poetry recital - not to trouble the kids with my camera as on the last few visits.


She did a nice job of her poem - an acrostic. Several of the others recited something I later learned was a 'cinquain' poem.  It wasn't a form I'd heard of but Exile #4 did a nice job of explaining it to me using the one from her poetry collection.

This isn't hers:

Cinquain
simple elegant
with definitive structure
Easier than a haiku
poem

...but you'd probably have guessed that.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Day 5.064: The Pi-day Pi-ku challenge

For Pi-day
This
From Exile #2.

A Pi-ku
Three...
Then one, then four.

My challenge:
You
Guess whose is whose:*

------

A circle -
Wow!
Not one corner.

Pumpkin pie
With...
Whipped cream - so good!

3
pop
[E5N1] me!

Not just three -
The
Magic number

I love pie
Pie!
I love apple.

Three point one
Four
One five nine, ...what?

I want pie
Now!
Pie is so good.

Ev'ning sun -
Spring?
It's here at last!



* Not including the introductory ones, three are mine, one each from the kids and two from Exile #2

Monday, November 21, 2011

Day 4.315: Leaf drifts

In winter, we pile snow here, cleared from the driveway, cleared from the road, the hydrant is protected from disappearing by my shovel.

But for now, we rake and pile and wait - not for Spring or a temporary melt - but for the leaf collectors to come and remove the piles that we have made.

And they better hurry up or there will be leaves and snow down there at the same time, and we'll never be rid of them!

Friday, July 22, 2011

Day 4.193: Friday Haikus #11

No visa for him,
But a neutral expression?
We can still do that!

Air-conditioned man,
Extremely hot evening -
Light sensor failure*.

A week of day camp.
A week of decorating.
Now it's time to sleep.




* It's true - it seemed the infrared sensor on the driveway light could not pick me (recently stepping out of a cool car) from the approx 90°F background signal!

Friday, July 8, 2011

Day 4.179: Friday Haikus #11

Some pieces of cloth -
Two big sisters' persuasion -
Exciting couture!

Dad has sympathy -
His own big sisters are still -
Friendly tormentors*

He seems so happy -
Maybe not so tormented?
Really loves orange!

* with an emphasis on friendly and a little poetic licence.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Day 4.151: Friday Haikus #10

a june afternoon
and five happy first grade girls -
birthday party fun


slip and slide and cake
sack races and popsicles
phew! T.G.I.F.

tomorrow will bring
the momentous day - now she's:
seven (minus one)

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Day 4.134: Bobolink and the goslings

Around the time the rapture was not happening on Saturday, we headed down to Five Rivers where the girls checked that heaven was not calling*:


Then we continued on a walk where we saw some Canada geese (not so ahhh) with some goslings (ahhh):


and got our first ever view of the bobolinks which we knew frequented the meadow.  They are extraordinary looking birds even at a distance.


It turns out that one of this little bird's claims to fame is a mention in a poem entitled "An Exile's Garden"
Yet, among the gods of the garden,
The roses and gods, I think,
Daylong, of a far-off clover field,
And the song of a bob-o-link.
And no, it has nothing to do with me.  It was written by Sophia Jewett in 1910.





*They were actually practising their cart-wheels and hand-stands.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Day 4.095: Friday Haikus #9

It is a while since
I found myself doing this:
Friday Haikus (nine)

A circle around
another circle around
another circle

Fast goose on the ice
Hot footing it, if you will
In spite of the cold

'Shade' on the ground but
All three dimensions revealed
When seen from above

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Day 4.092: Ichi, ni, san, shi, ... go

While I was in Japan - before the earthquake - I wrote something about my experiences there. For various reasons it has been sitting around untouched since then.  I can't work out if it is appropriate, but I am going to post it anyway.  It maybe doesn't quite qualify for National Poetry Month, but it's not quite my normal blog post style either.

The photo is of the departure board for my to-be-earthquake-interrupted flight taken on the train from Tokyo to the airport. So cool.

Anyway, here it is - I hope you like it, but if not there'll be a more normal post along tomorrow.


As his right hand grasps the handle he realizes his mistake but he is committed and a moment later he struggles to keep his hold as the pain stabs at his elbow. "Over forty now!" he smiles ruefully to himself but he doesn't really believe that it is time to start to write his body off yet. He disguises his reaction and quietly switches hands.

Japanese people count by folding rather than unfolding their fingers ichi, ni, san... They start with their thumb and even four works fine - just leaving the sometimes recalcitrant pinkie standing patiently awaiting its turn.

Thinking about his apparent arm injury, he looks at his gloved hand as if it does not belong to him - a  prosthetic perhaps or a transplant. An alien thing only reluctantly agreeing to do his bidding. His elbow twinges again - perhaps to remind him that it at least has not been fooled by the usurper. 37, 38. 39, too old...

When it snows in Tokyo in March everyone is surprised but you would not know as you watch them scurry by purposefully sheltering themselves. Even a passing cyclist is navigating the deepening slush at the sides of the narrow and busy streets with one hand on the handlebars and the other holding an ever-whitening umbrella over her head.

Maybe somewhere nearby Japanese children are pressing their faces to a window and hoping for a chance to throw snowballs. He remembers that it is snowing at home too. Perhaps his own children are doing the same he thinks, forgetting that they are sleeping waiting for this day to begin nine long hours from now.

He reminds himself to tell them how in the restroom antechamber there are two neat lines of plastic bathroom slippers, one set for men the other for women. As if changing into slippers at the doorway of the workplace is not strange enough, here more communal shoe changing is required.

It is elsewhere that he notices that there's a small hole in his left sock. He looks at it with dismay as one of the many short moments when they are on show unfolds agonizingly slowly. With relief he notes that at least the hole is not allowing a toe to protrude. Shirt, tie, pressed trousers, holed socks. Eastern business attire for the incompetent.

At least this moment of social discomfort gives him temporary relief from the simple physical kind. He flexes his arm this way and that seeking the exact place where the pain begins. When he finds it, he holds the  position. Surely, he feels, this is in some way beneficial. Why is it that modern man thinks that was is   pleasurable is bad and what is painful is good? We have turned a million years of evolution on its head.

Our distant ancestors favored food with fat and sugar, high in life-giving calories. They did not need to learn to rest when they got tired or to stop when pain made them wince. Their life was simple; ease has made ours too complicated.

The number four, shi, sounds like the word for 'death' in Japanese. For this reason, their tall buildings often shun the fourth floor much as American ones avoid the thirteenth. Also, they avoid the coincidence in certain compound numbers including forty. Too close to home he thinks with a silent chuckle.

He decides he will let his arm and his cultural insecurities rest for a while; after all he is not a young man to agonize over such things any more. Determined not to dwell on either real or social death, he folds the final finger into a fist. Go.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Day 3.075: Friday Haikus #8

Look - this morning's snow -
Just a dusting on the bush* -
Quite disappointing

Tonight was Rock Band
We played the Country Track Pack**
Yeehaw! So much fun.

* There was also a dusting on the grass - but nothing of any consequence.

** We borrowed it - and no, I have not managed to become a fan of country music by being here.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Day 2.335: Friday Haikus #7


First snowball fight by the_exile:
Snow: balled in gloved hand
The throw: transfixed, breath bated
Then - nothing. It missed.




Writing haikus is easy by the_exile:
First five syllables
Then the next line has seven
Finish with five. Done!

Friday, November 13, 2009

Day 2.307: Friday Haikus #6

(watch this film first)


A girl on a box -
Inside is E5N1.
He seems to like it.

Friends came to visit -
I broke out LEGO Rock Band.
We rocked the plastic!

Friday, September 11, 2009

Day 2.244: Friday Haikus #5

Rhythm and tassels
Defending a proud culture:
Indian dancing


Lines merge and tangle
Moment of celebration:
A movement captured.


Apologies for the poems which are neither good nor funny tonight. I liked the pictures though - I hope you do too!
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Friday, August 7, 2009

Day 2.209: Friday Haikus #4

Fifth Birthday Party
E. had tiny bowling shoes
How extremely cute!


Exiles in New York -
We hit the big time this week
Thanks to a link here.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Day 2.188: Friday Haikus #3

Yesterday was wet
Really really really wet -
Ten weather alerts*

This day was Friday
We assembled for Rock Band
Even Exile #2

* This was the only previous day to have triggered so many.