Friday, July 28, 2023

Poetry Sisters Write Monotetra Poems

The challenge this month was to write a poem in the form of monotetra. You can learn more about it at Writer's Digest. I believe I suggested this one when we were mapping out the year. It looked interesting and I'm always a sucker for form. This form includes any number of quatrains written in tetrameter (8 syllables in each line), with each quatrain using a single rhyme (mono-rhymed). The last line in each stanza repeats the same four syllables.

This was a lot harder than I imagined. I found the single rhyme hard to work with. I much prefer AB rhyme patterns. I wrote two really bad poems before I remembered our theme of transformation, so I started again. I'll admit to cheating a bit, as this poem has 3 lines with 9 syllables. I tried but couldn't find synonyms with the "right" number of syllables to make the lines 8 syllables. Oh well. I do have a poem to share, even though it feels unfinished. I think it needs one more stanza, perhaps something more hopeful. This is definitely a draft I will revisit.

Cast of Uintatherium anceps skull, French National Museum of Natural History, Paris
Photo by Jebulon, Public Domain

Monotetra for a World Changed

The summit view is worth the climb
back to nature our paradigm
enter a world still and sublime
Step back in time, step back in time

Picture this place in the Eocene
modern mammals arrive on the scene
now most are gone, what does this mean?
Sight now unseen, sight now unseen

Rivers polluted, trees cut away
towns have replaced the fields and the hay
oysters dying in Chesapeake Bay
We've lost our way, we've lost our way

Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

You can read the pieces written by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

    Would you like to try the next challenge? Next month, we’re creating an Exquisite Corpse poem. These collaborative poems necessarily involve yourself and at least one other poet, passing lines or stanzas forward, so now’s the time to choose poetry compatriots. Are you in? Good! The Poetry Sisters are continuing with our 2023 theme of TRANSFORMATION – and we’re going to also sneak in a few of Linda Mitchell’s clunkers to give us more to play with. If you’re still game, you have a month to craft your creation and share it on August 25th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals.We look forward to reading your poems!  

    I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Jan at BookSeedStudio. Happy poetry Friday, friends!  

    Friday, June 30, 2023

    Poetry Sisters Write to a Quote

    The challenge this month was to write a poem in response to a quote. Initially, I thought we would be writing to the same quote, but several examples were shared, so I decided to use one that spoke to me. Over the last few weeks, the calendar was looming large for me as the month of June and the second anniversary of my mother's death approached. That anniversary is today. Knowing that we would be sharing our poems at this time, and because she's been much on my mind, I decided I wanted to write a poem for or about her. 

    The second challenge was to include the theme of transformation, which informs all of our writing this year. I couldn't figure out how to do that, though death is a form of transformation, and surely my life has been transformed by this loss. 

    I decided I wanted to write to a form and chose the villanelle. I like the repeating lines and the need for only two rhymes. I wrote with this photo of my mother beside me. It was taken in May of 2021 when I visited with her for the last time.

    A few weeks ago, I read On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong. It's an amazing novel with beautiful prose. I copied several quotes from it into my commonplace journal. One stuck with me and ultimately became the inspiration for my poem. It rings true because I am both missing and remembering my mother, today and every day.

    “In Vietnamese, the word for missing someone and remembering them is the same: nhớ.”
    -Ocean Vuong in On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

    Villanelle for My Mother

    Some days it’s hard to bear that you are dead
    I talk to you each morning when I pray
    And often hear your voice inside my head

    “Put on something bright. Why not wear red?”
    You were never at a loss for what to say
    Some days it’s hard to bear that you are dead

    I follow your advice and make my bed
    “Straighten up your room before you play.”
    I often hear your voice inside my head

    Loose buttons? Reach for needle and some thread
    Your smallest lessons stuck, won’t fade away
    Some days it’s hard to bear that you are dead

    On my last visit you forlornly said
    “Our time has been so short, I wish you’d stay.”
    I often hear your voice inside my head

    It’s been two years since those first tears were shed
    Yet still I carry grief each waking day
    Most days it’s hard to bear that you are dead
    Thank God I hear your voice inside my head

    Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

    You can read the pieces written by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

      Would you like to try the next challenge? Next month we are writing in the form of monotetra. You can learn more about it at Writer's Digest. We hope you'll join us. Are you in? Good! You’ve got a month to craft your creation(s), then share your offering with the rest of us on July 28th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

      I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Irene Latham at Live Your Poem. Happy poetry Friday, friends!  

      Friday, June 02, 2023

      Poetry Friday is Here!

      Hello All! I'm so happy to be hosting Poetry Friday. 

      I have spent the last few months preparing to move out of the building I have spent the last 29 years in on campus. It is my home away from home. There is much I will miss about it. The physical move of all our things occurred this week and still continues, as bookshelves are installed, and furniture moved in. I have been adrift for weeks, with no place to land, settling most days in the library before my classes meet in the late afternoon. We will be allowed to move in next week, and I can't wait. 

      In seeing my new office, I am saddened that I have lost so much space to store my books. Out of necessity, I will need to let some go. While I will be able to pass them on to new teachers just starting out, it will hurt to part with them.

      Thinking of moving had me reading Ralph Fletcher as I packed up. In Moving Day, Ralph gives readers a series of free verse poems in which 12-year-old Fletch describes his family's move from Massachusetts to Ohio. Here's one of my favorites from this collection.

      Defrosting the Freezer

      One container of spaghetti sauce
      Grandma made before she died.

      Two pieces of old wedding cake
      you couldn't pay me to eat.

      Three snowballs from last winter
      slightly deformed, no longer fluffy.

      Four small flounder from the time
      Grandpa took me deep-sea fishing.

      Everything coated with a thick
      white layer of sadness. 
      That thick layer of sadness has surely enveloped me. I did stop by my old digs one last time to say goodbye. My son grew up here, and when he came to campus, lived in the building connected to mine for 2 of his 4 years. It holds many precious memories.

      I'll be rounding up posts through the day old-school style, so please leave your link in the comments, and I will add you to the post. Happy Poetry Friday, all!

      **********
      Original Poetry
      Laura Purdie Salas is sharing a poem entitled The Song of Sunshine.

      Mary Lee Hahn of A(nother) year of Reading is sharing a sudoku poem entitled No Vacancy.

      Heidi Mordhorst of my juicy little universe is celebrating pride and sharing a color poem entitled I Finally Choose a Favorite Color.

      Linda Mitchell of A Word Edgewise is also sharing a color poem written to a lovely photo. 

      Robyn Hood Black shares a proud grandparent moment and the poem You're the ONE! on the occasion of her grandson's first birthday.

      Linda Baie of Teacher Dance shares a poem entitled The Bouncing Ball Keeps Bouncing.

      Irene Latham of Live Your Poem shares an ArtSpeak: LIGHT poem entitled Meadow Song. She also shares an invitation to a moon poem party when she hosts Poetry Friday on June 30th.

      Margaret Simon of Reflections on the Teche is also sharing a color poem that begins, "If you want to find red."

      Michelle Kogan shares some Good morning haiku.

      Carol Varsalona of Beyond Literacy Link remembers her uncle and pays to tribute to loved ones with her poem Life is a Journey.

      At Poetry Pizzazz with Alan J. Wright, Alan shares a poem entitled Appliance Compliance.

      Carol Labuzzetta of The Apples in My Orchards shares a found object poem entitled Debris.

      Anastasia Suen is sharing an acrostic poem for June.

      Patricia J. Franz marvels at the mountains in springtime and shares the poem snow flower: a haiku.

      Sally Murphy is generously giving us a glimpse into her new verse novel, Queen Narelle.

      Matt Forrest Esenwine shares news of his forthcoming book and a poem entitled The Eve of Maturity.

      Jone Rush MacCulloch combines the prompt for the monthly Spiritual Thursday Journey with her thoughts and poems in a slide show of visual prayers.

      Donna Smith of Mainely Write shares her poem The Ocean as a Canva movie.

      Molly Hogan of Nix the Comfort Zone used Eileen Spinelli’s “If You Want to Find Golden” as a mentor for her color poem

      Janice Scully of Salt City Verse shares two poems about Santa Cruz.

      Amy Ludwig VanDerwater of The Poem Farm shares a poem entitled Possibility, which can be sung to the tune of "Dona Nobis Pacem." She's also featuring some fourth-grade guest poets.

      Marcie Flinchum Atkins shares a haiku and photo.

      Book Reviews and Book Lists
      Jama Rattigan of Jama's Alphabet Soup shares a review of Champion Chompers, Super Stinkers and Other Poems by Extraordinary Animals by Linda Ashman and Aparna Varma.

      Susan Thomsen of Chicken Spaghetti shares a list of poetry books for adults published or forthcoming this year.

      Mandy Robek of Enjoy and Embrace Learning shares the anthology Things We Feel by Sylvia Vardell and Janet Wong.

      On Writing
      Lou Piccolo shares some thoughts about writing poetry to combat writer's block.

      Poetry of Others
      Ramona of Pleasures from the page rambles through the rhododendrons and shares lines from a Joy Harjo poem and Wendell Berry too.

      Tabatha Yeatts of the Opposite of Indifference shares the poem "Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear" by Mosab Abu Toha.

      Karen Edmisten shares the poem "New Moon Newton" by Oliver Baez Bendorf.

      Friday, May 26, 2023

      Poetry Sisters Write Ghazals

      The challenge this month was to write in the form of the ghazal. You can learn more about this form here. This is a fairly restrictive form. When I began working on the first draft, I felt pretty good about where it was going, until I realized I was bending the rules far too much.  Suffice it to say I scrapped my first draft and started on something entirely new. This one far better meets the rules for a ghazal, though I'm not sure it's very rhythmic. I can feel where the lines don't "sing" together. Maybe this is just a weird quirk of mine, or perhaps it comes from writing so often in iambic pentameter.  In any case, this is a form I definitely need to play with.

      Ghazal For the Dawn

      birds in the garden sing in the dawn
      all manner of creatures take wing in the dawn

      mourners weep at a graveside
      tears sting in the dawn

      summer ends, school starts again
      when the first bus arrives, children cling in the dawn

      candles are lit, pews quietly fill
      bells in the chapel ring in the dawn

      hens wake up early, eat breakfast, lay eggs
      rooster greeting the sunrise is king in the dawn

      I lace up my sneakers, hit the road in the dark
      feet pounding the pavement, arms swing in the dawn

      Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

      You can read the pieces written by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

        Would you like to try the next challenge? Next month we are writing in response to a quote. We hope you'll join us. Are you in? Good! You’ve got a month to craft your creation(s), then share your offering with the rest of us on June 30th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

        I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Patricia Franz at Reverie. Happy poetry Friday, friends! 

        Friday, April 28, 2023

        Poetry Sisters Write in the Style of Neruda

        This month's challenge was to write in the style of Neruda. Oh boy. I haven't read much Neruda, so finding a poem as a mentor text was hard. I was familiar with the bilingual, illustrated selection of Neruda's Book of Questions that was published by Enchanted Lion Books last year. I thought about writing a poem composed of questions, but I went down the rabbit hole of reading Neruda's odes and got lost. They're pretty amazing. If you haven't read them, the best way to describe them is a lengthy (usually) stream of consciousness about everyday objects with a hefty dose of meandering seemingly off-topic before brilliantly closing with a meditation on beauty, nature, or something else profound.

        Inspired by these odes, I attempted one of my own. Our theme for the year is transformation. I'm not sure I got there this time, but I had fun trying.

        Ode to a Basket of Trinkets

        Woven coils 
        of colorful paper
        form a wide
        round bowl
        letters 
        clearly visible
        one can 
        imagine 
        the stories
        they told
        In their
        present form
        transformed into
        this bowl
        they hold
        memories
        trinkets
        baubles 
        no one
        but me
        can love
        I cannot bear
        to part
        with small
        forgotten 
        treasures
        I worry them 
        in my hand
        bringing the
        ghosts of
        love, loss
        to life
        memories clear
        and cloudy
        hanging by
        a thread
        I worry 
        over them
        wonder when
        they'll 
        disappear
        each trinket 
        a touchstone
        an exercise
        in remembering
        and forgetting
        a pink diaper pin
        once mine
        mother kept
        it in her 
        jewelry box
        a fountain pen 
        ink cartridge
        the bane of
        my left-handed
        existence
        I'm not 
        cool enough
        or adept enough
        to write
        without smudging
        the ink
        my hand
        the paper
        a Scrabble tile
        one puzzle piece
        Mardi Gras beads
        tiny paper dolls
        a frayed Girl Scout badge
        three wheat pennies
        a wooden nickel
        all fleeting
        beautiful
        reminders of 
        the me I 
        used to be
        and the ones
        who made me
        who 
        I am

        Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

        You can read the pieces written by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

          Would you like to try the next challenge? Next month we are writing in the form of the ghazal. You can learn more about this form here. We hope you'll join us. Are you in? Good! You’ve got a month to craft your creation(s), then share your offering with the rest of us on May 26th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

          I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Ruth at There is no such thing as a God-forsaken town. Happy poetry Friday, friends! 

          Friday, April 14, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 14

          My poem for Day 14 of National Poetry Month is written to the illustration Sowing and Reaping in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, (1863 May 23), p. 141. The poem focuses on the right side of the image.


          The Richmond Bread Riot
          April 1, 1863

          In the third spring of the war
          a nation of farmers
          was starving

          hungry women took the lead
          took to the streets
          wielding  clubs and knives
          axes and hatchets

          they marched on
          the Governor's mansion
          discontent, angry

          quiet determination turned
          to chaos as chants of
          "Bread or blood!"
          echoed through the streets

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886) 
          April 8 - Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams
          April 9 - Amnesty Oath of Robert E. Lee (1865) 
          April 10 - Detroit Publishing Company photograph of The Main street, Mackinac
          April 11 - Pigeon Message from Major Whittlesey to the Commanding Officer of the 308th Infantry (1918)
          April 12 - Henry Bacon’s Competition Proposal for a Monument to Abraham Lincoln (1912)
          April 13 -  The Johnstown calamity. A slightly damaged house. Pennsylvania Johnstown, 1889

          I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Jone Rush MacCulloch. Happy poetry Friday, friends!

          Thursday, April 13, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 13

          My poem for Day 13 of National Poetry Month is written to the photograph The Johnstown calamity. A slightly damaged house. Pennsylvania Johnstown, 1889.


          The Great Flood of 1889

          When the South Fork Dam gave way
          the Little Conemaugh River ran 
          like the Mississippi
          a flood of water and debris
          hit the unsuspecting town
          fires burned for three days
          it wasn't pretty
          even in stereoscope

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886) 
          April 8 - Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams
          April 9 - Amnesty Oath of Robert E. Lee (1865) 
          April 10 - Detroit Publishing Company photograph of The Main street, Mackinac
          April 11 - Pigeon Message from Major Whittlesey to the Commanding Officer of the 308th Infantry (1918)
          April 12 - Henry Bacon’s Competition Proposal for a Monument to Abraham Lincoln (1912)

          Wednesday, April 12, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 12

          My poem for Day 12 of National Poetry Month is written to Henry Bacon’s Competition Proposal for a Monument to Abraham Lincoln (1912).


          neoclassical ghosts haunt DC
          triangular pediments, massive columns
          majestic domes
          iconic symbols of democracy

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886) 
          April 8 - Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams
          April 9 - Amnesty Oath of Robert E. Lee (1865) 
          April 10 - Detroit Publishing Company photograph of The Main street, Mackinac
          April 11 - Pigeon Message from Major Whittlesey to the Commanding Officer of the 308th Infantry (1918)

          Tuesday, April 11, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 11

          My poem for Day 11 of National Poetry Month is written to Pigeon Message from Major Whittlesey to the Commanding Officer of the 308th Infantry (1918).


          battlefield messengers
          of the feathered kind
          braved harsh conditions 
          kept rear commanders informed  
          of enemy movements
          and friendly fire

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886) 
          April 8 - Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams
          April 9 - Amnesty Oath of Robert E. Lee (1865) 
          April 10 - Detroit Publishing Company photograph of The Main street, Mackinac

          Monday, April 10, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 10

          My poem for Day 10 of National Poetry Month is written to a Detroit Publishing Company photograph of The Main street, Mackinac.


          Main street, 1906
          strung, wired,
          ready to power up

          my insulator collection
          small piece of forgotten history

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886) 
          April 8 - Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams
          April 9 - Amnesty Oath of Robert E. Lee (1865)

          Sunday, April 09, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 9

          My poem for Day 9 of National Poetry Month is written to the Amnesty Oath of Robert E. Lee (1865)


          After surrender
          he promised to uphold the Constitution
          expressed a desire for reconciliation
          transitioned from treasonous general
          to college president

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886) 
          April 8 - Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams

          Saturday, April 08, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 8

          My poem for Day 8 of National Poetry Month is written to Roy Takeno reading paper in front of office / photograph by Ansel Adams

          Free Press in Manzanar

          There was nothing free
          in this "reception center"
          240 miles from the sea
          in a high-walled mountain valley
          where US citizens
          treated as aliens and enemies
          were interned

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools
          April 7 - Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886)

          Friday, April 07, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 7

          My poem for Day 7 of National Poetry Month is written to a horrific Letter from Governor Ross Supporting Apache Removal (1886). You can read the entire letter in the link.



          They Were Here First

          ghosts of the past
          rattle in the present
          their descendants are here
          strangers in their own land

          targeted by hateful language
          yesterday and today
               traditional enemies
               generations of hostility
               warpath of pillage and murder
               radical measures
               extermination

          no peace except in
          distant and isolated lands

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song
          April 6 - Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools

          I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Margaret Simon at Reflections on the Teche. Happy poetry Friday, friends!

          Thursday, April 06, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 6

          My poem for Day 6 of National Poetry Month is written to Teachers' Monthly Report and Rules (1865): Narrative School Reports from Teachers and Superintendents of Freedmen's Schools. This is a found poem created with words from the Rules.


          Teacher Rules

          value knowledge and
          subjects of instruction 

          notice and observe with 
          special attention
          all pupils

          provide time for learning
          deliver best care in teaching

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman
          April 5 - Sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song

          Wednesday, April 05, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 5

          My poem for Day 5 of National Poetry Month is written to the sheet music cover for Votes for Women: International Suffragists' Song. This is a found poem created with the song's lyrics.


          Votes for Women

          mothers and maids
          foremost toilers of our land
          all answer the call
          marching as one vast army
          liberty under way 

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses
          April 4 - 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman.

          Tuesday, April 04, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 4

          My poem for Day 4 of National Poetry Month is written to a 1917 poster showing Liberty presenting a sword "Service" to a young woman.


          Over There

          more than Uncle Sam
          indelible images 
          posters sold the war 

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card
          April 3 - Section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses

          Monday, April 03, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 3

          My poem for Day 3 of National Poetry Month is written to a section of the city code of Montgomery, Alabama, requiring segregation on buses


          Don't tell me it's not systemic
          Don't try to convince me it's done
          Centuries of brutal oppression
          Need time to be overcome

          Don't tell me the past is divisive
          The facts can't be denied
          We must tell the truth of history
          Honor all who suffered and died

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77 
          April 2 - John Wilkes Booth's calling card

          Sunday, April 02, 2023

          NPM 2023 - Poem 2

          My poem for Day 2 of National Poetry Month is written to John Wilkes Booth's calling card. You can read more about it on the Pieces of History blog.


          April 14, 1865

          in the afternoon
          he played the gentleman 
          observed the niceties of the day
          before he played America's Brutus
          felling The Great Emancipator

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me tomorrow for my next poem highlighting a piece of history. You can read the previous poems as images on Instagram or at the links below. Each one is listed according to the primary source that inspired it.

          April 1 - Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77.

          Saturday, April 01, 2023

          National Poetry Month Project 2023

          Last year for National Poetry Month I wrote poems in a variety of Japanese poetic forms (haiku, tanka, dodoitsu, etc.) to photos, letters, newspaper articles, and other family ephemera. This was my first attempt at using primary sources to write poems.

          This year I'm going back to primary sources, though this time around I'm using pieces from the National Archives and Library of Congress. I am posting the poem and primary source here. You will be able to find a graphic mashup of the poem and primary source on my Instagram.

          My first poem is written to this Sketch map of White Oak Swamp and vicinity southeast of Richmond.]; 6/1862; Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Record Group 77.

          In 1862, this was his world
          a hand-drawn map
          dotted with enemy encampments
          rebel pickets and redoubts

          world turned upside down
          civilization measured in
          miles to Richmond

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          I hope you'll join me this month for more primary source poems. If you are interested in my previous projects, you can find them linked below.

          2022 - Poems and Primary Sources - For this project, I wrote in Japanese poetic forms to photos, letters, and other ephemera of family history.

          2021 - Found Poems - For this project, I wrote and shared found poems, most of which were science- or nature-themed. 

          2020 - Armchair Traveler - This project highlighted original poems related to places I've been. These were written in response to the COVID lockdown and the desire to be anywhere but home.

          2019 - Original Poems - This project highlighted original poems in a range of forms on a variety of topics.

          2018 - Assorted Poems - This project highlighted a range of poems written by others that I found interesting or inspiring.

          2017 Celebrating My Late Sister-in-Law - On the fifth anniversary of my sister-in-law's death, this project shared memories of her and a poem related to each memory.

          2016 - Celebrations - Inspired by World Rat Day: Poems About Real Holidays You've Never Heard Of (written by J. Patrick Lewis) and The Poetry Friday Anthology for Celebrations: Holiday Poems for the Whole Year in English and Spanish (compiled by Sylvia Vardell and Janet Wong), this project focused on daily, weekly, and monthly celebrations held during the month of April. In addition to information about each celebration, posts highlighted poems, books of poetry, children's books, and more.

          2015 Poetic Forms - This project, entitled Jumping Into Form, examined poetry writing and a variety of poetic forms, while providing a wealth of resources for teachers guiding students in writing poetry of their own.

          2014 Science Poetry Pairings - Inspired by the Book Links article Sylvia Vardell and I co-authored, Nonfiction Monday meets Poetry Friday: Linking Genres, this project highlighted books of poetry (or in some cases very special poems) and their perfect partners.

          2013 Poetry A to Z - In this project, I shared books, poems, poetic forms, and other poetry-inspired topics. Beginning with Z and winding down to A, the posts were a potluck of poetry resources.

          2011 Poetry in the Classroom - In this project, I highlighted a poem, a theme, a book, or a poet each day and suggested ways to make poetry a regular part of life in the classroom. I also suggested companion books, websites, and activities to accompany the reading of selected poems.

          2010 - Poetry Makers - Following on the heels of the 2009 project, I posed a series of questions to 32 different children's poets. I highlighted their answers, along with their work and selected poems.

          2009 Poetry Makers - In this project, I posed a series of questions to 35 children's poets. I highlighted their answers, along with their work and selected poems.

          2008 Poetry in the Classroom - In this project, I highlighted a poetry book or related set of books (on a theme) and described how they might be used in the classroom. I also suggested companion books, websites, and activities to accompany the reading of selected poems from the books. Over the course of the month, I covered 62 books by 39 authors.

          Friday, March 31, 2023

          Poetry Sisters Write Etherees

          This month's challenge was to write in the form of the etheree. An etheree is a poem of ten lines in which each line contains one more syllable than the last. Beginning with one syllable and ending with ten, this unrhymed form is named for its creator, 20th-century American poet Etheree Taylor Armstrong.

          Variant forms of the etheree include the reverse form, which begins with 10 syllables and ends with one. The double etheree is twenty lines, moving from 1 syllable to 10, and then from 10 back to one. (I suppose a double etheree could also move from 10 syllables to 1, and then from one back to 10.)

          You can learn more about the etheree at The Poets Garret and Shadow Poetry.

          Since our theme for the year is transformation, I tried to think through topics that would lend themselves to the building structure of the etheree. I settled on alchemy. Here's what I came up with.

          Alchemy 

          What
          magic
          power lives
          in this base stone
          that channels water,
          fire, air, and earth to make
          transmutation possible
          some call it sorcery, changing
          lead to gold, nature and elements
          altered through alchemy's mystical art

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2023. All rights reserved.

          You can read the pieces written by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

            Would you like to try the next challenge? Next month we are writing in the style of Neruda. Pick a poem you like and use it as inspiration for a poem of your own. We are still working on the theme of transformation, so perhaps you can squeeze this into your poem. We hope you'll join us. Are you in? Good! You’ve got a month to craft your creation(s), then share your offering with the rest of us on April 28th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

            I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Mary Lee Hahn at A(nother) Year of Reading. Happy poetry Friday, friends!