Don’t be
blue, Writerly Friends. Although our month-long Pantone® Poetry Project is
winding down, we still have three days of color-inspired poems to share.
Today’s
colors tell a weather story with a happy ending. We begin with Stormy Weather…
Day 26 Stormy Weather Pantone ® 18-4214 |
but by
Daybreak…
Day 26 Daybreak Pantone ® 17-3817 |
the skies
are Porcelain Blue.
Day 26 Porcelain Blue Pantone ® 14-4512 |
We’ve got
some interesting metaphors working in today’s poems. Linda Baie (Teacher Dance) uses Stormy Weather as a state of being – a weather report on human
moods, rather than precipitation.
Don’t Know Why…
By Linda Baie
Sunday crunch-
weekend flew,
cloudy words:
“Homework due!”
stormy weather
stormy weather
Chapter two-
history,
darkened sky:
“It’s a mystery.”
stormy weather
Analyze
poem’s rhyme,
lightning strike:
“I don’t have time.”
stormy weather
Write bio-
famous guy
raining hard:
“Now I sigh.”
stormy weather
Teenager
turns out light
advisory:
“Good night, good night.”
stormy weather
I can relate to the stormy teen moods,
Linda, but also to the parent who acts something like a weather forecaster.
It’s Mardi Gras week. Margaret Simon
(Reflections on the Teche), who lives in Louisiana, writes, “I did travel to
New Orleans this weekend and saw some amazing cloudy skies. I started
thinking about how the layers looked like a wedding dress. I found some
wedding gown descriptions to help me carry the metaphor throughout the poem.”
Partly Cloudy
by
Margaret Simon
The bride
was dressed in billowing waves,
blue-grey
Chantilly lace layered
over a
white-topped empire waist.
Her
scalloped neckline accented by rays
of
sunlight peering through a cathedral train.
Her
attendants, those high Mississippi kites,
flew with
utmost grace
announcing
her imminent arrival.
Mississippi Kite from Carolina Bird Club |
There have been a few times during this
project when our poems’ themes have overlapped. (Remember our nostalgic Oxblood Red poems?)
Today is one of those days.
Something about Blue Porcelain sent several of our poets shopping for vacation
and travel souvenirs.
Journey
by Diane Mayr (Random Noodling)
by Diane Mayr (Random Noodling)
Made in China. Ballast
in a wooden ship to be
shipped across the seas.
South around the tip
of a continent, then
northbound to Boston.
Shattered along the way.
Tea unloaded. Shards
of cheap china dumped
into Boston's harbor.
High tide, low tide.
Tidal currents. Day after
day. Year after year.
Decades...A century?
A walk on the beach
in Nahant. Sea glass,
a polished stone, and
a fragment of porcelain--
edges smooth. Placed
in my pocket for luck.
And the journey home.
Souvenir
by Laura
Shovan
Magnets
are for tourists, seashells glued
into
googly-eyed turtles, a coffee-table
Coliseum.
When I visit, take me
to the
yarn shop—to Ursula’s Knits
above the
bail bond store in Waikiki,
where the
large proprietress swore
she never
made mistakes and,
if I came
back, promised to fix all mine;
to climb rickety
stairs in Concord, Mass,
up to the
shop where the only local wool
was
Canadian, cool porcelain blue
I longed
to own, that hot summer.
I take the
Concord yarn out sometimes,
roll its
two-ply twists between my fingers.
I leave
the bits of hay and can’t think
what to
make: a sweater? scarf
in
Wedgewood blue, color
of my
mother’s eyes? Curled
into its loose
skein, I linger in
potentialities—a
flock of blue sheep
grazing the
fields of Canada
like puffy
ice cubes, clouds
frozen solid,
heavy enough to land.
An Eye for Blue Porcelain
By
Patricia VanAmburg
He was
fond of Willow Ware
Flow Blue
and the blue lotus dragons
that his
parents bought in Madagascar—
pocked
with rice before glazing.
Patricia
knows I am a knitter and hand-made sock-lover, so she sent me these virtual
Blue Porcelain socks.
At the Prince and the Purl |
My blue
wooly sheep could be munching flowers in Michael Ratcliffe’s poem. Maybe in a
few weeks.
Poem by Michael Ratcliffe
Morning sky, porcelain blue-- March snow--
we know winter's not through.
Spring awaits daffodil's cue
to return with Beltaine's hue.
we know winter's not through.
Spring awaits daffodil's cue
to return with Beltaine's hue.
I had to look up "Beltaine." It's a traditional celebration of the spring equinox. We have
the deep Peacock Green and Blue Jewel skies of spring for tomorrow’s colors.
Day 27 Peacock Green Pantone ® 16-5431 |
Day 27 Blue Jewel Pantone ® 18-4535 |
I’ll save
our last color, Tandori Spice, for this week’s Poetry Friday. Look for a
Pantone® Poetry Prize announcement -- I've got something special for the participating poets.
Somehow all the "blue" poems perked me up a little :)
ReplyDeleteLovely travels today. And Linda's teen angst stormy rhyming poem was spot on.
ReplyDeleteI did a bit of research for the porcelain blue and couldn't seem to connect to it, and now see the beauty of the poems that did, each one in some facet or another so touched by that color. Beautiful words everyone!
ReplyDeletePoor Daybreak! Such a pretty color, but I think we've all had our fill of purple-ly inspiration! I love the variety today from just two colors.
ReplyDelete