For National Poetry Month
2014, I have invited 17 authors and poets to guest post about source poems. In this series of essays, each
writer will describe a single poem's significance in his or her life.
Today's guest blogger poet Jone MacCulloch. Jone
blogs about being a K-5 librarian at Check it Out.
Jone MacCulloch |
There
were a lot of poets on my mind when I signed up to guest blog here. I could
select Naomi Shihab Nye or William Stafford or William Carlos Williams (already featured). Each one has influenced my writing. However, one poet is responsible
for teaching me the following poetry form.
Whenever
I write a poem using the pantuom form, I am thankful for Joyce Sidman's book Butterfly
Eyes and Other Secrets of the Meadow. [What is a pantoum?]
"We Are Waiting (a
pantuom)" was tucked into the back half of this book which I was reading
as a judge for the CYBILS Poetry Award in 2006. (Read about it here.) This poetry form is also found in Joyce’s book This is Just to Say.
We Are Waiting (a pantuom)
By
Joyce Sidman
Our
time will come again,
Say
the patient ones.
Now
is meadow,
But
not for long.
Say
the patient ones:
Sunlight
dazzles,
but
not for long.
Seedlings
grow amongst the grass.
Sunlight
dazzles,
and
the meadow voles dance,
but
seedlings grow amongst the grass.
Forest
will return.
Meadow
voles dance,
where
once was fire,
but
forest will return.
We
wait patiently.
Once
was fire,
Now
is meadow.
We
wait patiently.
Our
time will come again.
What
are we?
I
read and reread this poem. Its musicality captivates me. It feels like a call
and response in the simple complexity of repeating lines. I love the weaving of
the lines, a tapestry of words. There's a story here. Something has happened in
what was once the forest.
"We
Are Waiting" is a perfect source poem for close reading with students.
Asking them what they notice about the poems and its structure provides great
discussions. Sidman's website is an excellent resource for all poetry
aficionados.
Sidman's
poem mentors me. Rereading this poem is important to my process of writing a
pantuom. While I've not memorized this poem (or many others, as I hate
memorizing), the cadence of this poem is with me. Sidman suggests to begin with
a topic that's a passion for you. I write down several phrases about the topic.
Then like a jigsaw puzzle, I arrange the lines, fitting them together. It's a
time to play around with the line order.
For
my response to "We Are Waiting" I borrowed the first line of Joyce’s poem and a few other words.
I
love what happens in spring. In February, when we had snow, there were the
daffodils emerging in my front flower box. They are followed by the pink
tulips. And there’s nothing better than listening to the arrival of the robins,
a harbinger of spring days.
Jone's daffodils are eager for spring. |
Spring
By Jone
MacCulloch
Our
time will come again,
say
the emerging daffodils
in
the dazzle of the sun
as
pink calypso tulips bloom.
Say
the emerging daffodils:
Our
time is brief
as
pink calypso tulips bloom
during
spring's first rain.
Our
time is brief,
sing
the robins
during
spring's first rain
while
worms wriggle in the grass.
Sing
the robins,
We'll
be back
while
worms wriggle in the grass
nectar
awaits the first arrival of bees.
We'll
be back
in
the dazzle of the sun
nectar
awaits the first arrival of bees.
Our
time will come.
© 2014 Jone Rush MacCulloch
Joyce Sidman |
Jone
is a teacher-librarian during the school year, who writes, reads, and blogs
(personal blog, Deowriter and school blog Check It Out) the rest of the time.
She’d
rather write poetry than memorize it. She has had haiku published in Acorn; A
Journal of Contemporary Haiku and the Haiku Society of American Members'
Anthology. In 2012, she self-published a small collection of poetry and
photography, Solace in Nature, and is currently working on a novel in verse.
Helping with SCBWI-OR book sales is one way Jone gives back to a great writing
community. You can follow Jone on Twitter @JoneMac53.
Previous posts in this series:
Laura Shovan on "This
Is Just to Say" by William Carlos Williams
Dylan Bargteil on "On Moral
Leadership as a Political Dilemma" by June Jordan
J. C. Elkin on "Hannibal
Clim" (author unknown)
Diane Mayr on a haiku by Basho
7 comments:
I love reading Jone's response to Joyce's poem! Both are lovely. xo
Good job, Jone! I definitely need to take another look at the form!
It's wonderful that you crossed over from Joyce Sidman's poem into your own time coming, Jone. Your images are lovely-high time for spring!
Wonderful to see Jone and her writing highlighted here in this terrific series! (She's so generous to shine lights on others.) Jone's poem is a lovely homage to Joyce's - much to dazzle the reader in both of them!
Thanks for sharing.
Love reading your response to the Joyce poem! I'll have to give the pantoum a try. I've been keeping a poetry journal again for the first time in ages. This time with a 2x2 inch sketch to go with each poem. It's been a lot of fun.
Just want to say thanks to Jone for so many things. I won your book on the SOLC and can't wait to get it! Thanks! Also the pantoum is a wonderful form for playing with language, like a puzzle. Both Joyce and yours mentor me and will be my source poems when I get to P in the alphabet. Love this post!!!
Love pantoums! I had never read this one by Joyce, and I can see why you were captivated. The music, the music! The puzzle aspect of pantoums is what I like about them, that technical side (just as music is technical), getting the notes to fit together just right -- as you did in your response. Lovely, Jone!
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