26 January 2013

Couples Competition

Today's offering for Poets United  "The Poetry Pantry 2nd Chance Poems or 1st time shares":


Birds rarely collide
inside my fantasy realm
but dance together freely
leaving hetero-only air
their neat artsy ballroom
looming in breezes swirling
twirling feathers. And in trial
while figure skating, who can tell
well the gender of penguins
in happy tap-a-tap
flap and slide off ice,
spice flying in our eyes?



Posted for my "Sunday Mini-Challenge" at Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads.  The challenge is to use the last line from one of your own poems as the first line of a new one.  Here is the required link to the first poem: "Telephone Lines Haiku," but it is also here (not required):


chore-o-graphy
dance writing rhythm for rooks,
crows, doves and sparrows

safety in numbers
with sequential memories
birds rarely collide



   Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast





25 January 2013

These Boots

Hear my confession under moonglow:
I have owned emus and bearpaws and 
aussie dogs—and lately I’m wearing them
double-time because—hey—it’s cold in 
and outside—and I like being barefoot 
and a little defiant as my best friend says 
You wouldn’t catch ME dead in those 
teeny-bopper-sluff-alongs and my sister 
poets won't (or can't) wear them.  Alone
at home, I slip on my What the Fluffers 
(with, granted, hidden prosthetics) and 
sluff and I scuff and I stroll along side-
walks, main streets and moon walks, too.







For my friend, Nancy K. Truly I am grinning as I write . . . .

Posted at Poets United "Poetry Pantry #134."  
    

There will never be aFFF right day to post thiths Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast.

                             

23 January 2013

Butterflies

Let me tell you a story of the old ways
Can you hear me?  Adjust your shells,
I’ll wait.

We used to have extensions related to
a form of com’utics  called sensation.
Look and see where sound sensors—ears—
were located, one on each side of the head.
We had another mid-face—nose—which
paired with ears to bring the outside in
to us.  You can imagine how such useless
appendages caught on and damaged the
ecosystem we move through by wasting
our time on empathy for our competitors.

Turn in place with gratitude!  Notice how
the fog ash of your wastes lifts, applauds
and readies moist nourishment for you!
Open your pores and you will receive!
That is the joy of our new world where
no waste exists but only food, no distance
but only here, no rhyme but what a shell
can read.  Can you imagine open vistas of
uncertainty and multiple species proclaiming
their own beauty?  Overloading killed many.

But we survive to tell the stories, and story
reveals the folly of the old.  It hurt to
remove my ears, but what a relief to my
existential suffering, and look—what
designs they gave me with my healing!
I am a double buttercup!  Imagine how
the flies love that!  How sad that no one
has the operation and the tattoo anymore!
This little touch of color is like a precious
stone—I’ll tell you that story next time.

Time for me to refresh.  I will dig my toes
deep into the muck while you float and bob.
Ah, children, such energy.




Posted for "Kerry's Wednesday Challenge ~ Worldbuilding" at Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads.  This time dystopia.  Next time utopia.  I promise.

Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast

22 January 2013

Collaboration with Hannah today

I am happy to say that "Words between Birds" the collaboration between Hannah Gosselin and me is now posted at Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads.  Please visit.


13 January 2013

Death Plays

 
They live for “Sudden
Death” playoffs in sports, games and
television shows—

Reinvent Gothic
death fantasies for costume
balls with pale faces—

Spurn death from Goth Clubs
and Playoffs when it’s too real
and uninvited.
 
 
 
 
Posted for Haiku Heights #204 - Death.  And again for "Sunday, January 20, 2013 Poetry Pantry - #133.
 
 
 
Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast


 


05 January 2013

Scripts



Speak the speech, I pray you, as I pronounced it to
you, trippingly on the tongue . . . .
acquire and beget a temperance that may give it smoothness.
~Shakespeare’s Hamlet, III:2                      


To be seen and heard
to be obeyed most of all
words on the page live

Prescriptions and Laws
Descriptions and Inscriptions
Transcriptions and Plays

Poets travel through
scripts to sample, sip, strip, sense,
string and sing new songs



Posted for "Poetry Pantry - #131" at Poets United, this poem grew from this week's prompt at Haiku Heights #203 - Script.  Could I say all of this in one Haiku?  Yes, but it leaves out poets, and Shakespeare said it better in Macbeth and As You Like It:


 World stages players 
like horses in blinders who
pace and race as told.


I think I should just re order the original so that the second is first, the first is second and the poet stays last.  Hmm.
 

Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast


 

02 January 2013

Another January First: a sestina

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Another January first, keep them coming:
I awoke early from my spiritual retreat
walking slowly toward breakfast after the bell,
past crumpled dark luminaries and frost ready
to melt, and I was in step with other seniors
some speaking, some silent with worshipful intent.

We woke early at our religious retreat
after a feast night with music, ringing the bells—
senior citizens waiting to hear God, ready
for earth's midnight.  We've gathered together, senior
moments on hold, radios turned off, so intent
on this December thirty first. Keep them coming.

We walked slowly toward breakfast after the bell
hoping to find even breakfast changed and ready
for anything but the same cereals seniors
eat daily.  But, I asked comrades, what if—intent
as we are on change—we miss the joy of coming
to familiar comforts with no need to retreat?

We look around, we dark luminaries, ready
to glow as suns in training, stars of the senior
class, ready to graduate, to commence, intent
on lighting the wicks of insight!  Keep them coming.
Today is not just a day—today ends retreat.
Finally this morning we know, so, ring the bell.

Let no one say we are over-the-hill seniors
depressed by cereal and eggs.  We are intent
on being heard in congress and we are coming
in droves to plant ourselves on the paths.  Since retreat,
we grow strong, bold again with a liberty bell
in our voices, soul riding on backbones, ready.

New Year’s Eve and day worship renew our intent
to move as God leads us and so we are coming
to walk on the wild side after this brief retreat.
We're full of enthusiasm this morning. Bells,
we eat granola and go to meeting ready
to leave retirement, graduating seniors.

January first's coming again.  No retreat.
Listen to the bells peal and send us out, ready
to love as only seniors can, with great intent. 



Posted for OpenLinkNight ~ Week 77 ~ Happy New Year!! at dVerse Poets Pub.  Happy New Year!  


Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast