Archives for posts with tag: villanelle

Vincent_van_Gogh_-_Almond_blossom_-_Google_Art_Project
How to Meet a Brand-New Day
—in villanelle form
by Jeannie E. Roberts

Wake before sunup, receive the new day.
Find insight in silence, yield to its flow.
Rise with blithe spirit to brighten your way.

Gather blossoms, shape a centered bouquet.
Welcome awareness, behold garden’s glow.
Wake before sunup, receive the new day.

Honor your essence like lilacs in May,
as if Almond Blossoms bursting with hope.
Rise with blithe spirit to brighten your way.

Enliven your body, bend, stretch, and sway.
Extend openness, like Landscape with Snow.
Wake before sunup, receive the new day.

Bathe in the lucence of enlightened rays.
Shine like the paintings of Vincent van Gogh.
Rise with blithe spirit to brighten your way.

See Sunflowers, Tree Roots, The Night Café.
Envision The Sower, Wheatfield with Crows.
Wake before sunup, receive the new day.
Rise with blithe spirit to brighten your way.

PAINTING: Almond Blossoms by Vincent van Gogh (1890).

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR: I had several ideas for this inspiring series, including how to crochet, how to snowshoe, how to be an artist, and how to write a villanelle (though another poet crafted that one). I settled on how to meet a brand-new day, a meditation of sorts; its content seemed to frame well in the form of a villanelle. Follow this link for the rules and history of the villanelle: Villanelle | Academy of American Poets.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Jeannie E. Roberts lives in an inspiring setting near Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, where she writes, draws and paints, and often photographs her natural surroundings. She’s authored four poetry collections and two children’s books. As If Labyrinth – Pandemic Inspired Poems is forthcoming in May 2021 from Kelsay Books. She’s listed in Poets & Writers and is poetry reader and editor of the online literary magazine Halfway Down the Stairs. To learn more, visit jrcreative.biz and Jeannie E. Roberts | Poets & Writers (pw.org)

koson sparrow 4
How to Write a Villanelle
by Marjorie Maddox

To write a villanelle, think like a bird
that soars and swoops in seven different ways
then sings a song that you’ve already heard,

returning to its favorite branch to perch.
Become a sparrow—light, and quick, and gray—
to write a villanelle.  Think how the bird

salutes you every morning undeterred
from trilling what it always wants to say.
within its favorite song; the one you’ve heard

so many times you suddenly are stirred
to listen closer still, to find the way
to write a villanelle, just like a bird

that flits across your vision in a blur
and leaves the sound of beauty in its trail,
still singing songs that you’ve already heard.

Next time you want to fly away on words,
remember what we talked about this day.
To write a villanelle, think like a bird
that sings a song that you’ve already heard.

SOURCE: “How to Write a Villanelle” appears in Inside Out: Poems on Writing and Reading Poems with Insider Exercises (Finalist Children’s Educational Category 2020 International Book Awards).

IMAGE: Sparrow on a Flowering Branch, circa 1930s, by Ohara Koson (1877-1945).

EDITOR’S NOTE:villanelle is a 19-line poetic form consisting of five tercets followed by a quatrain. There are two refrains and two repeating rhymes, with the first and third line of the first tercet repeated alternately at the end of each subsequent stanza until the last stanza, which includes both repeated lines.

Marjorie Maddox May 2020 with Inside Out author photo copy

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Professor of English and Creative Writing at Lock Haven University, Marjorie Maddox has published 11 collections of poetry—including Transplant, Transport, Transubstantiation (Yellowglen Prize); True, False, None of the Above (Illumination Book Award Medalist); Local News from Someplace Else; Perpendicular As I (Sandstone Book Award)—the short story collection What She Was Saying (Fomite); four children’s and YA books—including Inside Out: Poems on Writing and Reading Poems with Insider Exercises (Finalist Children’s Educational Category 2020 International Book Awards),  A Crossing of Zebras: Animal Packs in Poetry and I’m Feeling Blue, Too! Common Wealth: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania (co-editor); Presence: A Journal of Catholic Poetry (assistant editor); and 600+ stories, essays, and poems in journals and anthologies. Forthcoming in 2021 is her book Begin with a Question (Paraclete Press), as well as her ekphrastic collaboration with photographer Karen Elias, Heart Speaks, Is Spoken For (Shanti Arts). For more information, please visit marjoriemaddox.com.

PHOTO: The author with her book Inside Out: Poems on Writing and Reading Poems with Insider Exercises (Finalist Children’s Educational Category 2020 International Book Awards).