Saturday, February 22, 2014

They're here!


Looking out my window one day last week, here's what I saw in my next-door neighbor's tree.


Big, big Robins, all puffed up weathering the "almost-spring" weather.


Well, we hope almost spring...


Do they know something that we don't?


There were at least ten of them in the tree...


So, this week's poetry homework assignment was to write a "pantoum".  The form is a Malayan one from the fifteenth century, with older roots in Chinese and Persian poetry.  The sound effect is close to chanting, with extensive use of repetition.  The second and fourth lines of each stanza become the first and third lines of the next stanza.  The pantoum circles back.  It ends where it began.  The last line of the poem repeats the first line.  The second line of the last stanza repeats the third line of stanza 1...and so on.  (Frances Mayes, The Discovery of Poetry) 

The Soldiers
 
I spotted the robins in my tree
There among the icy branches
In the midst of a snow-filled day
The harbingers of spring wait.
 
There among the icy branches
As the winter wind harshly blows
The harbingers of spring wait
Scouting ahead to herald the rest.
 
As the winter wind harshly blows
In the midst of a snow-filled day
Scouting ahead to herald the rest
I spotted the robins in my tree.
 
 
A.Schabes



4 comments:

Suz said...

!!! mine were here last week...and yes, like you ,I squealed for joy in my kitchen!!
I love love your pantoum

~Kim at Golden Pines~ said...

I just saw my first Robin the other day--And it's about time! :-)!

~Kim at Golden Pines~ said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Doris said...

Delightful! The poem so purposeful yet beautiful!