Guidelines

Guidelines: (1) Include your name, the title of your original poem, and a brief comment about yourself; (2) Poems may be in any language (please include an English translation); (3) Poems may not violate Nicolet's Social Media Guidelines; (4) Original poems may be submitted anonymously; (5) Submit poems to Ocie Kilgus (okilgus@nicoletcollege.edu). Students who submit original poems are eligible for the Best Original Poem contest. The student with the best poem will be awarded the Ron Parkinson Poetry Matters Student Scholarship Award in the amount of $300. The community member with the best poem will receive dinner for two at Church Street Inn, Hazelhurst. Upon the closing of the Poetry Project, a faculty committee will select the winning poems. The winners of the contest will be recognized at Nicolet College's Award Ceremonies on May 10.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

April 30, 2011

"Tribute"
(to an old friend)
By Tricia LeBlanc

In an old familiar room
Where we made plans for the future
Still in the corner -- rusted bedsprings
Tattered lace framing white and green
News from '43 stained with age on the floor . . .
Sweet, musty

Summer breeze where I grew up
Where your heart belongs
Family photos in black and white
Ladies in the snow
Letters giving clues -- not many

Other pieces remain:
The old chair, not wobbly
One pair of black shoes
Mason jars without lids
Perhaps a bit of ourselves -- mostly just a feeling
Child's dreams
All remembered
And promises not forgot

To return is not the same as then
But still a sense of calm
Through broken locks
Smile and climb the stairs
Look down at missing shingles
Perched above the orchard

Hard to describe . . . all this . . .
Kind of a loss, yet
The laughter is alive
Poetry and song
In the eyes of a dreamer
Is understood

"Across the lake where I grew up in the U.P., there was an old abandoned farmhouse (and also a barn and other outbuildings). The property was beautiful; in the front of the house was an apple orchard. The trees were mature and had great gnarled limbs. As kids (teenagers), we loved to explore the property, and especially had a fascination with all of the relics that had been left behind by the last inhabitants. Inside the house, there were remnants of lace curtains left in some of the rooms upstairs, and one could look out over the field on beautiful summer days. There was one special person who used to go there with me when he visited from Chicago - a grandson of one of our neighbors. He was a very creative and artistic person; we used to write poems to each other. I thought that someday we would 'end up together,' but that was not the case. The old farmhouse still stands, and I 'visited' a few times since. It still makes me smile to read the poem."

* * * * * * * * * *

"I Danno?"
By Samuel R. Cacas, Jr.

I got time 2 cry,
but its hard 2 shed,
a tear.
My babys' watch-n,
& shes' were I wonna b,
not here.

I been locked side,
i'm n,
eternally.
Theres' not a lot u can offer 1,
who has trouble find-n himself,
& its burn n me.
2 see no reflection,
has my soul turn cold?
if not: why don't u turn n talk 2 me,
don't just fold.

More than enough days, have pass.
like stars burn-n,
out there.

Some dings r better off,
not 2 b said,
so should I tell u?
Will dat save us,
a lot of lonely nights?
by me,
never tell-n- u?

Where does love go, when it's lost, disappear-n wit despair?
will love,
wonder off?

How often do u observe da 1 u say u love?
go ahead n tell another lie, & cry like dem dove.
U said u looked me, n my eyes, n search fa my soul,
don't bray me, n da concrete; let me love blossom,
like a rose.

I don't know, where we r headed,
but I know 1 ding.
My love 4 u, is genwine, so writing poetry, is my thing?
i danno?

* * * * * * * * * *

"A Love Story"
By Justine Specht

I hung by a thread
That was ready to snap
Wondering what lead
To this mishap

With a melody
Of a sweet bitter end
I plea
I need a friend

Help disarms
But there stands you
With open arms
To fall into

And that's where I want to be
With your arms intertwined with my body
Hand in hand
We stand
That's where I want to be

With looks that kill
Best poison to taste
Contains an arctic chill
When you hold my waist

With words so sweet
Heart so true
No deceit
Could come from you

With love that has intensity
Kisses like a drug
I know you are my destiny
Forever in your hug

With someone to confide to
Tell each painful memory
With you
That's where I want to be

"I wrote this poem to a boy when I was in high school. I thought that the poem was meaningful and I enjoyed the rhythm of the poem."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Green Eyes"
Anonymous

Green eyes follow my every move
they notice each freckle
each delicate hair
every twitch of my lip

Rough hands caress me from head to toe
they appreciate each curve
each supple bump
they warm my body and
goosebumps appear

Smooth pink lips work my body over
equally Loving my ear
my neck, my shoulders,
my back and every
sensitive spot
without a word being said

Strong arms protect me
and hug me
embrace me

He inches inside me
Loving me
in every crevice
hurting me
and pleasuring me

Green eyes watch my every move
as my pupils dilate
and begin to fall under my lids
they appreciate every wrinkle
every freckle
and every twitch of my lip.

"I am a second-semester student."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Little Girl"
By Katye Ziolkowski

Little girl writes a "K" for her name,
Her smile bright and her voice joyful;
Tiny glasses on a tiny face.

Little girl writes a "M" for her sister's name,
Her voice still happy, her smile true;
Yet this is not so joyful.

Little girl's baby sister is gone,
Three weeks ago the day before;
Seven-month-old baby missed so much.

Little girl doesn't understand it all,
One day baby's here - the next day gone;
Only when she's older will she know.

Little girl grown up will know the story,
How baby girl lived and died,
and went to heaven and will wait for her there.

"I enjoy writing poetry, especially about things that trouble me, or are close to my heart. I am attending Nicolet part-time and hope to transfer this fall and eventually go into social work, counseling, or something of that nature."

* * * * * * * * * *

"sidewalk café"
By Janice Kanyusik
 
should I die in Paris in the rain
I will be seated at a sidewalk café
near the Tuileries Gardens reading
poetry writing about ice going out
on the Minnesota River 1975   thunder
crashing under the Tenth Street Bridge
one hour north of Minneapolis
I will swallow the last drop of dark
coffee and my heartbeat will cease

for an instant the silence will sound
like thunder and I will rise confused
from the spindly chair and fall turning
onto my back under the orange canopy
Café Keber Marque  last breath elation 
last thought sunset the rain will stop
I will see the old woman’s body woven
through wrought iron filigreed with white
hair soaking red ‘round her cracked skull

I will see through flesh to boney cage
once cathedra   bishop’s official throne
at last a sudden breeze will sweep away
the loose pages of my little journal
left on the café table  they will drift across
the wet cobblestone patio  tumble down
the crowded avenue   torn and faded
carried to the flowing waters of the Seine
my words will return to their source 

"This poem was to honor a friend’s birthday. Then the poem wrote itself I guess. I gave my friend chocolates instead."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Yes, I Love Big, Boring Books"
By Shane Teter

I'm a contrarian
by nature and by heart:
authoritarian
of the dumb and the smart.
So, you say that "Moby-Dick
goes dully on and on."
And Dickens' *yawn* Pickwick
Papers a marathon
of tedium and woe?
Such dullard cries for me
bestows a golden glow
of heavy levity
upon those boring books
of noted gravity.
Of Kindels, texts or Nooks --
I am drawn to pages  
of "needless description"
like scholars to sages
and pain to prescription.

"It’s true: Walden, Democracy in America, The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms – I love them all. In fact there’s no such thing as too boring for me. Unless you include accounting books – I mean, a guy has to draw the line somewhere! Unrelated aside: Did I also mention that I love a six-count rhythm with a jingle-jangle rhyme?"

* * * * * * * * * *

"an ode for ernie"
By Todd Mountjoy

After a lifetime of misering away every penny.
After hoarding his accomplishments
     trying to screw the government
     before it screwed him.
After losing his family and any semblance of a close friend
     to acquire yet another dollar, another business.
After managing to accumulate everything
     he thought would make him happy

He died . . .

Dropped in a cheap box
A casket as warm and inviting as the gash
in the November earth which embraced them both

His young wife and her son got it all,
     every soiled dime that was gone
     before the first breeze of spring
Every dime, that is, except the hundred dollar bill
     stuck on the fridge, under the
     magnet from Jake's Towing.
A hundred dollar bill for the son with a prodigal father
     the preacher son who managed to say kind things
     while those who sat un-listening wondered how much
     his father has screwed them yet again, even in death
The hundred dollars that didn't come close
     to covering the gas
     covering the motel
     covering the time on the road
     covering the time it took to lay
An old bitter man down in his earthen crib
An old man writhing motionlessly while his young wife and her son
celebrated by spending what took a lifetime of severance to accumulate.

"My father was a pastor while his father was a businessman. When my father 'got the calling' he left the family business and my grandfather left our lives. This poem is a reflection on my grandfather's funeral at which my father gave the eulogy. Sometimes, when we write, there are not words you would like to use as words. Poetry gives a certain license to create words, such as the use of 'misering' which isn't a word, but one I kept because I liked it . . . And honestly, sometimes poetry is more for the writer rather than the reader . . ."

Friday, April 29, 2011

April 29, 2011

"Morning Dew"
By Anita Wood

Today is unlike any day before.
Yesterday is gone and tomorrow is unknown.
Do not dwell on the "what ifs",
imagine all the possibilities.
With each new sunrise, comes all
the chances to do what was not considered.
Today is unlike any day before.

* * * * * * * * * *

"This Writer"
By Kevin H. Straw, Jr.

I'd like to sit by, and watch the time go
Sit by, and listen with my eyelids low
Dreaming of the way it works

You could bend around to stay the night
Watching the streets lie without a fight
Seeing why a faith still lurks

My friends would all be sitting on the hill
Time and life zips by but we stay still
We'll never rest within the dirts

Our hands will never be caged with cuffs
Staying free was never really that tough
Waking up is still what hurts

* * * * * * * * * *

"Drama Makes the World Go 'Round"
By Nicole Weister

I hate you, I love you!
She said this, he did that.
Gossip is a drug, and you're an addict.
Story of my life is spread 'round the school.
Spreading rumors like wild fires, just trying to be cool.
They caught him cheating,
He even carried her books!
There's a field party tonight, let's go!
They're only dating because of good looks.

Brothers fighting with your boyfriend,
Trying to protect the little sis.
She screams "don't do it!"
Drama ends with a fist.

Don't talk to her, don't talk to him.
If you do I'll be mad at you!
He did that,
She said this.
Oh my god!
Did they really kiss?!
They broke up,
They got together
We've been friends for 12 years,
And they've been fighting for forever.

Does he love me, does he like her?
I really wish I knew.
Sometimes I wish I could get that damn boy,
To just stop with the chew.

Truth is everyone gossips,
It's not really a thrill.
People call you two-faced,
But for everyone it's a real easy skill.

"I wrote this in sophomore English. It just gets me because college is way different than high school, but sometimes I miss that 'she said, he said' drama! It puts a little "oomph" in your school day!"

* * * * * * * * * *

"sunrise with ginger tea"
By Janice Kanyusik

steeped
in boiled water
prickle scented
honey swirled
in an azure cup
sunlight
relaxes into sky

I linger breathe in
each spooned pool
slides sweetly
plentiful inside

a radiance its subtleness
balances
the magnitude of what we gain
we lose in the sun's brilliance

each day

I cup my tongue
a beggar's bowl

Thursday, April 28, 2011

April 28, 2011

"A Sonnet, Melodic"
By Allie Zacharias

Ever lasts my undying love for
Melodic verses, so compassionate
Piercing those drums of my ears, ever more Feeling so joyous, I've dreamt of such fate

Never known a voice so pure,
something rare As it's called,
a song, as it is, a song Such magic is shown,
nothing to spare Brought out, in being withheld for so long

A light shining, so brilliant, a sight
Viewed within mind, behind eyes awaiting To see such a beauty as is heard right Invisible,
yet hardly is fading

Goes forth, the harmonies forever on
Music said, heard in mind, and never gone

"Music is essential, an overlooked value in our lives. Its importance is great and inspirational. Peace, love, and harmony."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Perchance"
By Jeff Eaton

On the bedroom wall
The mirror swallows the moon.
A dream rises full.

"I am a member of the English faculty at Nicolet. As a poet, I believe in the power of compressed, concise images, as championed by the haiku form, though I also apply that concept to longer narrative works and song lyrics."

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

April 27, 2011

"Colors"
By Alexandra Jaros

The sun rises
The sun sets
No one despises
No one has regrets
You'll never fight
The colors of the sky
Shining so bright
Will make you cry
The bright sun
Sparkling in the sky
Having fun
It doesn't lie
Sit and stare
At this beautiful sight
You can't help but share
This beautiful night
The sun rises
The sun sets
No one despises
No one has regrets

"I write poems when I am not able to sleep about things that are going on in my life or my family's lives. So I don't start out with a certain type of poem; it just ends up being what sounds best."

* * * * * * * * * *

"love song"
By Janice Kanyusik

I once met a word
who wore her own tutu
who danced across the page
and leapt into my eye
who left me on the threshold
spinning

"This poem is an attempt to express my love for words and for the process of reading and writing poetry."

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

April 26, 2011

"Summer"
By Ashley Fielhauer

Fall brings the leaves,
Winter brings the snow,
Spring brings the blossoms,
Then there's the summer,
The hot lazy-like days
that bring out the people,
The cool peaceful lakes
that bring out the ducks.
Vacationing, Swimming,
Hiking, and Forgetting about school.
Camping, biking, relaxing
and watching the fireworks.
Seeing, listening, and feeling
the nature grow before us.
A time when memories are
best well remembered,
A time when there is love,
happiness and peace.
Faster the long days
start to shorten,
Leaves start to turn colors
and soon the cycle starts again.
Oh, Summer, don't be gone for long.

"Summer has always been my favorite time of the year. This is my second semester here at Nicolet, and I am going for a double major in both English and Kinesiology. I have always enjoyed writing."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Song of the New Potty"
By Shane Teter

So our old pot,
It rocked a lot:
When you had to "go",
It swayed to and fro.
Both the bowl and basin
Did much water wastin'.
A miserable crapper
With a broken flapper!

"Enough!" I said.
So off I sped
To the big box store.
Hoses, pipes and more
They had in great supply.
And potties! I had to try
To pick one with the perfect flush.
But I was in such a rush!

And I forgot
(wish I had not)
The hue of the old pot!
This matters a lot!
White? Almond? Bisque? Or Bone?
If only I had known!
When then I took a mighty risk
And I went with a lovely bisque. . . .

Installation;
Defecation:
Numbers one and two
Cheer our potty new!
Stable, "Standard", and bright:
Flush and flow are just right.
I hereby proclaim a "pwn"
For our perfect little john.

"Not all poetry captures a sublime moment, summarizes a therapy session, or offers the woe of teenage love. Some poems are silly . . . like this one."

Monday, April 25, 2011

April 25, 2011

"Innocence"
Anonymous

I feel the warmth of the sun
As I glide and flitter about the garden
I see Bee balm, Coneflowers, lavender and Blue Indigo
As they shed the morning dew
I hear the finches, the robins, and bluebirds
While I listen to the beautiful song of the hermit thrush
As it echoes in the distance
This is my sanctuary
Full of beauty, peace, and security
I soar downward
Landing now on a patch of milkweed
I am unsuspecting and carefree
But All At Once I Am Swooped Up
A net has ensared me and I spiral downward unable now to move
I am entrapped
And I try desperately to escape
I flutter and fly in circles
But I am unable to free myself
I find I am a mere specimen
A prisoner in my captor's stronghold
Fear, confusion, and exhaustion overcome me
And I have not the strength to fight
I give up . . .
Later I am released from my bondage
There is no longer any use for me now
I am tossed to the ground . . .
And my oppressor will seek yet another victim
While I lay here battered with broken wings
No longer able to fly

"This poem was written for the victims of sexual assault. April is Sexual Assault Awareness month."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Birthing Deer"
Anonymous

Don't let her be a deer . . . brown, slender, lithe.
As a yearling, her flesh will be desirable.

Later, eager for earthy pleasures,
she'll wander the fields and woods.

Her ears, relishing the rhythm of her own pace,
will know to fear the young, the old . . . even the withered.

Her nose, quivering at the smell of a cool soil,
will sense the strange air that moves the earth.

Her glance, direct and bold,
will attract unwelcome gazes.

To those who no sooner set their sight upon a deer than
shoot their wad, she'll be prey.

And as if not enough to satiate their lust,
they'll violate her again.

And once assured that her will to live has been extinguished,
they'll claim her as a prize, a trophy.

And they, spent, will soothe their loins
to proclaim the climax of their perennial ritual.

If a desire to live is to be her assassin,
don't let her be a deer.

"This poem was written for the victims of sexual assault. April is Sexual Assault Awareness month."

Sunday, April 24, 2011

April 24, 2011

"Eminent Domain"
By Christian Meier

The question of ownership causes
too much unnecessary confusion.

Case in point: A new neighbor
lives up the hill.

He surrounded his house with
a moat made of grass.

Keeps the watch over it.

An old neighbor
lives down the hill.

He is a dog.
His name is Gus.

I sip my iced tea and
watch Gus make his customary trek
up the hill.

He lumbers over his well-worn path
straight to our new
neighbor's well-administered fiefdom.

Gus zeroes in on a sunny patch
of pampered greenery.

He circles.
Centers himself.

Squatting,
he exerts dominion over this space.

No confusion, or ambiguity, or irony there.

No board room babel.

Nature speaks with such refreshing clarity.

"This is my tribute to Gus, fierce foe of would-be emissaries of empire and stalwart champion of the common sense of the commons."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Leaving My Boy at Camp"
By Todd Mountjoy


It's cloudy, mist falling and rising.
Mist gathers and runs down his cheek.
No tears, only excitement for
the adventure that begins as he looks
to the forest, darker than the darkened sky,
a sky that is veiled for his first time
with white pines and black oaks.

A boy of the plains entering under the blanket
of the northwoods. He's out of place. Still he
makes each step with a sureness that I
find lacking within my own chest. Hesitating,
he looks first to me and then to the pines
dripping their offering from the sky.

I see for the first time why his mother
believes he is angelic. From his blue gaze
to his blonde hair accenting his
soft white face he looks pure,
innocent.

And then, as with all that is celestial, he
turns and vanishes within the natural.

"Just a short poem from when my oldest first left the plains of Nebraska to attend a summer camp which I attended as a youth. It was the first time he'd been in an actual forest as Nebraska is not much more than corn, weeds, and an incessant wind which is oppressively hot in the summer and bitterly cold in the winter. It was one of those moments that, as a parent, I saw the world of childhood innocence and nature bleed into one another . . ."

Saturday, April 23, 2011

April 23, 2011

"Sirens Wail"
By Kriscillia Thomley

Sirens wail as the thunder rolls in
Lightening strikes the trees.
People are outside frantically taking shelter
But one person stands in the breeze.
He looks up at the dark blue and green sky
Listening very closely to every noise.
Just then it seems to all stop.
He knows it isn't over quite yet.
But then the train sound starts coming in
The sight of what was next, he could have made a bet
The tornado was as wide as he could see
There were things he still had to get
Yet there was only one place he wanted to be
Next to his wife and newborn son
It all was starting to close in on him
Yet he was still standing there
The tornado moved closer and closer
Trees were cracking, the sound he could not bear
The force of the winds were fierce
It all came to an end when the tornado passed
But what was left behind was such a mess
He looked around not knowing what he would see
What he saw filled him with glee
His wife stood there holding their son
They had made it
They were as happy as could be.

"I am a freshman at Nicolet. I somewhat like to write poetry, but it's not always my favorite. I do not like tornados, but since this last storm, I have been inspired to write about them."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Spring Planting"
By Todd Mountjoy

Long ago, before time was measured,
a mountain of ice scrapped clean this land.
A mountain towering a mile above what is
now prairie, wetlands and mixed forest.

It's hard to imagine straining to catch a glimpse
of the ridge as soiled mountains marched southward
leaving bits of the artic, pebbles from the north,
stones from crushed landscapes here in my garden.

Stones that I harvest to stack in a pile to allow
bush beans and tomatoes an opportunity to survive
both the late frosts of spring and the early freezing
of autumn. All in the rich soil of the lact ice age.

"My wife and I enjoy gardening in the summer. I often find that with outdoor work comes inspiration to write. Sometimes it takes the form of a longer poem, while other times it is more of a Haiku-ish snippet as when I accidentally chopped a worm in two."

          dark earth, my shovel
          rings against a hidden stone
          a worm now has a brother

Friday, April 22, 2011

April 22, 2011

"Celestial Embrace"
By Sally Kindell

Distant     Miles
Worlds      Apart
City Skyscape
Northern Stars
Foshay Tower
Majestic Pine
Two Astronomers
Focus In . . .
I See the Moon . . .
YouAreEverNear

"When my youngest daughter was small, she would look up at the sky and recite the poem 'I See the Moon . . .' which would comfort her when her older sisters all moved far away from home. She felt closer, knowing that they also could see the moon. I wrote this poem as a way of comforting me after she moved to Minneapolis to begin college."

* * * * * * * * * *

"The Poet Empathizes with Gamers (and makes fun of them too)"
By Shane Teter

Off to United Nations Space Command,
Then on to a morning in Azeroth!
An animated, surrogate life --
We gamers move like ice on planet Hoth:
We run with our fingers; we fight with wrists;
And our tarsal bones are on-the-floor stiff.
Experience for experience points,
And memories traded for "saved game" lists:
Shall I compare you to a hydroponic
Tomato? I doubt you'll want me to.
Planted? Sunless CFLs? And Mountain Dew?
But how can I judge? I'm a gamer too.

"Because I'm old and mean, I don't really like or appreciate the games I've listed in my poem. Those games are for the young to waste their lives upon. I love real video games . . . the ones that I played when I was young and wasting my life. Games such as Ultima IV: Quest of the Avatar, Bard's Tale, and Baldur's Gate: That was the golden age, I tell ya."

Thursday, April 21, 2011

April 21, 2011

"We Have Worked Very Hard"
By Mark Mathews

We have worked very hard
to be able to play on this yard;
most of the snow has washed away
and we are excited to finally be able to play;
our roster is almost complete,
which for our coaching staff is quite a feat;
our team is finally ready,
even though some of our guys are unsteady;
when I finally hear that first loud cheer,
it will really sink in that baseball is here.

"I'm a transfer student, and this is my second year at Nicolet. I coach baseball for the high school."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Sibadee dee dee, Mother of Me"
By Pam Gokey

Sibadee dee dee watches my every move . . .
     I look for her smile
She guides my first step
     I look for her smile
She waves to me as the school bus moves
     I look for her smile
She speaks of how sweet it is to be a woman
     I look for her smile
She cries of the aches and pains without an education
     I look for her smile
She soothes my hurts of soured relationships
     I look for her smile
She tells family that I'm a beautiful mother of seven
     I look for her smile
She plays games with her grandchildren
     I look for her smile
She loves her life and smiles . . .
     And I say, "I love you, too."
Sibadee dee dee, mother of me.

"I've always wanted to write a letter to my mother, to let her know that I appreciate her. And now it's too late to write that letter, so here is my poem in memory of my mother."

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

April 20, 2011

"Oh Wind"
By Brian Cox

Oh wind, blow me up a storm
A storm the likes of which
has never been born
With menace and its power
It'll lay me to the bone
And I will settle down and call this tempest home

A home that will shatter when it's thrown upon the rocks
A home that will tell me what I'm all it's got.
A home that will splinter when it's given to the wind
A home that will lose me, but call me back again.

A hundred times it'll raze,
and still.
I'll love it more
and rebuild from will.
Timber will shiver, and rocks will slide
But home is where the heart is,
so keep it inside.

"This poem is dedicated to the lives and livelihood lost locally and around the world in the face of epic destruction. It's a simple poem with a simple purpose: find solace in love and regrowth. The most valuable things we have are our lives."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Grow, Grow, Grow"
By levueH nednaV noveD

Sprouting from a barren site
Thin, fine, stalks reaching for the sky like needles to the touch
Yes, it's growing fast now
A daily ritual of checking the growth
brings a smile in anticipation
Excitement grows daily
How tall will it get before another round of chemo
causes it to disappear?
Oh, well, for now I have hair!

"This is in honor of all the people that have suffered through cancer. I am in awe of their perseverance, strength, and will to survive. Sometimes it's the little things that give us the greatest pleasure and brings us back to earth."

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

April 19, 2011

"Time Cut Short"
By Lea Anderson

She sits silently alone with her memories,
Her face hot like fire drenched in burning tears,
He would stay in her heart forever,
She just wanted more time,
He said it was her perfect passionate love
that kept him so strong.

Now it was her turn to be strong,
Her mind constantly replayed her memories,
She thought of the day they fell in love,
It was a vision as clear as her transparent tears,
She knew she would be better in time
because her heart would not beat forever,

He promised he would love her forever,
She smiled and said I will stay strong
enough to enjoy the short time
we have left, after awhile her memories
wanted to fade away, but her love
would aways stay, just like her tears

Now for the first time, his eyes filled with tears,
He didn't have the strength to stay forever,
He told her there was not much time,
And like she promised she stayed strong,
That night God took away her only love
and all he left behind were those precious memories.

The memories blurred over time, but the love would stay forever.
Her tears dried and she was strong because, they would meet again in time.

"I wrote this poem when my grandmother lost my grandfather to cancer a few years ago. It's written in the style of a Sestina, which means you choose six words and use one of them to end each sentence in every stanza. The words I chose were tears, forever, time, strong, love, memories."

* * * * * * * * * *

"El baile"
Por Ocie Kilgus

Ella baila sola,
pero no por los pobres desaparecidos
como sale la tristísima canción mercedesosiana.

Su baile nocturno despierta canciones
llenas de deseos atrapados.

Su cuerpo es un instrumento,
tocado por dedos secados,
dando placer a las cuerdas que
buscan y pagan un toque cariñoso.

Y todavía
ella baila
por las ventanas abiertas . . . que dan saludos a plena oscuridad.

Sabe que ves solamente
su cuerpo,
sus curvas sumisas.

Y s
abe también que no hay nada
ni nadie
que realmente la vea
incluso la noche indiferente.

Baila sola.

* * * * *

"The Dance"
By Ocie Kilgus

She dances alone,
but not for the poor missing ones
as the sad Mercedes Sosa song goes.

Her nocturnal dance awakens songs
of desires
trapped.

Her body's an instrument,
played by fingers
withered, 
satisfying chords that
look and pay for a tender touch.

But still
she dances 
by open windows . . . that greet complete darkness.

She knows you see only
her body,
her compliant curves.

She knows, too, there's nothing
nor anyone
who truly sees
including the indifferent night.

She dances alone.

"This poem explores the awareness of one's vulnerability, economic instability, and compromised ideals."

Monday, April 18, 2011

April 18, 2011

"Made"
By Kayla Fetting

If only we were made a little more less
full of vines and hungry occurrences
we would rage against all constitutions
enough to divide what pieces of each were
conquered and unleft
and all that is anchored left again to
the solid wonder
of awakened phosphorous night
that will always show its hidden face
to begin
instead to lead
to hold
this ribbon untied, loosening itself
flowing, unwinding
to breathless cosmos
letting the bound slip away

"I was inspired to write this by some red vines I had seen growing around a wooden fence on a recent walk. They just made me think of connections."

* * * * * * * * * *

Untitled Haiku
By Shane Teter

The ice-edged river
conveys my red canoe. . . .
mist in the morning

"Early spring is my favorite time to canoe the rivers in Northern Wisconsin. I wrote this Haiku to celebrate this underappreciated time of year."

Sunday, April 17, 2011

April 17, 2011

"Death for a Couple of Drinks"
By Kara Burrell

Just a few drinks
Will take my worries away
When night starts to sink
And morning becomes day
My head will pound
My stomach will hurt
I'll awake to see strange faces
I guess I was in the wrong places
Someone had died
I wish it would have been me
He would have been mine
If it wasn't for that damn tree
I saw it come
I saw it go
I heard him yell
I had to let go
His memory's with me
And will always be
It was time for him to go
And now it's for me

"I wrote this poem when I was a junior in high school for a class assignment. I have attempted others, but this one still gets me."

* * * * * * * * * *

"My Rainbow"
By Sheila Whitaker

It is one of those days when I am laying in bed
And memories of him dance through my head
A happy day was the day that we met
The night that he died, I'll never forget
No explanations, no second chances
No making it better, no tender glances
In a blink of my eye, everything changed
The future we planned, now rearranged
I am not the same person as I was that night
And every day without him, is an uphill fight
I still feel him beside me when I'm laying alone
Still wait in the evening for the ring of the phone
I know he's still with me lighting my way
The rainbow I see in a world of gray

"I wrote this shortly after my fiancé died of a brain aneurysm. I turned to writing at this time in my life to help me deal with difficult emotions."

Saturday, April 16, 2011

April 16, 2011

"Shine"
By Stacy Fath

We all have a reason
We all have a purpose
For being in the place we are
We may not understand
But
We need to try to find it
We have to push forward
To be all we can be
We have to do our best
Because that's all
That can be asked
The best way to do this
Is just live
Live every day
To get the full potential
To find understanding
Be all you can be
Do all you can do
Shine like the brightest stars
To find your purpose

"I love writing poetry. It is my dream to be published even if it is just one poem. I have been writing for years. This poem in particular has a lot of meaning for me. I have struggled a lot with finding my purpose in life, and that is how this poem came about. My hope is that others who read this will be encouraged as well."

* * * * * * * * * *

Two Spring Haikus
By Ann Eshelman

"Spring Goose Migration"

Iron filings pulled
Across the dampening grey skies
By the north's magnet

"Vernal Equinox"

Stands of winter pines
Whisper the softest summons
To spring, so sweet spring

"I am an adjunct philosophy instructor at Nicolet College."

Friday, April 15, 2011

April 15, 2011

"Stepping Stones"
By Christian Meier

It has become a regular event,
His annual trek up the bluff.
It looks out over the big lake.
Cook family used to farm up there.
Piles of their efforts remain.
Stone reminders of straining
against the seasons.

He walks there every Autumn.
Wraps Himself in its majestic
multi-colored slide show.
Quaffs deeply its
cool   distilled   air---
a final night cap
prior to Winter's relentless darkness.

He harvests stepping stones here.
Carries them back down the hill.
Sets each back into the warm earth with care,
inscribing a circular pathway around His family,
His home.

"This poem is rooted in the woods, hills, lakes, creatures, and people I experience daily. It reveals the faint outlines of this place I call home."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Lion's Teeth"
By Michele Regenold

Jagged leaves
Like lion's teeth
Lie flat against the ground.

Flowers bloom
Like yellow pins
Stuck deep in cushioned mounds.

Overnight
The sunny parts
Will change to puffy rounds.

Breathe in deep
Then blow out hard
To make the seeds take flight.

Watch them close.
They spread their wings,
And sprout where they alight.

"The word 'dandelion' actually comes from the French which means lion's teeth. This poem for kids was inspired by the prolific dandelions that grew in my yard back in Iowa."

Thursday, April 14, 2011

April 14, 2011

"I am . . ."
By Justine Small

I am caring, sharing and true
I wonder what he thinks of me
I hear laughter from him often
I see toothless grins from him too
I want him to be happy
I am caring, sharing and true

I am caring, sharing and true
I pretend to act goofy
I feel the need to be silly
I touch his heart, I hope
I worry how he feels inside
I cry if I think he hurts
I am caring, sharing and true

I am caring, sharing and true
I understand if something's wrong
I say it'll be ok
I dream of our time together
I try to picture our future
I hope we will always be this close
I am caring, sharing and true

"I am currently a part-time Nicolet student and part-time high school student. I am going to UW Stevens Point next year, and I will be working towards earning my CPA license. I plan on becoming an accountant then later hopefully become a counselor. I wrote these poems for my junior English class, and they all have to do with feelings I had at the time or about a boy I really liked."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Bananagrams and Women"
By Noved Nednav Levueh

The words are there in a pile
Good vocab, bus, coat, coin
No Q's please
Senile mind too slow
Laughing, laughing all around
Daughters, wife, I cannot beat
Damn this game

"This game was mentioned by a cohort's daughter, and it instantly brought to mind my constant battle for that elusive victory. When I play my daughters and wife in this game, they always seem to win with such simple word combinations. I swear I will not play this game with them anymore, but when they bring it up I always cave in, thinking that this is the time I am going to come out a winner. Drat! Foiled again!"

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

April 13, 2011

"A Gardening Poem"
Barbara Gehrke

My back bent so long does ache,
My knees they are permanently brown.
I feel like I have advertised dinner
To every mosquito in town.
I create for the pure joy of creating,
I create to be more than the dust I will someday be,
I create to show beauty to all that choose to remember
That this dirt was once a little bit of me.
My hands are blistered from pulling one too many weeds, and
The baby trees I plant will bear fruit for the future, not me!
So why do I so love this garden
That I will do it all over again next spring?

* * * * * * * * * *

"Regimen"
By Karen Barr, Beth Kost, Dianne Lazear

Night;
Dark pudding.
Daylight;
Tapioca,
Unexpected pearls.

"This was silliness at lunch; we were just having fun with structure, words, and images."

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

April 12, 2011

"Sunset Cruise"
By Mike Paszak

Sun setting,
turbo spinning.
Red light stop,
race the block.
Ocean breeze,
before the midnight freeze.
One last cruise
before winter's bruise.
Time to head home,
watch the gnome.
Gear up for storage,
don't need a mortgage.
Sun setting,
turbo spinning.

"Cars interest me, and I'm familiar with the transition between fall and winter. This sparked my interest to write this poem."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Laundry"
By Ocie Kilgus

Tomorrow you leave for Florida,
and tonight, in Kansas, as you sleep
I'm doing your laundry.
I say it over and over,
letting the thought pile up for the bleak and sunless days ahead.

I'm doing your laundry,
a longing of mine still,
but now one pregnant with loss.
I know the years of doing your laundry are over,
so I'm savoring this night,
watching my hands do what they've always done.

I iron the creases from a pair of pants
that probably were meant to have creases.
I snap them
slowly
and fold one overly starched leg to another,
smoothing them out with sad hands.
I tuck one sock into another,
remembering how you used to tuck one hand into mine.

By midnight I have a mannequin of you here
in front of me, beside me, around me, with me.
I take in this image of you, embodied by all this laundry,
and I hug these clothes as if I were hugging you,
wondering if my hands and eyes and life
will again be this lucky to see this much of you.

I'm not ready to give you up,
so I wonder if you'll miss the shirt
that I've kept behind
to console me when you're gone.

"For Sydney."