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Posts Tagged ‘raccontino’

Poetry Friday is hosted today by Jama at Jama’s Alphabet Soup.

I have been comforted by all of the sympathy notes and messages from this Poetry Friday community over the death of my mother this summer. I appreciate more than ever how this community supports and cares for each other.

In the summer poem swap, organized by Tabatha Yeatts, Denise Krebs sent me two poems, a raccontino and an acrostic of my one little word, Still. She also sent a beautiful crocheted twirly that I’ve hung in my kitchen window.

Still acrostic by Denise Krebs
By Denise Krebs
Crochet Twirly from Denise Krebs

My response to Denise:

When a poem comes
wrapped in swirls of gold
and tied with a ribbon,
I open,
find,
feel myself
touching soft grass
with my toes
finding cool comfort
there.

Thanks, Denise, for your comforting words and gift of swirly gold.

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Poetry Friday is gathered today by Tanita at {fiction, instead of lies}

This month’s Poetry Sisters challenge was to write a poem form called a raccontino, a poem of any number of couplets in which the odd-numbered lines (along with the title) tell a story. Even-numbered lines rhyme. This was a totally new form to me, so I looked for inspiration in an obituary, of all things. I liked how the woman was described as leaving a legacy of kindness. Who among us would not want to leave that kind of legacy?

She Leaves
laughter and abiding love, a
generous spirit echoing silly songs.

Her family holds her legacy.
When every heart longs

to be of some use, of
a place she belongs,

there is only kindness
that lasts, healing all wrongs.

Margaret Simon, draft


Photo by Javon Swaby on Pexels.com

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