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IBPC Winning Poems, 2011, Congratulations Poets! |
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Aug 28 11, 10:44
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Mosaic Master
Group: Administrator
Posts: 18,892
Joined: 1-August 03
From: Massachusetts
Member No.: 2
Real Name: Lori Kanter
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
Referred By:Imhotep
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First Place Infield Chatter by Michael Harty Wild Poetry ForumYou don’t hear the old chatter these days, the third baseman’s chipping staccato to your right, the random hoot from first, behind you a warbled stream, a doubleplay duet like meadowlarks celebrating summer: that chorus of monologues, chanted mantras of got-your-back, comebabe humbabe shoot that pill, rock and fire, you’re the one, but you’re not the one any more and the game has changed.
It’s a poor imitation, just the very young in their home and away jerseys and all they know is batter the batter with empty crescendo, like practice for the talk shows. In the end your best stuff is thrown into shadowed silence, the seats half empty, the sun sunk below the grandstand roof, the birds gone mute, even the children grown old.It is not easy to make fresh a poem about time passing that uses a sports metaphor at its core, but this is a beautifully managed poem. The final image of the sun falling behind the grandstand roof is so evocative and so perfectly moderated for this poem: “the bids gone mute,/ even the children grown old”. The second stanza is the heavy counterpoint to the playful game with words, sounds, and the perfectly captured richness of baseball chatter which is hopeful until those final three lines of the stanza: “…you’re the one,/ but you’re not the one any more/ and the game has changed.” It would be easy for this poem to sound like the ranting of an old curmudgeon complaining about how things have changed, but there is a delicacy here, a self-reflective sadness that undermines any hint of arrogance; and in the end the poem is not about baseball because it is really never about baseball, is it: “...In the end your best stuff/ is thrown into shadowed silence,/ the seats half empty,…”For its pitch perfection, its tidily shaped classic structure, and for its understated honesty, I really like this poem. --Kwame DawesSecond Place Death Artist by Billy Howell-Sinnard The Writer's BlockSix foot five Kiowa with one leg, Sada stretched across a booth in the cowboy and oil worker’s bar like he’d conquered a country.
He sketched with carpenter’s pencil in a Big Chief notebook. Nobody bothered him, except to buy him a drink from a distance as if to settle a debt.
He lost his leg in Nam, wore a long green Army coat, medal pinned to the lapel, tall black cowboy hat, eagle feather stuck in the beaded band.
He painted murals of ghost dancers and totems in acrylics–faster drying than oils, not as fast, not as permanent as bullets. Brush had replaced gun– medicine against wolf prowling inside him.The poem is a character sketch. The efficiency here must not be overlooked. In four stanzas the poet offers us a way to see a man who is of course fascinating even if a bit of a cliché. But he is what he is and sometimes people are clichés. What the poet is able to do is find some very fetching images to turn this cliché into a poignant poem. First there is the simile of the man stretched across a booth “like he’d conquered a country”—fitting for a soldier returned from a war where that is exactly what did not happen. In the second stanza we find another simile of people buying him a drink from a distance, “as if to settle a debt”. Again, the lines are densely packed with ironies and yet accurate to the moment. Finally, the image that ends the poem: “medicine against wolf/ prowling inside him” brings us to elegant and haunting closure. These are carefully constructed images and they work well. The character sketch is superficial. We don’t know the man any better, but what we do have is a powerful portrait from the outside barely looking in. --Kwame Dawes Third Place The Borrow Pit by Allen M. Weber Muse MotelWhen Earle would say, Need you, Little Bro, I’d always come running—that’s the way it was. On a visit home from the Navy, he tells a tale of swimming from torpedo tubes, how his men take fear to folks you’d never read about in the Daily Gazette.
Growing up, Earle could tread water forever—had to be tough in the pit by the blueberry fields: the water gets dark, real fast; the steep mud bottom holds your feet, so there’s no way to rest. A neighbor boy drowned there—cramped up, maybe, slipping
right under, without calling to his friends. We weren’t allowed, but some nights we’d sneak down, with a six-pack, to skinny-dip till the farmer’s hounds got to howling and we’d know that soon the screen door would bang shut, and we’d see his flatbed Ford
as bouncing balls of light, clattering down the dusty path. Tonight a black Buick glides in—One Nation Under a Groove and something like joy pulsing from the open windows—some city boys muling uncut coke from Chicago. I take one look at Earle—those blue lips,
how they stretch across his berry-stained teeth, and even before he lifts the grocery bag of money and glinting metal from the trunk, I understand: not everybody’s leaving this field tonight. Then Earle tosses a shotgun and laughs, Hey Brother, still like to climb trees?
The lonely maple quivers and startles my skin with an earlier rain. Hugging a lower branch, oiled steel ices my cheek. Between leaves I make out that Earle’s showing off—got all three flocked together, bowed down and kneeling, facing the edge of his still moon water.Were this poem to lose the heavy “prose-markers” festooned first stanza, we would be looking at an elegant narrative poem of such delicately observed emotion and such carefully shaped detail. The line, “not everybody’s leaving this field tonight” is a powerful turn of the poem that studies the understated casual violence of the scene. The poet has an important gift, the ability to discern what is important and interesting in a moment. In the narrative poem, this gift is critical—it makes all the difference in the world because it is, ultimately, the thing that allows us to see the poem in the moment. This is well demonstrated in this poem. --Kwame DawesHonorable Mentions
Pack Ice by Bernard Henrie The WatersI will go to the pack ice and when others return I will stay behind.
I carry my long knife, tar black strips of fluke meat and boots sewn by my wife.
But I have no hunger, no thirst for the vial of vinegar. I go pure like the great sea before the whale boats enter.
In the all day sun I dry my straight hair and briefly expose my chest. I call like a white bear as my father once called.
My eyes are grown small as the eyes of fish, but I see my wife gone over the floes, not looking back.
My brave dogs strong as bone hooks. They pull into white ice.
The great walrus I hunted and lost in the snow, death heavy snow with no water hiding falls in broken places.
I will see you again. I will wait for the great aurora to swim in the sky as sea animals tossed in waves the color of kerosene and gasoline spilled on the ice.Even though I can’t be sure of the accuracy of the arctic details in the poem, what carries powerfully and beautifully is the sense of aloneness, the resignation to the kind of pure emptiness of being alone—a purity akin to the combined desolation and possibility of “the great sea”. The final image, of course, is jarring for the basic way in which what reads like a poem about the natural world (timeless), becomes defined by time, by the contemporary world of “kerosene and gasoline/ spilled on the ice”. Any poem that manages to offer us, “My brave dogs strong/ as bone hooks” is coming from a promising poet. There is something here, despite the occasional imprecision in the poem. --Kwame DawesThe Forgetting Water by Brenda Levy-Tate PenShellsLet fancy still my sense in Lethe steep – Twelfth Night
A woman must have created such a river - one chance at erasing all her memories, even the better ones. Heaven, it appears, is set apart for patriarchs and handsome boys who please God more willingly.
I shake on the bridge’s edge, listen down at the current as it sucks, mutters, sucks, mutters. Sullen infant - barely contained by its dam – froth rising through a mouth prepared at any moment to break open.
Green steel rocks me, lulls me, salts nuggets of rust in my eye-corners. I catch myself just in time. But this is my temptation: to balance here like Athena’s bright owl on a twisted limb. I scan the night for blood.
Overstep, swoop into this field of foam - my own predator, my own lost prize.There is a wonderful evocation of sound and movement in the line: “at the current as it sucks, mutters, sucks,/ mutters” that describes the body of water flowing under the bridge. At the surface, the poem seems to be flirting with the idea of suicide, but the epigraph reminds us that the inclination towards self-destruction is often prompted by a resignation to the fact that one no longer wants to contend with the tyranny of memory, the haunting of those things we would rather forget. So the poem. In this sense, the poem takes some interesting risks. Its problems are not insignificant, though—the reliance on the Greek mythology for a certain cleverness is cliché and unnecessary—no real effort is made to engage that allusion. Also, opportunities are lost because of the distraction of the “owl” image which turns the core metaphor of the poem towards that of an owl in hunting. An unfortunate shift, but one that does not completely obscure the deft craft at work here. --Kwame Dawes
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"It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step into the Road, and if you don't keep your feet, there is no knowing where you might be swept off to." ~ J.R.R Tolkien, The Lord of the RingsCollaboration feeds innovation. In the spirit of workshopping, please revisit those threads you've critiqued to see if the author has incorporated your ideas, or requests further feedback from you. In addition, reciprocate with those who've responded to you in kind. "I believe it is the act of remembrance, long after our bones have turned to dust, to be the true essence of an afterlife." ~ Lorraine M. KanterNominate a poem for the InterBoard Poetry Competition by taking into careful consideration those poems you feel would best represent Mosaic Musings. For details, click into the IBPC nomination forum. Did that poem just captivate you? Nominate it for the Faery award today! If perfection of form allured your muse, propose the Crown Jewels award. For more information, click here! "Worry looks around, Sorry looks back, Faith looks up." ~ Early detection can save your life.MM Award Winner
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Posts in this topic
Cleo_Serapis IBPC Winning Poems, 2011 Aug 28 11, 10:44 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for February, 2011
Judge Kwame Dawes... Aug 28 11, 10:57 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for March, 2011
Judge Kwame Dawes
Co... Aug 28 11, 11:07 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for April, 2011
Judge Judith Fitzger... Aug 28 11, 11:16 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for May, 2011
Judge Judith Fitzgeral... Aug 28 11, 11:29 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for June, 2011
Judge Judith Fitzgera... Aug 28 11, 11:55 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for July, 2011
Judge Tyehimba Jess
C... Sep 27 11, 11:32 Cleo_Serapis Winning Poems for August, 2011
Judge Tyehimba Jess... Sep 27 11, 11:47
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