I believe in the power of the imagination to remake the world, to release the truth within us, to hold back the night, to transcend death, to charm motorways, to ingratiate ourselves with birds, to enlist the confidences of madmen.
~J.G. Ballard
Welcome! Glad you could make it. The Opposite of Indifference is hosting two collections today— one is a compilation of poems that take place in imaginary places and the other is the Poetry Friday round-up. Please leave your link in the comments!
Has anyone brought any historical poems? My son is taking part in the first annual U.S. History Bee on April 25th. It's the brainchild of David Madden, who was a 19-day champion on Jeopardy. Madden also founded the National History Bee and National History Bowl, which will be taking place this weekend (and my son is doing those as well!). Lots of poetry and history for us today.
A while back, I began writing poems about fictional lands using entries from The Dictionary of Imaginary Places as prompts. I collected those poems, plus ones by other poets in this collection:
THE DIRECTORY OF IMAGINARY POEMS
* Alice at Seventeen: Like a Blind Child by Darcy Cummings
* Alzuna by Alfred Noyes
* An Epilogue to the Above By Duchess of Newcastle Margaret Cavendish
* Atlantis by Tabatha Yeatts
* Atlas by Carol Ann Duffy
* Bibliotherapy
by Linda Baie
* Eldorado By Edgar Allan Poe
* Fairy-Land By Edgar Allan Poe
* Geppetto in the Whale by Tabatha Yeatts
* Inside the Chocolate Factory
by Irene Latham
* Jabberwocky by Lewis Carroll
* Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
* from Laon and Cythna; or The Revolution of the Golden City By Percy Bysshe Shelley
* Máel Dúin, Seafarer of the Atlantic
by Diane Mayr
* Medusa by Louise Bogan
* Morte d'Arthur By Alfred, Lord Tennyson
* On the Island of the Fay by Tabatha Yeatts
* O.O.U. by Tabatha Yeatts
* Peter Rabbit
by Laura Shovan
* Puff the Magic Dragon by Leonard Lipton and Peter Yarrow
* The Agamemnon Rag By Jack Conway
* The Division of Poetic Licensing by Tabatha Yeatts
* The Gardener of Tanje Palace by Tabatha Yeatts
* The Hunting of the Snark by Lewis Carroll
* The Sea of Frozen Words by Tabatha Yeatts
* The Sugar-Plum Tree by Eugene Field
* The Theater for Cloud Repair
by Sandra J. Lindow
* The Valley of Unrest By Edgar Allan Poe
*
The Well o’ the World’s End by Ethna Carbery (Anna MacManus)
* Waiting On Hogwarts
by Tabatha Yeatts
* We Pay Our Fare in Apples Here
by Megan Arkenberg
Some housekeeping notes:
I'll be running a Summer Poem Swap again -- let me know if you want in! Also, I am clearly technologically-challenged, based on what happened when I added a blog roll this week. I went through and got everyone's blog info, which then all got erased. It took me a while to figure out that I was only allowed to save one blog at a time, and by that point, I was pretty tired of doing it over again. If you aren't on the roll but would like to be, email me and I'll add you.
*****************
* At Today's Little Ditty, it's Michelle's turn to host the Progressive Poem.
* Joy shares an original rondelet and a poem for two voices.
* At TeachingAuthors, April is deconstructing her poem HOW TO READ A POEM ALOUD.
* On April's Poetry Month blog, she compares writing a book to taking a challenging walk.
* Laura Shovan is continuing her series on "Source Poems" with her friend Ann Bracken, a Maryland poet. This post is for grown-ups, as it deals with poetry's power to help heal depression.
* Matt is sharing two things: a short interview he posted earlier this week with crime poetry editor/poet Gerald So and a poem that arrived unexpectedly in the mail yesterday!
* At Random Noodling, Diane has a poem about Boston's swan boats.
* Kurious Kitty has a poem by Celia Thaxter.
* KK's Kwote is by Paul L. Thomas.
* Buffy offers two versions of a poem inspired by Laura Salas' 15-word-or-less prompt.
* At Hope is the Word, Amy reviews Tour America by Diane Siebert.
* Violet offers Magnolia haiku, a collection of three haiku.
* Donna is all about the letter V today with a villanelle called "the giVer riVer."
* At TeacherDance, Linda is sharing a children's book of poems and stories from a long while ago, and a spring poem in it from a Norwegian poet new to her.
* Robyn is in with a Happy 450th BDay to the Bard (it was Wed.), and his Sonnet 98.
* At NC Teacher Stuff, Jeff is talking about cinquains.
* Myra brings us Margarita Engle's "The Lightning Dreamer" which is based on the life story narrative of Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, Cuba's Greatest Abolitionist.
* Julieanne reminds me of the Poetry Monster as she shares an adorable poem "of apology" for her first Poetry Friday post.
* Greg has poems by Julie Larios and George Ella Lyon. This week, he's also shared poetry by J. Patrick Lewis, Georgia Heard, Nikki Giovanni, Charles R. Smith, Jr., Janet Wong, Heidi Mordhorst, an original, Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, Jane Yolen, Brod Bagert, Arnold Adoff, and David L. Harrison!
* Four of B.J. Lee's poems are being featured by artist Jaeda Renae.
* Mary Lee is visiting Victoria Falls for her Our Wonderful World National Poetry Month project.
* At The Poem Farm, Amy has Poem #25 in the Thrift Store series: "Duck and Doll" - a free verse poem about friendship.
* Renee is sharing her post on Sylvia Plath's "Daddy," which is part of Laura Shovan's source poem series.
* Tara offers The Evening is Tranquil, and Dawn is a Thousand Miles Away by Charles Wright.
* Irene reviews a new book of poems titled A POND FULL OF INK, which totally reminds her of Shel Silverstein. :)
* Heidi's National Poetry Month journey takes her close to home today, with poems by her kindergarteners!
* Anastasia brings us a STEM haiku.
* Liz is still working on her poem a day project for April. This week she's posted poems about the mailbox, the sidewalk, the earth, and one reason the outside world is a refuge for me.
* JoAnn has an original shape poem and tips for creating shape poems, and she is also giving away a copy of Write a Poem Step by Step.
* At POETRY TIME, Charles posts about a classroom visit he did and shares other nuggets of goodness.
* Ruth at There's No Such Thing as a God-forsaken Town gives us a review of Irene Latham's book, plus a poem her daughter wrote about her a few years ago.
* Laura Purdie Salas shares a riddle-ku, which she's wriiting daily for Poetry Month.
* Becky is celebrating Jack Prelutsky.
* Margaret is in with a pantoum that took her in an unexpected direction.
* At Bildungsroman, we have PIGEON by Carl Sandburg.
* Birthday girl Karen Edmisten brings us Teaching Mavis to Ride a Bike by Faith Shearin.
* Janet Squires has Joyce Sidman's Meow Ruff at All About the Books.
* Tricia has what I didn't know I was missing: Lines Written for Gene Kelly to Dance To by Carl Sandburg.
* TeacherPoet Jen Ward brings us an original poem called Fallen.
* At Wild Rose Reader, Elaine shares an original poem about the Megalodon which she wrote as a definition of the prehistoric shark.
* MsMac has some haiku poems from second grade.
* From Deo Writer, NaPoWriMo Day 26: Making Up for Lost Time.
You are the Queen of Collections, Tabatha. I will be pouring over both of these, but especially taking my time with the imaginary poems to relish each one. (Delighted to see so many of your own poems featured on the list!) Thank you for being today's Poetry Friday roundup goddess as well.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry to hear about the blog roll fiasco-- what a nuisance. But thanks for including me. :) I WILL get around to doing this myself one of these days!
At Today's Little Ditty, it's my turn to host the Progressive Poem. The post will be live at 12:30 a.m. http://michellehbarnes.blogspot.com/
Thanks for hosting us today, Tabatha.
ReplyDeleteI have an original rondelet posted for the Friday Poetry Round Up this week. It goes live at midnight MST. On Thursday, I had a poem for two voices for Poem In Your Pocket Day. Both of these posts can be found at www.poetryforkidsjoy.blogspot.com
Tabatha! Thanks so much for hosting...just HOSTING makes me tired...so I can't even IMAGINE the tiredness that set in when all those blog links disappeared
ReplyDelete...argh!
And thanks for sharing your collection of imaginary place poems, filled with so many of my Poetry Friday friends' poems!
At TeachingAuthors I'm in today deconstructing my poem HOW TO READ A POEM ALOUD (which goes live early Friday morn...):
http://www.teachingauthors.com/2014/04/deconstructing-poemand-happy-last.html
AND...at my Poetry Month blog on my own website where I've been having a metaphoraffair all month long. Friday's entry compares writing a book to a challenging walk...
http://www.aprilwayland.com/2014/04/walking-to-the-ocean-metaphor/
...which also goes live early Friday morn...
Hi, Tabatha. Jabberwocky is an all-time favorite at our household.
ReplyDeleteI'm continuing my series on "Source Poems" with my friend Ann Bracken, a Maryland poet. This post is for grown-ups, as it deals with poetry's power to help heal depression. http://authoramok.blogspot.com/2014/04/source-poems-well-of-grief.html
Thanks for hosting today, Tabatha! Your list reminds me of a poem I wrote about all sorts of faraway lands, called 'The Search': http://mattforrest.wordpress.com/2013/03/08/poetry-friday-the-search/
ReplyDeleteAnyway, today I'm sharing two things: a short interview I posted earlier this week with crime poetry editor/poet Gerald So (http://mattforrest.wordpress.com/2014/04/23/national-poetry-month-catching-up-with-crime-poetry-editor-gerald-so/) and today's Poetry Friday is a first for me - I'm posting a poem I did not write! It arrived unexpectedly in the mail yesterday (http://mattforrest.wordpress.com/2014/04/25/poetry-friday-the-poetry-of-vladimir-k/) and I had to share it!
Tabatha, this has been a great month visiting imaginary places!
ReplyDeleteHere are my offerings for P.F.:
At Random Noodling I have a poem about Boston's swan boats. http://randomnoodling.blogspot.com/2014/04/poetry-friday-sign-of-spring.html
Kurious Kitty has a poem by Celia Thaxter. http://kuriouskitty.blogspot.com/2014/04/poetry-friday-celia-thaxter.html
KK's Kwote is by Paul L. Thomas. http://kkskwotes.blogspot.com/2014/04/poetry-friday_24.html
Tabatha, as always, there's an embarrassment of riches here at your hangout. Thanks so much for hosting us today!
ReplyDeleteMy offering today is a collection of three haiku I titled "Magnolia haiku." It's here: http://vnesdolypoems.wordpress.com/2014/04/24/magnolia-haiku/
Thanks for hosting, Tabatha. I can see that I will be spending some time visiting imaginary places in the morning!
ReplyDeleteI've got two version of a poem inspired by Laura Salas' 15-word-or-less prompt:
http://buffysilverman.com/blog/?p=487
(and I'd love to participate in the summer poem swap. Thanks for organizing it again.)
ReplyDeleteGood luck to your son!
ReplyDeleteMy Poetry Friday entry:
http://www.hopeisthewordblog.com/2014/04/24/tour-america-a-journey-through-poems-and-art-by-diane-siebert/
Thanks for hosting today, Tabatha! I am interested in joining the summer poem swap. Not sure how it goes, but I'm willing to give it a whirl.
ReplyDeleteToday for Poetry Friday I have a Villanelle called "the giVer riVer". Yes, those caps are in the right place - it is all about the letter V today!
Donna Smith
http://mainelywrite.blogspot.com/2014/04/ayuh-to-z-challenge-v.html
Hi Tabatha, your collection looks marvelous! Best wishes to your son in the history bee. My poem is not historical, but the book it came from is. I am sharing a children's book of poems and stories from a long while ago, and a spring poem in it from a Norwegian poet new to me. Thanks for hosting! http://www.teacherdance.org/2014/04/poetry-treasure-for-poetry-friday.html
ReplyDeleteAs Violet noted, "an embarrassment of riches!" Thank you for everything you do. And I'd love to swap this summer!
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting today as well - I'm in with a Happy 450th BDay to the Bard (it was Wed.), and his Sonnet 98.
http://www.robynhoodblack.com/blog.htm?post=955113
Thank you for hosting and good luck to your son today. I'll be sharing Waiting for Hogwarts with my Potter-mad daughters. At NC Teacher Stuff, I am talking about cinquains: http://ncteacherstuff.blogspot.com/2014/04/cinquains.html?m=1
ReplyDeleteTabatha! Thank you so much for being our gracious host this week. Your directory of imaginary poems is such a buffet of magical words that feed the soul.
ReplyDeleteI have the silenced voice of Tula or La Peregrina (The Wanderer) for Poetry Friday at GatheringBooks today as I share Margarita Engle's "The Lightning Dreamer" which is based on the life story narrative of Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, Cuba's Greatest Abolitionist.
Here is the link:
http://gatheringbooks.wordpress.com/2014/04/25/poetry-friday-the-silenced-voice-of-tula-in-margarita-engles-lightning-dreamer/
Excited to post my first Poetry Friday post. So intrigued to visit imaginary places! (wish I found this sooner). Thank you for hosting!
ReplyDeletehttp://jarhartz.wordpress.com/2014/04/25/poetry-friday-this-is-just-to-say/
I'm up today with poems by Julie Larios and George Ella Lyon.
ReplyDeleteThis week I've also shared poetry by J. Patrick Lewis, Georgia Heard, Nikki Giovanni, Charles R. Smith, Jr., Janet Wong, Heidi Mordhorst, me, Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, Jane Yolen, Brod Bagert, Arnold Adoff, and David L. Harrison! I hope folks will check 'em all out....
Thanks for hosting!
Hi Tabatha! Loved your list of imaginary poems! I'm in today with a Feature of four of my poems by artist, Jaeda Renae http://bluewindow.weebly.com/1/post/2014/04/poetry-friday-jaeda-renae-features-my-poems.html thank you,
ReplyDelete~BJ
My National Poetry Month project (Our Wonderful World) is kind of the opposite of your Dictionary of Imaginary Places! Today we visit Victoria Falls:
ReplyDeletehttp://readingyear.blogspot.com/2014/04/our-wonderful-world25.html
Please include me in the summer poem swap!
Thank you, Tabatha, for hosting with all things imaginary and all Poetry Friday things real! Much fun to your son this weekend.
ReplyDeleteAt The Poem Farm, I have Poem #25 in the Thrift Store series, "Duck and Doll" - a free verse poem about friendship.
http://www.poemfarm.amylv.com/2014/04/duck-and-doll-poem-25-for-april-2014.html
I love the imaginary place poems! I clicked through a few and saved the list for later - fabulous!
ReplyDeleteToday I'm sharing my post on Sylvia Plath's "Daddy," which is part of Laura Shovan's source poem series. http://authoramok.blogspot.com/2014/04/source-poems_24.html
Thank you for hosting!
Poetry and history - I have to check this out! Here's my Poetry Friday offering:
ReplyDeletehttp://ateachinglifedotcom.wordpress.com/2014/04/25/poetry-friday-charles-wright-the-evening-is-tranquil-and-dawn-is-a-thousand-miles-away/
Oh, feeling your pain on the lost blog roll! Grrr. And this is such a marvelous list of imaginary poems. Thank you thank you! Happy poetry Friday to you... I'm in with a review of a new book of poems A POND FULL OF INK that totally reminds me of Shel Silverstein. :)
ReplyDeletehttp://www.irenelatham.blogspot.com/2014/04/a-pond-full-of-ink-by-annie-mg-schmidt.html
My NPM journey takes me close to home today, with poems by my kindergarteners!
ReplyDeletehttp://myjuicylittleuniverse.blogspot.com/2014/04/npm-travel-journal-25-kensington-md.html
I look forward to working my way through both your collections, Tabatha--thanks for hosting. I'm considering the Summer Poem Swap...I'm not working or taking any courses or traveling this summer, but hope to spend it WRITING. : )
Thanks for hosting, Tabatha!
ReplyDeletePlease keep me in mind for the Poetry Swap this summer. In the meantime, I have a STEM haiku for today: http://anastasiasuenpoetpoet.wordpress.com/2014/04/17/byte-sized-mail/
Tabatha--Thank you for hosting and for inspiring so much poetry. I'm still working on my poem a day project for April. This week I've posted poems about the mailbox, the sidewalk, the earth, and one reason the outside world is a refuge for me. Here's the link to yesterday's poem. I haven't written today's poem yet!
ReplyDeletehttp://elizabethsteinglass.com/2014/04/the-mailbox/
Thank you for the list--I'm looking forward to reading the poems!
ReplyDeleteI've posted an original shape poem and tips for creating them at http://www.joannmacken.com/blog.htm?post=955103 I'm also giving away a copy of Write a Poem Step by Step.
Good morning. Thanks for hosting! I have a blog post about a classroom visit I did and other nuggets of goodness at my blog which is called POETRY TIME.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.charleswaterspoetry.com/#!POETRY-TIME-BLOG-11/c23vc/389630FE-3888-4036-9F06-86E7A11E7C60
Thanks so much for hosting! You always do such a great job! I finally reviewed Irene Latham's book today, plus I have a poem my daughter wrote about me a few years ago. Happy Poetry Friday!
ReplyDeleteOops, forgot the link...http://thereisnosuchthingasagodforsakentown.blogspot.com/2014/04/poetry-friday-sky-between-us-plus.html
ReplyDeleteGood luck to your son! No historical poem from me, though. I'm in with my riddle-ku, which I'm doing daily for Poetry Month: http://www.laurasalas.com/blog/for-teachers/rk-big-drum/
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting!
Laura
I LOVE your collection of Imaginary Poems, Tabatha! I am going to have to spend some time here today. = ) My Poetry Friday post today celebrates the incredible Jack Prelutsky!
ReplyDeletewww.beckyshillington.blogspot.com
Such a wonderland of writing that I can read this Friday morning. I am on spring break which has put me in a more relaxed state. I am in, though, with a pantoum that took me in an unexpected direction. http://reflectionsontheteche.wordpress.com/2014/04/25/a-gift-and-a-pantoum/
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting! I posted PIGEON by Carl Sandburg at my blog, Bildungsroman: http://slayground.livejournal.com/778806.html
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love The Dictionary of Imaginary Places. And what fun that history bee must be!
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting, Tabatha, and I'm in this week with Faith Shearin. It's here.
Thanks for hosting.
ReplyDeleteMy selections is a story in concrete poetry: "Meow Ruff" by Joyce Sidman with illustrations by Michelle Berg.
Hi Tabatha,,
ReplyDeleteI'm in today with a poem about Gene Kelly.
http://missrumphiuseffect.blogspot.com/2014/04/poetry-friday-lines-written-for-gene.html
Thanks for hosting!
Best,
Tricia
Wow! What a fantastic collection of poetry and resources. I'll be back
ReplyDeleteagain and again.
And here's my first Poetry Friday contribution, too. I recently learned about this weekly collection from the Two Writing Teachers blog. Thanks so much for hosting!
Jen
Tabatha,
ReplyDeleteThanks for doing the roundup this week. Sorry to be so late submitting my poem. I've been babysitting my granddaughter while my daughter and son-in-law were away on vacation. I'm one tired grandma!
At Wild Rose Reader, I have an original poem about the Megalodon--which I wrote as a definition of the prehistoric shark.
http://wildrosereader.blogspot.com/2014/04/a-poem-about-megalodon.html
How are the History Bees going, Tabatha?
ReplyDeleteI've been and read a half-dozen of your own DIP poems--my favorites are the Hogwarts and the Gardener of Tanje ones, for very different reasons. I would love to see a published collection of these!
Did you organize something poetic at RM? Let me know if I can help next year...
Horribly late but I got it done: http://deowriter.wordpress.com/2014/04/26/napowrimo-day-26-making-up-for-lost-time/
ReplyDeleteHorribly late but I got it done: http://deowriter.wordpress.com/2014/04/26/napowrimo-day-26-making-up-for-lost-time/
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting. I don't expect these to be added as I am so late. Here are some haiku poems from second grade: http://maclibrary.wordpress.com/2014/04/26/thirty-days-of-student-poetry-22/
ReplyDeleteThanks for adding, Tabatha. Appreciated..
ReplyDeleteGood to see Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark in your list. And introducing poetry to children is good as well. How about using Henry Holiday's illustrations to learn seeing?
ReplyDelete"We have neglected the gift of comprehending things through our senses. concept is divorced from percept, and thought moves among abstractions. Our eyes have been reduced to instruments with which to identify and to measure; hence we suffer a paucity of ideas that can be expressed in images and in an incapacity to discover meaning in what we see. Naturally we feel lost in the presence of objects that make sense only to undeluted vision, and we seek refuge in the more familiar medium of words. [...] the inborn capacity to understand through the eyes has been put to sleep and must be reawakened."
(Rudolf Arnheim: Art and visual Perception, 1974, p. 1)