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"Engaging Growth"


Prologue
Prologue To Growth

By ~Dovey


Psst... I want to share secrets,
read and review works of art,
offer reflective vignettes,
list achievements part by part,
observe the good and the bad,
give guidance to wayward words,
use my paint brush and notepad -
evoke the singing of birds.

Tell tales in poetic form,
oscillate the phrasing norm...

Give God honor for His grace,
relish life at Turtle's pace.
Own my place in creation,
writing of Nanook Nation.
This April I'll measure time
happily immersed in rhyme.

4-2-24










 
 
 
 








 

Author Notes Illustration courtesy of Pixabay


Chapter 1
greatest gifts given (a haiku)

By ~Dovey

 
greatest gifts given
gleeful, giggly grandchildren  -
glimpsing God's glory
 
 

Author Notes Picture of my family on Easter, 3-31-24.

AN ALPHABET HAIKU is modern haiku form created by Beatrice Evans
- It requires strict 5/7/5 syllable construction.
- It is formulistic, with all words beginning with the same letter.
- There is no requirement for "aha moment" and punctuation and metaphor and photos are permitted.


Chapter 2
Our Turtle

By ~Dovey

 
Five weeks in to a glorious journey. Two pounds added despite sleeping 
at the breast and struggling to suckle. Sleepless nights and dozens of diapers 
are quickly forgotten when she coos and smiles.
 
Our Turtle
took five days to arrive,
clearing Life's first hurdle,
so glad that you're alive -
Mama's milk won't curdle.
 
bottles are your prize 
they magically appear 
just open up your eyes
 
4-3-24 

Author Notes Picture of Evelyn Grace, born 2-27-24. We call her Turtle since it was 5 days from Nichole being induced to her birth. Slow and steady wins the race.

I melded a Haibun, which is a prose poem followed by a haiku with a Bob and Wheel, which is often a part of a longer poem. A Bob and Wheel is a quintain with ababa rhyme scheme. The first line is 2 to 3 syllables and lines 2-5 each have 6 syllables.

She is growing!

Kim


Chapter 3
Bestowing Dignity

By ~Dovey


Growing
spiritually,
devoting abundance,
to augment our community.
Glowing...
Sowing
seeds of light so intricately,
dispel darkness, enhance
maturity.
Growing

4-4-24

Author Notes Picture courtesy of Pixabay


A Mirror Cinquain, then, is a 10-line poem (decastich) made up of two Cinquains, where the second is reversed, forming a mirror image of the first.
So in summary, the Mirror Cinquain is
A decastitch (10-line stanza) with an emphasis on the syllabic count of each line.
Syllabic count: 2-4-6-8-2-2-8-6-4-2
It should express a complete thought, on any theme, and express any mood.
Rhyme is optional.


Chapter 4
Please Send Us Flowers

By ~Dovey

 

We're growing weary of winter,
as Alaskans often admit,
the icicles drip and splinter,
snow is still falling, to wit:
we wish and dream of a true Spring,
and April proves herself a tease!
Longing for a changing season,
when all we get is thaw and freeze!
It's called break-up for a reason -
we'd rather not be shovelling!

4-5-24

Author Notes Fairbanks, AK April 2024 Photo of my husband getting ready to leave for work. Poem inspired by the guys at work shovelling when I arrived yesterday. We have had fresh snow each day this week.

a decima Italiana with ten 8-syllable lines that rhyme ababcdedec


Chapter 5
Tips From An Alaskan

By ~Dovey


When growing patience discommodes
just let Impatients pass,
don't yield your mood to icy roads
or Snow Butts when they hit the gas.
With patience, wisdom grows,
and learning comes in episodes.

In April when it sleets and snows,
as transparent as glass,
speed is one of the biggest NOs,
this is a fact that never ends.
And, each Alaskan knows
the mantra, "Brakes are not your friends."

Just let Impatients pass.
With patience wisdom grows,
as transparent as glass.
And, each Alaskan knows,
you'd best invest in winter tires,
generators, and woodstove fires.

4-5-24

Author Notes Picture taken on the drive to work, 4-5-24.

the dandizette form was created by "discoveria" of Allpoetry.com
it has 3 sestets and is partially inspired by the villanelle and features a tricky repetition of four refrain lines in the final stanza.

**the meter is optional, but the syllable counts are as follows:
- for the first two stanzas: 8/6/8/8/6/8
- for the last stanza: 6/6/6/6/8/8

**The rhyme scheme is:
stanza 1 -- a-B1-a-b-C1-b
stanza 2 -- c-B2-c-d-C2-d
stanza 3 -- B1-C1-B2-C2-e-e

**The final stanza is composed of lines 2, 5, 8, 11 from the previous two stanzas plus a concluding rhyming couplet


Chapter 6
New Beginnings

By ~Dovey

 
To help growth happen 
add a seed,
sunshine, and water.

Author Notes Picture courtesy of Pixabay

Lune format 5-3-5


Chapter 7
Wish You Were Here

By ~Dovey


Dear Dad, I would travel
though sad and unraveled,
through all of time and space -
to hear you, see your face.

If Heaven is the place
you met Evelyn Grace
and thus delayed her birth
before she came to Earth,
the thought sure makes us smile;
you held her for awhile.

As she grows up so well,
she will know, as we'll tell
of great-grandpa so dear.
We wish you were still here.

4-7-24

Author Notes A picture of my Dad, who passed two years ago, and Evelyn Grace, who was born in February.

NaPoWriMo Prompt
Write a poem titled 'Wish You Were Here,' as if sending a postcard. I chose the essence poem format for inspiration and incorporated internal and external rhymes in six syllable lines.


Chapter 8
Count Me In!

By ~Dovey

Once upon a time,
two words tried to rhyme.
Three more came before
four took to the floor.
Five minutes in and
six syllables stand
seven feet apart.
Eight made the best start.
Nine were divine, then,
ten started again.

Increase what you know,
continue to grow.
Just wait there, now look -
the words formed a book!

4-6-24

Author Notes Picture courtesy of Pixabay


Chapter 9
Ode to the Baby Bottle

By ~Dovey

Her blue eyes delight
and shrill cries subside
at very first sight.
Our sweet newborn pride
with skin soft as silk,
demands you provide
her coveted milk.
You are bona fide
her favorite thing,
rivalling car rides,
and stuffies that sing.
Suffice it to say
that bottles are best
to soothe beasty babes
and give parents rest.

4-9-24

Author Notes Evelyn Grace content with her bottle.

NaPoWriMo prompt to write an ode to an object.


Chapter 10
Walking Creamer's Field

By ~Dovey

With birds, hope springs eternal,
as April brings longer days.
Walk a mile with me today;
snow and puddles, splattering,

heard a squirrel chattering,
saw snow buntings fluttering,
in flight, four swans mustering,
Canada geese clustering,

pussy willows rustling,
and an eagle circling prey.
As April brings longer days,
with birds, hope springs eternal.

4/10/24

Author Notes Pictures from my walk today. My growing hope for Spring.

ECLIPSE POEM - This is a form I created which focuses on imagery and motion. It is one image crossing over another image. Cross rhyme, onomatopoeia, and double entendre are additional elements that are encouraged.

There are three quatrains and the lines are seven syllables each. The rhyme pattern is: ABbc cccc cbBA (The capital letters are refrain lines.)

I hope you enjoy this style.

Kim


Chapter 11
tanka (at mountain pond's edge)

By ~Dovey



At mountain pond's edge,
ensconced by fireweed and trees,
sunbeams faerie dance
with brushstrokes, tentatively
building my someday cabin.

4-11-24





Author Notes Paint night with my bestie, Tami! Our painting skills are growing! #AlaskaArt&Soul

Tanka 5-7-5-7-7


Chapter 12
Twelfth Day of Snow in April

By ~Dovey

The Twelfth Day of Snow in April

It's swirling white, although daylight, still gray.
When Winter's long fingers reach to May,
we cling to hope for a new day,
where sunshine and flowers slay
all frigid fears, allayed
for another year
'til seasons swing.
Stop snowing!
We want
SPRING!

4-12-24



Author Notes A picture taken Friday at work. Our eyes are better at capturing the swirling snow than the camera lens.

An Etheree has 10 lines and drops a syllable per line, from ten to one. Created by Etheree Armstrong Taylor.


Chapter 13
ABC's of Adulting

By ~Dovey

I'm ambidextrous, a handy thing,
juggling many roles from day to day.
Knowing which pathway is next and kneeling,
led by the Lord when I have lost my way.
While navigating life, always learning.

4-13-24














Author Notes Picture courtesy of Pixabay


Chapter 14
Growing in April

By ~Dovey

Growing longer days until Midnight Sun.
Growing ambivalent to Winter's guise.
Growing Winter weary til Spring has sprung.
Growing calmer beneath Aurora skies.
Growing our patience as the baby cries.
Growing stronger in our family bond.
Growing dreams of a cabin by a pond.
Growing faith in the Lord of Pentecost.
Growing restless feet, like a vagabond.
Growing a garden once we're free of frost.

4-14-24

Author Notes Picture of the Aurora courtesy of Pixabay. We are still seeing these this month.

Here are the basic rules of the dizain:

One 10-line stanza

10 syllables per line

Employs the following rhyme scheme: ababbccdcd

The NaPoWriMo challenge was to write a minimum of a 10 line poem and each line was to begin with the same word. I chose the Dizain.

Kim


Chapter 15
The Raven, A Trickster

By ~Dovey

The Raven was once all feathered in white.
He sought to illuminate the whole world.
Earth then endured a perpetual night.

Right or wrong, the Raven's plan was unfurled.
A rich man had boxed the sun, stars, and moon.
Vowing change for the whole Tlingit nation,
evolved a plan for the rich man to swoon,
now a speck of dust, began creation.

As legends tell, the daughter of the man

took a drink and swallowed the new formed speck.
Raven then, was born as child to her clan.
Indulgence of him would the rich man wreck.
Clandestine Raven, now a favored child,
kept tossing shiny orbs through the smokehole,
stealing light from the rich man he beguiled,
then flew away, his feathers black as coal.

Ever sacred, in this Tlingit tale,
Raven proved to all he would prevail.

Author Notes Inspired by the postage stamp prompt day 15 of NaPoWriMo.

Excerpt from Google

The Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, Bella Bella, and Kwakiutl viewed raven as the creator of the world and the bringer of daylight, as well as an incurable trickster. The raven is also the frequent subject of myth among the Inupiaq people of the north.


Chapter 16
Inspired by Aurora

By ~Dovey

Author Note:For my Amazing friend, Deanna Hemmen. Thank you for the inspiration.

Just one more look before I sleep,
and pray, the Lord, my soul to keep.
So sure that if I die tonight,
in Angel's arms I'll take that flight,
and traverse through Aurora's gates,
to where eternity awaits.
And there, where Heaven transcends Earth,
discover what true faith is worth.
4-16-24



Author Notes My amazing friend, Deanna Hemmen at Camp Curvy Birch, took this photo last night. I saw it this morning and HAD to write this poem, sitting in my car before I drove to work.

An Ekphrastic poem is one inspired by a picture or another work of art.


Chapter 17
Painting Turtles

By ~Dovey

Tonight we paint turtles in the sea,
lots of laughter, Tami and me.
Our canvas of glass imbues -
smooth, smaller surface, blues,
browns, gold infused sand;
painting was grand -
like toes dipped
in the
sea. 
4-18-24

Author Notes Picture of me and Tami tonight.

A Nonet descending one syllable per line from 9 to 1.


Chapter 18
Erudition

By ~Dovey

Expect exemplary
expositions on an
endless array of things.
Elucidating on
existential callings.
Ever enlightening,
encyclopedia.

4-19-24

Author Notes Picture courtesy of Artspark at Pixabay.


Erudition, n: profound scholarly knowledge

The Pleiades form was invented in 1999 by Craig Tigerman, Sol Magazine's Lead Editor. Only one word is allowed in the title followed by a single seven-line stanza. The first word in each line begins with the same letter as the title. Hortensia Anderson, a popular haiku and tanka poet, added her own requirement of restricting the line length to six syllables.


Chapter 19
A Golden Shovel for Felix Pedro

By ~Dovey

"There's gold in them there hills" - Felix Pedro

In Fairbanks, Alaska, it's told, where there's
folks known for golden hearts - Pedro's gold
let this all unfold, 1902 in
July - after many tries, all of them;
prospectors with a glint in their eyes, there
from the Chena's banks settled in the hills.

4-20-24

Author Notes A photo of the Felix Pedro Monument I took last night on the way home from Chatanika.

http://fairbanks-alaska.com/gold-rush-history.htm

Here are the rules for the Golden Shovel:
I used a quote from Felix Pedro himself.

Take a line (or lines) from a poem you admire.

Use each word in the line (or lines) as an end word in your poem.

Keep the end words in order.

Give credit to the poet who originally wrote the line (or lines).

The new poem does not have to be about the same subject as the poem that offers the end words.






Chapter 20
Family Outing

By ~Dovey


Mixed
paint
pallette -
Brown outhouse
built before baby
Evelyn needs her diaper changed.

Author Notes Picture from paint night at Chatanika Lodge. Nichole, Evelyn, and I had a ball.

Fibonacci poetry was founded by Gregory K. Pincus in 2006 as a 6-line poem that follows the Fibonacci sequence for syllable count per line.

For the 6-line poem that means:

1 syllable for first line

1 syllable for second line

2 syllables for third

3 syllables for fourth

5 syllables for fifth

8 syllables for sixth




Chapter 21
Ars Poetica, too

By ~Dovey

Am far, far less than eloquent -
it's a struggle to write tonight.
She drools and burps, not elegant,
this baby girl is my delight.

Her scent - vanilla happiness -
her eyes are just so blue and bright.
We cuddle and poem's a mess 
this  baby girl is my delight.

Silky skin is a distraction.
Her tiny fingers hold on tight,
with one hand less, I'm a fraction.
This baby girl is my delight.

Her coo and cry are magnet strong,
just can't resist her feeding, right?
My poem's written way too long,
this baby girl is my delight.

4-22-24

Author Notes A picture of me with Evelyn Grace, the newest member of our family.

An Ars Poetica is a poem about writing a poem. I added the Kyrielle format, a French form, to this poem, which requires as many 8 syllable per line quatrains as you wish, with a distinct rhyme scheme, and a refrain line in each stanza.


Chapter 22
Spring is Underway

By ~Dovey

Thirties in the morning, sixtyish by noon.
April weather varies - day, by day, by day.
All we really long to see is flowers bloom.

Of course, it often doesn't work out that way.
The geese returned, they're honking noisily.
Who knew Canadians had so much to say?!

The swans, more poised, display themselves artfully.
It's melting now so Alaskans can't complain.
Though, the mosquitoes buzz around hungrily.

Their incessant clouds will make us all insane!
I can't decide if I want the snow or rain!

4 - 24 - 24

Author Notes A collage from Creamer's Field - at the comparing the beginning of the month to today.

A Terza Rima is a poem with an eleven syllable count in each line and a rhyming scheme of� aba, bcb, cdc, dd.


Chapter 23
Mother Earth Day

By ~Dovey

In twenty four hours I've seen moose,
gaggles of geese and a stray goose,
a dozen swans swim on the pond,
a duck's pinwheeling wings in flight,
and more daylight than we have night.
People walking their pets beyond,
cyclists riding from afar.
I've seen all of this from my car.
Tomorrow I walk, Spring has dawned.

4 - 24 - 24
 

Author Notes A picture of me walking with Tami on Earth Day. We will be out walking again tomorrow evening.

The Nove Otto poetry form was created by Scott J. Alcorn. It is a nine-lined poem with 8 syllables per line (isosyllabic). The rhyme scheme is as follows: aacbbcddc.


Writing all evening in nature is an inspiration! My tribute to Earth today.


Chapter 24
Keys to the Universe

By ~Dovey

I see three
seasons each April day.
Basking in the sun I contemplate.

There were six
swans, all flying away.
Their gracefulness I appreciate.

As for nine,
sunlight holds moon at bay.
In her bright rays I luxuriate.

4-24-24

Author Notes Picture taken at Creamer's Field in Fairbanks, Alaska last night around 9pm.

Inspiration
"If you only knew the magnificence of the 3, 6 and 9, then you would have the key to the universe.

Nikola Tesla

I'm not sure if I discovered Tesla's key to the universe, but sitting in the sunshine writing poetry at 9 pm is mine!

Kim



Chapter 25
Sunset at 10 PM

By ~Dovey

With sunset and recharged batteries,
sun fed Vitamin D -
10:30...

I've restored my sensibilities,
watched the birds, found my words;
that pleased me.

If we could just harness energy
to expend at our whim
we'd be free.

4/25/24

Author Notes Photo Credit: Fairbanks, Alaska Facebook page, Bruce Irwin Nelles

A Companion piece to my 3-6-9 Poem, Keys to the Universe.
Inspired by a quote by Nikola Tesla

If you only knew the magnificence of the 3, 6 and 9, then you would have the key to the universe.

Nikola Tesla



Chapter 26
Born To Be?

By ~Dovey

Two babies born in two months.
Will they fall in love?
Or be friends?

Author Notes A picture of Asher, born January 1st and Evelyn Grace, born February 27th. Their mom's are best friends.

The English word quinzaine come from the French word qunize, meaning fifteen. A quinzaine is an unrhymed verse of fifteen syllables.

These syllables are distributed among three lines so that there are seven syllables in the first line, five in the second line and three in the third line (7/5/3). The first line makes a statement. The next two lines ask a question relating to that statement.


Chapter 27
Those Happy Little Trees

By ~Dovey

A golden horizon,
azure skies,
mountains, a river, and flowers.
Not bad to lay eyes on,
such surprise,
although, I left out the bowers.

Beauty I envision
compromised
canvas, my confidence cowers.
When strokes need revision
brush belies
that trees aren't my superpowers.

Black requires precision,
once paint dries
not one other color scours.
Last evening's decision -
practice tries,
painting happy trees for hours.

4-28-24

Author Notes A picture from Paint Night Friday night with Nichole, baby Evelyn, and Katrina.

The Tri-fall, created by Jan Turner, consists three 6-line stanzas, for a total of 18 lines. The rhyme scheme is� a,b,c,a,b,c� and meter for each stanza is as follows:� 6/3/8, 6/3/8. This form requires little to no punctuation and can be written on any subject matter.

I am hoping to keep improving on my happy little trees!
Kim



Chapter 28
What Alaskan Sourdoughs Say

By ~Dovey

Question posed that was without question
one with a unique answer, not one
suggestion leading to suggestion,
done to give advice, just once and done.

When do you plant the garden? Just when
you believe Winter has gone, will you
then spring into action, wanting then
to till, plant seed, then hill the soil, too?

Wait! That was the answer - you must wait
'til the Birch leaf does appear to till.
Late? At size of a squirrel's ear, late -
Will you wait, or follow your own will?

May, when frost free nights display, "You may,"
say they who know, or so the Sourdoughs say.

4-29-24

Author Notes Picture of Birch branches from ADN.

Excerpt from an article on gardening from the Anchorage Daily News:

For the newbies among us, let me be the first to point out that we wait until after the birch leaves are the size of a squirrel's ear to plant most things outside. This is a sure signal from Mother Nature that we won't have a killing frost and that the winter is really over.
*The rule of thumb for Fairbanks is not to plant outside before Memorial Day weekend. Kim
The Shadow Sonnet was created by Amera M. Andersen, may be written in any sonnet style. The Shadow takes place at the beginning and ending of each line as the words are identical or homophonic. Since all poetry was originally meant to be sung or recited out loud, homophonic words are acceptable, these are words that sound alike such as see and sea. (Rules: 14 lines, 9 or 10 syllables per line. The poem should have a volta or pivit; iambic pentameter is not necessary.)




Chapter 29
Lunch at Creamer's Field

By ~Dovey

Once again, I'm lunching with the birds,
eating as they swim or honk with glee.
Gratitude inspiring my words,
evoking creativity.
Graceful swans, ducks diving downwards,
lines of geese add to my poetry.

4-30-24

Author Notes Picture I took at Creamer's Field.

I've heard the Sandhill Cranes are arriving, but I haven't seen them yet! I still love the swans, geese, and ducks.

Kim

Harrisham Rhyme, created by the female poet,�?� Harrisham Minhas, belonging to the State of Punjab in India, of a six-line rhyming stanza. In this form, the last alphabet of the first word of each line is the first alphabet of the first word of next line.

There is no restriction on the starting alphabet of the first line.

Rhyming scheme �?� ababab.


Chapter 30
Where Has April Gone?

By ~Dovey

This April
I've yearned for blossoms to grow,
favored flowers, Winter's dull.

Auroral
displays danced over fresh snow.
Silent hues are seasonal.

Found faithful
reflection has helped me know
my Lord's love is bountiful.

Cerebral
contentment, as words will flow -
my true joy is cranial.

Fair wildfowl
are an entertaining show,
in flight or field, fanciful.

Our angel
babe has left us all aglow,
soft, sweet smiles, so loveable.

Gold shovel
tales told of Felix Pedro,
fine Fairbanks historical.

Multiple
rhyming styles proved apropos,
month ending in denial.

Perhaps I'll
stay and play through May, also,
dabbling with words for awhile.

4/29/24

Author Notes Picture is a Facebook meme.

This is my wrap up poem for my NaPoWriMo book. I hope you enjoyed this month of Poetry.
Kim

The treochair is an Irish form. While there are quite a few mentions online, the only book that appears to mention it is Robin Skelton's The Shapes of Singing. Here are the basic rules:

Variable number of tercets (or three-line stanzas)

Three syllables in the first line, seven in the second, and seven in the third

The first line rhymes with the third

Treochairs employ a lot of alliteration



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