Cabin in the Woods, #Paint Chip Poetry Rondelet

Photo by Olivier Guillard on Unsplash

Cabin in the Woods

Sweet cabin mine,

Hidden among the forest trees,

Sweet cabin mine,

Surrounded by divine design,

By day, I observe honeybees,

By night, a firefly’s light I see,

Sweet cabin mine.

© Susan Joy Clark 2021

The challenge from Linda Kruschke of Another Fearless Year this week is to write a rondelet, using one (or more) of the pictured paint chip colors, and using “cabin in the woods” as a title.

According to The Poetry Dictionary by John Drury, a rondelet is …

RONDELET (ron-deh-lay’; French, “little rondel”) A form consisting of seven lines, with a refrain and only two rhymes. The rhyme and refrain scheme is AbAabbA (capital A = refrain). The refrain lines (A) each contain four syllables; the other lines (a and b) each contain eight syllables.

Carnival Ducky — A Limerick

Photo by Ian Taylor on Unsplash

There once was a carnival ducky,

Who wasn’t so terribly lucky,

Each night, as he swum,

He was shot in the bum,

But my, that ducky was plucky!

© Susan Joy Clark 2021

It’s fun to be silly. This was written for Carrot Ranch Literary Community’s Anyone Can Poem limerick challenge.

Into and Out of the Blue, #Paint Chip Poetry

Photo by Jordan Whitfield on Unsplash

So, here is another paint chip poetry challenge from Linda Kruschke. We were challenged to use 10 out of 15 of these paint chip colors from the picture below in a poem form of our choice. My last and only other time using this prompt, I only had to choose two. This seemed much more challenging, but it can’t be harder than magnetic poetry, can it?

I look in your eyes,

deep pools of blue,

reflecting clear skies

just before the rain,

and suddenly,

out of the blue,

my gray world

has turned technicolor,

and I’m on the

yellow brick road,

lined with sunflowers

and watermelon vines,

soaking in the sunshine;

my universe somersaulted —

a total eclipse.

© Susan Joy Clark 2021

Photo by Akshay Nanavati on Unsplash

Butterfly Friend, #Decima, #Haiku, #Ronovan Writes Challenge

Photo by Chris Keats on Unsplash

Butterfly lights upon my cheek,

It seems to make itself at home,

Freezing like a sculpture of Rome,

I welcome it; its friendship seek,

Though I am strong, and it is weak.

A mosquito’s friendship I’d reject,

A honeybee, I would protect,

Although in a more distant way,

My butterfly’s welcome to stay,

A better friendship, I suspect.

© Susan Joy Clark 2021

Photo by Meritt Thomas on Unsplash

wings flutter in air,

wisps of antennae tickle,

a butterfly’s kiss

© Susan Joy Clark 2021

This was written for Ronovan Writes decima challenge. The requirement was to put “cheek” in the A rhyme line. Ronovan suggested tying the decima in with the haiku challenge, using the words “air” and “wisp.”

Eden Stroll, #Tanka Tuesday, #Shadorma

Photo by Tom Allport on Unsplash
© Susan Joy Clark 2021

This is for Tanka Tuesday hosted by Colleen M. Chesebro. This week, it’s Poet’s Choice, but Colleen suggested we try magnetic poetry, so I put this poem together on a site called magneticpoetry.com and used the Nature Poetry kit, then took a screen shot of my finished poem. It was interesting working with preselected random words.