Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Mama
Mama
I've got enough work
to fill three days,
but here I sit,
mooning over the photo book.
Mama, I wish you'd look up
from your prize houseplants and chat a bit.
Help me figure out how to go on --
my two big boys gone to war --
one on a ship, one in a cockpit --
my little girl suddenly a woman, and lovesick --
the youngest just trying to find his way,
figuring out where he fits in all this.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Monday, April 11, 2016
Papa
Papa
That Jack.
He pestered me
like a horsefly
on a mule.
Just had to have my picture.
Stood me beside
the car, but made sure
the mistake he made after the dance
was hidden behind.
I was madder than a hornet that night.
Reckless, ungrateful son-of-a-gun.
But I can't help myself. He makes me smile.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Mama
Mama
Got a photo postcard today
from my brother who stayed
back on the old place
north of Concordia
when the rest of us moved to Colorado.
Looks like they've got no complaints.
"Richard on Eds shoulder,
he couldn't look out. Mrs. and myself
in our oats field, it made 62 bu."
We watch the clouds build up in the west,
watch them pass by our fields,
watch them continue east to deliver their rain.
It's sure enough dry here -- nearly desert.
But there's a beauty in it, and we are learning
to lean into the wind and weather. We'll stay.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Saturday, April 09, 2016
Jack
Jack
Mama gave me my own camera
for my eighteenth birthday.
She seems to believe
that I could profit from studying the world
instead of always trying to get the world
to look at me.
Your plot backfired, Mama.
The herefords are watching.
And behind the shed, so's Henry.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Friday, April 08, 2016
Henry
Henry
Dear Iva,
I didn't think Mama
would miss just one.
Guess she knows her flock
better'n I thought.
It sure was fun
to see that photographer's face.
If I hadn't started laughing,
no one would have known I done it.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
A note to my readers: these stories and these characters are works of fiction. With very few exceptions, I have no idea who the people are in these photos. The names of many of the characters come from my ancestors and their friends. Other names are ones I chose to fit the character. The settings are real. My mom is from Denver and my dad grew up on a farm in Eastern Colorado (although some of these photos could be of ancestors/family friends further back who lived in Nebraska and Kansas). If we could sit down together for a cup of tea and a scone, I'd tell you all the little bits of truth I've woven into this fiction. I'd tell you the biggest surprises I've had, and the poems that took the most/fewest drafts. Like Amy LV commented, sometimes I feel like these people are talking through my pencil.
I did not have this all planned out before Poetry Month began, except that I grouped the photos in sets of seven to have ready to load onto the main page for the project. I had no idea I would be telling a story in verse this month. I'm as surprised and thrilled as you are. I expected to be frustrated by the challenge of writing a variety of poems, and instead, I look forward (and often can't stop myself from writing forward) as I discover the story and figure out ways to fill in the gaps. How will it end? No idea. Stay tuned. (If you want to read from the beginning, go back to the poem for April 1, and read forward to today.)
Over at Poetrepository, I have added (with permission) poems that Steve Peterson and Carol Wilcox have written that seem to me to fit with the flow of the story I've got in my mind. Carol Varsalona has also written some fabulous partner poems using these photos. You can find them here.
Happy Poetry Month Poetry Friday! Laura has the roundup at Writing the World for Kids.
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Friday,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Thursday, April 07, 2016
Mother
Mother
Iva, I made this move
for your own good.
You will become
a proper lady.
I let Auntie down,
but you will overcome
growing up on that wretched farm.
You will rise in society
to the level you are from.
You can squirm all you want,
but I've got you firmly
under my thumb.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
Iva
Iva
Dear Henry,
I found this picture of Mother
in Great Uncle's attic.
Wishing I could send you
that dead coyote.
Bet it would be worth more than
all those skunks you trapped
last summer
when you hatched that plan
to get rich quick.
Let me tell you,
rich ain't always grand.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Tuesday, April 05, 2016
Iva
Iva
When Mother's rich uncle in Denver died
and left everything to her,
she took it as a sign
that we were meant to leave
"that dirty farm" and
"those ignorant farm wives" behind.
I missed the class picture,
but Marjorie wrote and told me
how Jack masterminded
a plan to become
as famous as his siblings.
I wish I had been there to remind
him -- be happy with what you are
and what you've got.
Sometimes good enough is just fine.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Monday, April 04, 2016
Lizzy
Lizzy
When Lewis came home
from basic training
Jack suddenly remembered the chores
Pop has been nagging him to get done.
Everyone looks up to Lewis.
He's a natural-born
pilot if there ever was one.
Why does everyone's favorite
have to go off to some war?
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Sunday, April 03, 2016
Henry
Henry
It stinks being youngest.
Lizzy's famous
for her forty-inch hair,
and Jack's the ringmaster
whose life is a circus.
Last week, he made a pair
of dogs do a pony show,
and now he's holding
a pig in the air
by its back feet.
With one hand.
Being youngest is just not fair.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
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