I have to admit, August was tough. The weather turned as if Summer took its ball and went home, leaving me with nothing to play with and only the constant banging from the construction next door to keep me company. However, the sun returned yesterday, bringing with it a will to get back to work, so here are new images and a new poem for OLN (open link night) at dVerse Poets Pub.

This morning, using Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem “What Lips My Lips Have Kissed, and Where, and Why” as inspiration, I wrote two Sonnets in iambic pentameter. So when I saw today’s mini-prompt to write a sonnet in iambic tetrameter, I was actually in the mood. I had never heard of the Onegin stanza or Pushkin sonnet, and I’m excited to give it a try.
From Wikipedia: “Onegin stanza, sometimes ‘Pushkin sonnet,’ refers to the verse form popularized (or invented) by the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin . . . mostly written in verses of iambic tetrameter with the rhyme scheme aBaBccDDeFFeGG where the lowercase letters represent feminine rhymes (stressed on the penultimate syllable) and the uppercase representing masculine rhymes [stressed on the (only or) ultimate syllable].”
I’m glad I read that. It’s not often I read a form poem’s instructions that include feminine rhyme. What a fun extra challenge.

New Forms of Light Pollution
Those dancing human silhouettes
like neon palm trees of the night,
a staring contest’s denouement,
reflecting to the other side.
Their flailing limbs of no regrets
cast shadows on the fire beneath
while signaling to all the stars
celestial touch is not too far.
Does the neon palm shout longing
like invasive species will cling?
Tightly they choke ’til there’s nothing
to hold. Is bright light belonging’s
cry, echoing across the lake,
the song that goads, and dancers make?
Or is bright light what children of Gud make, by their bright eyes? I enjoyed your poem. There are no dimes left. By inflation it has come to it there are only dollars. Shameless inhabitants of color. By your beautiful poem you make it clear God will not be impressed.
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A great use of form! Bravo!
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Thank you.
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Bravo, Maria! I am delighted that you tried the form and you created some wonderful images.
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Thank you. I shared the form with my creative writing group this morning.
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A perfect marriage of poem and images, Maria…
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Thank you.
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I enjoyed you new forms of light pollution, Maria, especially the opening image of ‘dancing human silhouettes like neon palm trees of the night’, with their ‘flailing limbs of no regrets’.
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Thank you so much.
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You’re welcome, Maria.
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