
There aren’t many things that land in my Inbox and that I read consistently, but Pádraig Ó Tuama’s Sunday post is one of them. This week he announced it was Pantoum Sunday and invited readers to join in and write a pantoum. He offers a wonderfully accessible template, which I’ve used before. This past weekend he added prompts for each line. If you’re interested, you can read more here. I played around with the prompt and wrote two pantoums. Both are still drafty, but here’s one of them:
Pantoum
Today is all golden tree tops and turbulent clouds
and I find myself wishing it away
Although yesterday I watched storm clouds mass and spit
As I write, I try to find my way to the core
Still, I find myself wishing it away
When I was younger, I tried so hard to fly
Now I write to find my way to the core
I didn’t realize that flight insists on a landing
When I was younger I tried so hard to fly
but my feet never left the ground
and I didn’t realize that flight insists on a landing
though once I had a dream that I soared
Anyway my feet remain grounded and
yesterday I watched storm clouds mass and spit
and remembered I once had a dream that I soared
Today is all golden tree tops and turbulent clouds
©Molly Hogan, draft
This week’s Poetry Friday is hosted by Mary Lee Hahn at her blog, A(nother) Year of Reading.
Ooh…this is all kinds of lovely and wise: “flight insists on a landing.”
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Thanks, Mary Lee. I love Pádraig Ó Tuama’s pantoum “recipe”!
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[…] at Nix the Comfort Zone, has joined the Pádraig Pantoum crew with one so delicious you’ll want to read and reread […]
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I love how this poem takes me back to those childhood years of wonder. Considering flight and seeing the turbulent clouds can be both literal and metaphorical. I enjoyed the exercise this time and felt a sense of accomplishment at the result. Fun that you did, too!
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He offers such an accessible entry into pantoums! Yours is so rich and lovely!
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I agree with Mary Lee, all kinds of lovely and wise. The golden tree tops, the mass & spit of the storm clouds and the gathered wisdom of a full understanding of landing. I love how your poems…even drafts as you see them…feel so effortless. Beautiful writing, Molly.
Isn’t it funny how we all wrote pantoums? This should count for a group challenge!
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Thanks, Linda! I love using his guidelines to create pantoums. Did we already use this as a challenge once? I can’t even remember!? lol
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Molly, your poem feels dreamlike in the best way. I love the spiraling sensation created by pantoums. Well done!
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Thanks! I appreciate how accessible the form becomes when using Pádraig ó Tuama’s prompts. I’m not sure I’ve ever written one without his guidelines. Maybe my next challenge?
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I love the feeling of freedom in your poem, Molly. Your words soar.
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Thanks, Rose. I can still remember so clearly thinking I could fly if I could just run fast enough for lift off!
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Molly, your feet remain grounded even during turbulence and dreams of soaring. I really like this poem and think it deserves more than a draft.
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Thanks, Carol!
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Molly! I love all the flight and dreams imagery against the reality of the narrator’s grounded today (but maybe not for long). Gorgeous! I especially love the “I tried so hard to fly” line, so poignant and layered!
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Thanks, Mona. As I commented elsewhere, I clearly remember thinking flight was so close at hand…if only I could get enough speed to lift off!
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Molly, this is wonderful! And sort of eerie…I, too, played with pantoums (also a big Padraig fan) — didn’t post mine — but I have a line that mirrors your “When I was younger I tried so hard to fly.” Mine was “I couldn’t have known I was meant to fly.” Isn’t that interesting?? Your pantoum pulls together really nicely. Mine didn’t, thus no post – lol.
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That is interesting! This was my second pantoum effort from his prompt. Sometimes they pull together in intriguing ways and sometimes not so much! I suspect your pantoum was more post-worthy than you think!
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This is lovely. Gosh, so many ways to fly…
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And so many ways to land, too!
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The whole intraspective mood of your poem is rich with association to childhood dreams and aspirationss. The wonderful imagining of a child’s mind. Love this poem, Molly. I read it and it reminds of my current interactions with my grand-daughter aged 6 and all the glorious beauty of her imagination and how I hope it is preserved as long as possible. I still look nostalgically back to those days of which you write. Your pantoum is perfect. I shall explore the template.
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The template is great, Alan! I’m sure you’ll enjoy it, and I hope you share the results.
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The contrast of heading to the sky vs. heading to your core…which way to go? The line “flight insists on a landing” is powerful. (You reminded me that I used to dream I could fly. But I couldn’t go up very high, and the bad guys were always grabbing at my feet.)
The question of inner and outer makes me think of Pema Chödrön’s “You are the sky. Everything else – it’s just the weather.”
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That yearning to fly feels sort of universal. I suppose it’s the sense of freedom. Which has me wondering how much unnoticed burden there is in the sheer physicality of flight as well…lots to think about!
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Beautiful, Molly…. your aerial dance between contrasts, infused with some wisdom earned with years, is rich and wonderful. :0)
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Thanks, Robyn!
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I love the line, “I didn’t realize that flight insists on a landing.” It makes me think of ups and downs, of choices and consequences, of unexpected twists of fate.
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Thanks, Karen. There’s always some sort of counterbalance, isn’t there? Even if we’re not aware of it at first!
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