“The best-laid schemes o’ mice an ‘men
Gang aft agley”
~ Robert Burns ~
I started working on the poem I planned to share today on Monday. I drafted two versions and played with them both throughout the week. I recorded different lines on my phone on the way to work. But when I sat down last night, nothing worked. The poem just wouldn’t come together and it’s still a muddled mess.
My day was filled with poetry, though. I shared Amy Ludwig VanDerwater’s poem, “Wonder,” with teachers at our Language Arts Committee meeting this morning:
“Wonder”
Water the wonder
that lives in your brain.
Water your wonder
with questions like rain.
Read the rest of the poem, and more about Amy’s 2016 poetry project, here.
Then the principal and I read this Douglas Florian poem during morning announcements:

I shared many poems with my students throughout the day, but didn’t have a minute to think about my own poem. By the time I left work, my prime writing hours were long gone. The weather was writing it’s own poem, though. Dark gray clouds piled up in the northwest, while the sky was still bright blue in to the south. Impatient rain drops were falling and the wind was picking up. It was a gorgeous sight that made me think of this Emily Dickinson poem:
“A Drop fell on the Apple Tree” (794)
A Drop fell on the Apple Tree –
Another – on the Roof –
A Half a Dozen kissed the Eaves –
And made the Gables laugh –
A few went out to help the Brook
That went to help the Sea –
Myself Conjectured were they Pearls –
What Necklaces could be –
The Dust replaced, in Hoisted Roads –
The Birds jocoser sung –
The Sunshine threw his Hat away –
The Bushes – spangles flung –
The Breezes brought dejected Lutes –
And bathed them in the Glee –
The Orient showed a single Flag,
And signed the fête away –
Emily Dickinson
Please be sure to visit Amy Ludwig VanDerwater at her lovely blog, The Poem Farm, for the Poetry Friday Roundup.
lovely poem
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I’m glad you are sharing poetry with your school and colleagues. April is such a fun month. I look forward to jumping in when we return to school on Monday. So many great projects to share with my students.
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I found a poem in your words…
Didn’t have a minute to think –
The weather was writing it’s own poem.
Dark gray clouds piled up in the northwest,
The sky still bright blue to the south;
Impatient rain drops were falling,
Wind was picking up –
A gorgeous sight
that made me think.
Donna Smith
A to Z Challenge and NaPoWriMo
Mainely Write
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Love the Emily poem! Great way to start poetry month. 🙂
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Some days are like that — filled to the wonderful brim, but not quite what we wanted them to be!
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A poem can certainly do all of those things… and so much more, even. A joyful post, Catherine!
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This post can fly.
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“The weather was writing its own poem…”
Happy Happy Poetry Month! You are so generous!
xo
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