Décima Challenge 34 Poets Collected

12 Poets from last week’s challenge of STABLE and their Décimas. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

Nice

Decima Challenge Poets Collected Image


Ritu Bhathal | But I Smile Anyway…:   Nativity


L | EASTELMHURST.A.GO.GO:   Winter And Spring


http://www.engleson.ca

Day Dream

This morning fog consumes the sky,
lustrous dreams swallowed in haze,
a portent of loss, an end of days,
a slow sweep slippage into nigh.

But I choose not to let time fly
beyond my grasp, outside my ken.
With every breath, I breathe life in,
achieve new ground, fresh, strong, stable,
extend my reach, my life’s fable.
my spirit, my mind, and my Zen.


Frank Hubeny | Poetry, Short Prose and Walking:   Décimas #1 Stable and #2 Truthful Hope    


Mindfills:   travels in the wild


MMA Storytime:  The Elite Squad


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:    Self-deception


Ranting Along:  https://rantingalong.blog/2020/12/03/23837/


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:  Tripping with the Magi Power Tower


Ronovan Writes:  Our Youth Need


The Tenth Zodiac:  Unfamous Heir


willowdot21:   Banished



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© 2020- Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 335 CURL and Paw.

A new Seasonal Badge for the Challenge is below if you would like to use it. Some of you may have noticed in the reader the badge has returned to the usual one. This is because our poets are accustomed to seeing that one, so I set it as my featured image. We’ve been missing a few of our regulars for the past couple of weeks since I changed the image, and I’m worried the new image might have lost them. I hope they come back soon.


Check out the COMMENTS for entries this week, and come back throughout the week to see more links to poems as they come in.

Drop by on Wednesday for the Décima Poetry Challenge. Sometimes the two challenges have similar themes you can unite over the week.

Click HERE for last week’s collected links for easy access to the poems of last week’s poets. (GRACE and Slip)

Click HERE. To learn about the new style I’ve created called Shi Rensa Haiku and how to write one, maybe even for the challenges.



An updated How to Write Haiku in English. that has just a little more detail and for knowledge and perhaps craft. And how to do a Pingback.

Useful Links.
Thesaurus: CURL, Paw
Thesaurus.com
Merriam-Webster Dictionary

The Guidelines:

  1. Take the two words and write a Haiku. I use Haiku in English (the link shows you how) as my style, which is 5 syllables for the first line, 7 for the second, and 5 for the third, but you can use what you like.
    • The link above has links on how to write Haibun and Tanka. You can also do the 3/5/3 form if you like instead of the 5/7/5 that I usually use. Write, share, and have fun. For syllable help,
    • For syllables for each word, and different definitions, you use the definition that works for you Haiku. You can also use SYNONYMS. Go to Thesaurus.com for synonym help.
  1.  
  2. Copy the link of your finished haiku URL and paste in a comment below so we can all go and visit your Haiku.
    • You can do a pingback. What’s a pingback? Place the URL from the address bar up top from this post as a link within your post. Your inclusion of the link encourages others to try the challenge, be creative, and join a community to find friends and more followers (hopefully). I honestly gain nothing with more people visiting the post. I don’t have ads running that generates revenue by your visit or by clicks on whatever WordPress has put up.
    • Click HERE for a detailed post on PINGBACKS.
  3. If you like, copy the image in this post and place it within their post, just to show the Haiku is part of this challenge.
    • I am not saying you need or even should, but if you would like to do so then go ahead.


The Challenge Words!

CURL and Paw

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white backgroundSEASONAL BADGE


 


 

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Haiku Challenge 334 Poets Collected.

Links to the 31 Poets from last week’s challenge of GRACE and Slip and their haiku. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

 

fall haiku challenge poets collected japanese maple with black and white background


Annette Rochelle Aben:   disappearing act | Annette Rochelle Aben


Tina Stewart Brakebill:   grace denied (a haiku) – Tina Stewart Brakebill


Ritu Bhathal | But I Smile Anyway…:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 334 GRACE and Slip | But I Smile Anyway…


The Zeisy Geist | Deviating Vibes:   https://deviatingvibes.wordpress.com/challenges/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge/334-grace-and-slip/


Don’t Forget the Half:   Grace and Favor – Don’t Forget the Half


Ear to the Ground:  https://eartotheground.blog/2020/12/01/the-wind-speaks-winter-haiku/


William Thomas Engleson:

Contrasts

Presidential slips!
They occur, once with malice,
now, perhaps, with grace.

 

Contrasts -Shi Rensa

Presidential slips!
They occur, once with malice,
now, perhaps, with grace.

Now, perhaps with grace,
a gentler tone, we move on
to civility.

To civility,
a toast to respectful change,
and wishful thinking.

And wishful thinking
measured with reality,
and Joe’s your uncle.

http://www.engleson.ca


Bob Fairfield:   https://bobfairfield.org/2020/11/30/ronovan-writes-haiku-challenge-334/


Denis | Haiku Hound:  seasonal change – Haiku hound


Laura McHarrie @ The Hidden Edge:   Remorse – (Weekly Haiku Prompt) – Laura McHarrie @ The Hidden Edge   


J-Dubs Grin and Bear It:    Haiku – Grace & Slip ~ 11/30/20 – J-Dubs Grin and Bear It  


Alice | Malham Magna:  Rain | Malham Magna


Lauren | LSS Attitude of Gratitude:   Afternoon Shade | #RonovanWrites #Weekly #Haiku # Poetry #Challenge 334 – Quilted Poetry


Mindfills:    https://mindfills.wordpress.com/2020/11/30/3082/


MMA Storytime:   All the Right Moves    


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:   Grace #Haiku #Poem | Mystical Strings  


Lisa Coleman | Our Eyes Open:    Secret – Haiku – Our Eyes Open


Lizl Bennefeld | Quilted Poetry:     https://quiltedpoetry.wordpress.com/2020/12/02/afternoon-shade-ronovanwrites-weekly-haiku-poetry-challenge-334/


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:   https://arthurrichardson.org/2020/12/01/grace-and-slip/


Ronovan Writes:

an opened heart – a haiku a poem | ronovanwrites

Sweet Dignity – a haiku a poem | ronovanwrites


Scribblans:    Sometimes I Don’t Rhymes: Ronovan Writes Haiku – Grace and Slip – Scribblans


Sketching Words:   https://sketchingwords.com/2020/11/30/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-334/


Straight From My Heart:    Flight of an Eagle – Straight From My Heart 


The Bag Lady:  Ronovanwrites Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge – The Bag Lady


Lisa | The Verse Smith:  https://theversesmith.blogspot.com/2020/11/the-three-graces.html


Nima Mohan | The Tenth Zodiac:  https://thetenthzodiac.wordpress.com/2020/12/03/ronovans-weekly-haiku-prompt-challenge-334/


Pat | Thoughts and Entanglements:  Grace | thoughts and entanglements


Oneta Hayes | Sweet Aroma:  DO UNTO OTHERS | Sweet aroma


Two on a Rant:  https://rantingalong.blog/2020/12/03/23837/


Xenia | Whippet Wisdom:    Haiku: Grace Moves – Whippet Wisdom – a Highland Journey


WillWillowDot21:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 334 GRACE and Slip. | willowdot21


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© 2020- Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Life Remains – a haiku a poem

LIFE REMAINS

far from these pained lands

sparks of innocents fly high

once more round the world

 


How to Write a Haiku in English Form


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Sweet Dignity – a Shi Rensa haiku a poem

SWEET DIGNITY

the world slips along
nothing trying to save it
but with grace, we can

but with grace, we can
fight against the flow of fate
slipping past tyrants

slipping past tyrants
decency defines the day
with decisions made

with decisions made
we slip into a new world
of known dignity


fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background

How to Write a Shi Rensa.

How to Write a Haiku in English Form

A Shi Rensa poem for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge of GRACE and Slip.

IF YOU HAVEN’T VISITED ALL OF OUR POETS SO FAR THIS WEEK, MAKE CERTAIN TO CHECK OUT THE ONES THAT HAVE COME IN RECENTLY. SO MANY GET OVERLOOKED BECAUSE THEY AREN’T ABLE TO GET TO THE PROMPT AND FREE TO WRITE AS QUICKLY AS, SAY, THE GUY THAT COMES UP WITH HE WORDS AND CAN WRITE HIS POEMS LAST WEEEK FOR THIS WEEK IF HE WANTED TO.


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Our Youth Need – A poem.

Our Youth Need…

The young have not been so lucky,
their world defined by death and rage,
We had freedom, they have a cage,
locked up safe from the dying spree.

The fool and wisdom disagree,
on how to save democracy.
Our youth drown in hypocrisy,
as blue label fights red label.
They need foundations firm…stable,
with no games of bureaucracy.


I wrote this poem in part because of my son. A couple of months ago he came in contact with a classmate who had Covid-19. That of course meant he had to be quarantined. We all wore masks…because he’s a 16-year-old boy who forgets what meal of the day he’s eating. Meaning there was no way we were trusting him to wear a mask all the time. Things at school went downhill from there, well not all downhill, but a class here or there. He had to do remote learning and some teachers didn’t know how to use the equipment very well, and you can’t really learn Chemistry all that well from what is basically a skype call.

One teacher is a bit of a difficult one, and the boy has been stressed more than we realized. He was out two days sick, not from anything, just mentally psyched out and throwing up for two days. It turns out he has the hardest class schedule in his entire school, and it’s a college prep school. Imagine having 1 AP class, meaning a college credit class, the hardest class in the school, 3 Honors classes, and the rest College Prep classes except for Band where he’s an officer and section leader.

What we didn’t know was that while he was quarantined he was constantly worried he might end up with something that could potentially kill him. That on top of trying to keep up with two weeks of classwork and tests.

Anyway, that’s where we are. Just trying to get to winter break and a clean slate begins. We just hope his current slate isn’t a shattered mess. For a boy who has been identified as gifted, and identified as a Duke Tip student, and been in the national junior honor society and now Beta Club, this has been a huge blow for him.


How to write an Espinela or Décima poem.

Whether you enjoyed my poem or not, please click the link below to head to this week’s challenge page and visit some of the loyal in the comments who keep coming back to write using this style of poetry that is so accomodating to different ideas and more difficult than you may think to write. And it’s a great feeling to know you’re writing in a style created hundreds of years ago in Spain.

My entry for this week’s Décima Poetry Challenge NO. 34 STABLE.


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© 2020- Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Ronovan Writes Décima Poetry Challenge Prompt No. 34: (STABLE) in the D rhyme line.

I know, I know, it’s D rhyme week. I always have difficulty with this one. But then again, if you’ve read my Décimas, you know I have a problem with all of the rhyme weeks. Plus, this week I give you a two-syllable word, but I looked up the rhymes. There aren’t a lot, but the ones we do have are pretty good.

You may, if you wish, make some kind of link between the Haiku Challenge prompt of (GRACE and Slip). and STABLE. This means you could write a haiku post using the prompt words. Then do a Décima using this week’s prompt uniting the two with a common message.

The 2 CHALLENGES are SEPARATE but CAN BE combined if YOU CHOOSE to do so.


Welcome to the Décima Poetry Challenge. Each week we’ll be attempting a Décima, also known as an Espinela, poem.

If you don’t know how to write a Décima, click HERE to go to a post on How to Write an Espinela or Décima Poem.

Or…

Keep reading and find out, with an example included.


  • To last week’s links Décima Poets’ poems written for the prompt for BLIND, click HERE for all the links in one post. A good opportunity to check out some examples of Décima.

THE CHALLENGE

If you can’t come up with a Décima using the given prompt, you can use a Synonym instead. I don’t want to stall your creativity, and with the possibility of a synonym, you will certainly write something amazing…or in my case, something that rhymes.

Sites to help:

RhymeZone.com
Thesaurus.com
Merriam-Webster.com  Use this site for syllables. I’ve used several online counters and too many have given different counts for the same word, so I use the dictionary now. Also, in some parts of the English speaking world, the syllables may come out in the spoken language a bit differently. And that’s okay. Write to enjoy, too learn, and yes, try to get the syllables right, but above all create and enjoy.

Here is the quick description of a Décima:

There are 10 lines of poetry that rhyme. 8 syllables.
There is a set rhyming pattern we must stick to. abbaaccddc

The prompt word given (in the post heading) must appear at the end of one of the given rhyme lines, either A, B, C, or D.

Let’s look at the rhyme pattern once again and you will see what I mean.

The rhyming pattern is abbaaccddc with a choice of a break between lines 4 and 5, then being abba accddc, which I use in my example below.


For example, if I say in the subject line of the post:

“…(FALL) This week it’s the B rhyme line.”

my Décima might be…

NO!

As the end wept upon the land,

we could hear the approaching fall.

Justice answered the trumpet’s call,

trusting the fight to her troop’s hand.

 

Fate trembles with haste to expand,

through misdeeds by her shameless foe.

Past foolish decisions now crow,

“Wait—no—this was not meant to be.”

They beg the nation, “Hear our plea.

Heal honor, shout, no…no… NO!”

 

Notice the example prompt word ‘FALL’ is in line 2, the first B line, and its rhyme is in line 3, matching the rhyming pattern of abba accddc.


For today’s challenge, the word STABLE must be one of the D line words. Then the other D line(s) word(s) must rhyme with STABLE.

Sometimes you break the rhyme into two stanzas using the following rhyme pattern. abba/accddc.

Once you complete your poem and post it on your blog, copy the link and place it in the comments in this post. That way other people can visit your post and check out your poem. You can also put the link of this challenge in your post to let your followers know where to go if they want to participate. This is called a Pingback. This is not mandatory to join in or to put your post link in the comments. Click HERE to find out how to do a Pingback.

Reblogging is great as well.

Some people like to copy and paste the challenge image into their posts. That’s okay with me.

Ronovan Writes Decima Challenge Image


 

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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Décima Challenge 33 Poets Collected

14 Poets with 3 NEW POET BLOGS from last week’s challenge of BLIND and their Décimas. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

Some titles of the poems are chosen by me. So don’t blame the poet if it makes no sense with the actual poem. Great takes on the theme. Nice to see some new blogs taking part and a couple of the original Haiku Challenge poets from years ago joining in.

Decima Challenge Poets Collected Image


Ritu Bhathal | But I Smile Anyway…:  The Daily Grind

NEW POETRY BLOG TO THE CHALLENGE


Linda Lee Lyberg | Charmed Chaos:   Of Liquid Memories and Tears


L | EASTELMHURST.A.GO.GO:   Black Times


http://www.engleson.ca

Pickleball Blues

A small thing really, almost trite,
A privileged sort, COVID immune
But now we’re singing a new tune,
Though we know our case is quite…slight.

“We planned it well; almost airtight,
The best protocols you could find,
a thoughtful plan, we were not blind
to risk, to spread, it’s viral way.”
Sweet Pickleball, one more delay;
Were you a dream, a state of mind?


Bob Fairfield:    A philosopher’s foible


JosieHolfFord.com

NEW POETRY BLOG TO THE CHALLENGE

Blind

Old Gloucester in Shakespeare’s King Lear –
Quite the wanton lad in his youth –
Was just like Lear, blind to the truth.
His good son Edgar sent away
While evil Edmund has his way.
Gloucester has eyes but he is blind
He loses sight, Lear his mind.
Scenes painful and anarchic
The play’s effect – most cathartic:
To death and loss we are resigned


Frank Hubeny | Poetry, Short Prose and Walking:   Tears To Leave Behind    


Laurie McHarrie @ The Hidden Edge:    Blind


MMA Storytime:    Rules Are Meant to Be Broken


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:    Oasis


Revived Writer:   Was Blind But Now I See


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:   A Way


Two on a Rant:   Ronovan Writes Poetry Challenge : Decima & Haiku | Two on a Rant

NEW POETRY BLOG TO THE CHALLENGE


willowdot21:   Ronovan Writes Décima Poetry Challenge Prompt No. 33: (BLIND) in the C rhyme line. | willowdot21



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Décima Poetry (or any Poetry) Tips – Rhyming

Rhyming. I’ll say it’s one of the top three things to consider when writing a Décima poem, along with the message, and meter.

(If you don’t know how to write a Décima, click HERE to go to a post on How to Write an Espinela or Décima Poem.)

The word you choose to end one line will determine the wording of the next line because of the need to use a rhyming word.

This might seem simple, just change words if one doesn’t make it easy…but…sometimes you find a word, that could be unusual or less likely to have a rhyme, and it says exactly what you want/need, and it falls at the end of the line. And you are in no way going to change that word. Because Creatives can be stubborn beasts.

The first thing you will probably do is:

  • see if you can rephrase the sentence, still using your keyword, but ultimately what happens is the impact of the word and line is lost. It must be the last word of that line
  • next, you give in and pull out the thesaurus, But the words don’t hold up to your original word. So now you’re back to your original word.

So what do you do?

 

Decima Poetry Tip image.

BREAK YOUR WORD INTO SYLLABLES

Let’s use the word STABLE.

Some rhymes: Able, cable, fable, gable, label, sable, table, and the oft-forgotten Mabel.

Those are good rhymes, and a nice span of categories. But maybe you want more. Here comes my tip, a simple tip that many already use but some just don’t think about or forget to use. Break STABLE into its two syllable sounds.

Stay

&

Bull

Stay has a lot of rhyme words. Some would be bay, ray, say, may, clay, tray, play. And those are without looking at rhymezone.com.

Bull has full, pull, and wool. And don’t forget the always useful ‘ful’. There are others but not really ones we would use. We could and probably would now that I said we wouldn’t. Especially if someone’s name would work.

You could have a stable and playful or stable with a sleigh full. But one thing you need to consider is how the pacing will be as the verse is read. If two words are used instead of one at a slow pace, it could sound stilted, awkward. Meter and pacing are so important in Décima poetry, as well as other rhyme poetry.

Here is the first example using STABLE & PLAYFUL.

Soundbite Insanity

Woke up to find stories insane,
telling fables not so stable,
not so harmless not so playful.
Truth abounds, but not from his brain.

It’s all an emotional drain.
I’m to the point of giving in.
Hearing all of this daily spin,
think I’ll click off his real world.
One insult and another hurled,
still, Pres. did lose, Veep did win.


The above Décima is a little on the faster side of pacing for a poem. Not my fastest pacing but fast enough for this. Playful is not an exact rhyme for stable, but using fables with stable in that second line quickens the pace and carries that pace into the next line so by the time you get to the word playful you’re in a good cadence so your ear will be tricked into hearing a very near rhyme. Or at least enough not to notice the difference. This is one thing rappers do with their lyrics. They build up to that near rhyme with pace and a build-up rhyme, at least that’s what I’m going to call it. Rappers are poets telling stories just like other poets, but they rarely get credit for what they accomplish with their rhyming ability.

Soundbite Insanity is not my best Décima. I like writing this style of poetry although I’m still working on my meter and pacing. I mainly like sharing the style because it’s a great style used for writing songs for centuries and it has cultural significance in the Latin communities. No, I’m not Latin, but I love History and learning about anywhere and anywhen.

Here’s a second example using STABLE & SLEIGH FULL.

Jolly Ol’ Masked Man

It’s closing in on the big day,
“Bring the reindeer from the stable,
ready them to pull a sleigh full,”
But Big Red wants stimulus pay.

He begs no mask, the wife says nay,
“That beard’s not enough for the Vid,
so suck it up, and shut your lid.”
The chubby hubby says, “Yes, dear.”
While his belly jiggles with fear.
Pumpkin Spice Latte she’ll forbid?


Jolly Ol’ Masked Man, for me, is a slower pace than the previous example. The lines are longer, creating some space for the syllables. Reindeer helps with this. The word has a little more of a stretch to the way one says it than words like fables. And admittedly I think the title of the poem helps. You know it’s about Christmas and Santa. Although it is obviously going to have some humor in it, you still get into that comfortable feel a moment before beginning the poem.

So many things go into creating rhymes other than the two words you want to rhyme. I’ve spent hours because I’m stubborn enough to want to use one specific word no matter how ridiculous it is when another word would work just as well. But that’s a Creative for you.


I hope this gives you some ideas.

Good Luck and Good Writing Until the Next Tip.

Ronovan


If you don’t know how to write a Décima, click HERE to go to a post on How to Write an Espinela or Décima Poem.


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Holiday Train – a poem

The night is dry, and the lights glow with cheer,

As the train rolls through to announce the Holiday is here.

The pretty blue tree, an elf singing with the band,

makes the clouds festive, while in the cold we stand.

Cheeks are happily frozen, slight relief from hot cocoa cups,

a time it’s okay to make kids out of grownups.

Rushing our way home to find comfort in warm beds,

Jobs are tomorrow, tonight joyful dreams play in our heads.


Lynn’s Tuesday Picture Prompt  A Holiday Train.

Lynn's Picture Prompt at twilight with neon, the word Holiday, a blue Christmas tree and an elf.
Photo by Lynn. CP Holiday Train

Penisitivity’s Three Things Challenge   Festive/Pretty/Drypensitivity three things challenge logoFandango’s One Word Challenge.   Comfort.fowc challenge prompt imageMMAStorytime’s 100 Word Flash Fiction Challenge   Job

MMA Storytime’s 100 Word Flash Fiction Challenge Badge Image.


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 334 GRACE and Slip.

A new Seasonal Badge for the Challenge is below if you would like to use it. Some of you may have noticed in the reader the badge has returned to the usual one. This is because our poets are accustomed to seeing that one, so I set it as my featured image. We’ve been missing a few of our regulars for the past couple of weeks since I changed the image, and I’m worried the new image might have lost them. I hope they come back soon.


Check out the COMMENTS for entries this week, and come back throughout the week to see more links to poems as they come in.

Drop by on Wednesday for the Décima Poetry Challenge. Sometimes the two challenges have similar themes you can unite over the week.

Click HERE for last week’s collected links for easy access to the poems of last week’s poets. (LIFE & View)

Click HERE. To learn about the new style I’ve created called Shi Rensa Haiku and how to write one, maybe even for the challenges.



An updated How to Write Haiku in English. that has just a little more detail and for knowledge and perhaps craft. And how to do a Pingback.

Useful Links.
Thesaurus: LIFE, View
Thesaurus.com
Merriam-Webster Dictionary

The Guidelines:

  1. Take the two words and write a Haiku. I use Haiku in English (the link shows you how) as my style, which is 5 syllables for the first line, 7 for the second, and 5 for the third, but you can use what you like.
    • The link above has links on how to write Haibun and Tanka. You can also do the 3/5/3 form if you like instead of the 5/7/5 that I usually use. Write, share, and have fun. For syllable help,
    • For syllables for each word, and different definitions, you use the definition that works for you Haiku. You can also use SYNONYMS. Go to Thesaurus.com for synonym help.
  1.  
  2. Copy the link of your finished haiku URL and paste in a comment below so we can all go and visit your Haiku.
    • You can do a pingback. What’s a pingback? Place the URL from the address bar up top from this post as a link within your post. Your inclusion of the link encourages others to try the challenge, be creative, and join a community to find friends and more followers (hopefully). I honestly gain nothing with more people visiting the post. I don’t have ads running that generates revenue by your visit or by clicks on whatever WordPress has put up.
    • Click HERE for a detailed post on PINGBACKS.
  3. If you like, copy the image in this post and place it within their post, just to show the Haiku is part of this challenge.
    • I am not saying you need or even should, but if you would like to do so then go ahead.


The Challenge Words!

GRACE and Slip

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white backgroundSEASONAL BADGE


 


 

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

@RonovanWrites

 © Copyright-All rights reserved by ronovanwrites.wordpress.com 2020

 

an opened heart – a haiku a poem

~*~

*

~*~

with a gentle grace

her fingers flow across keys

chains slip from his heart

~*~

*

~*~

 


fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background

How to Write a Haiku in English Form

A poem for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge of GRACE and Slip.

IF YOU HAVEN’T VISITED ALL OF OUR POETS SO FAR THIS WEEK, MAKE CERTAIN TO CHECK OUT THE ONES THAT HAVE COME IN RECENTLY. SO MANY GET OVERLOOKED BECAUSE THEY AREN’T ABLE TO GET TO THE PROMPT AND FREE TO WRITE AS QUICKLY AS, SAY, THE GUY THAT COMES UP WITH HE WORDS AND CAN WRITE HIS POEMS LAST WEEEK FOR THIS WEEK IF HE WANTED TO.


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Haiku Challenge 333 Poets Collected.

Links to the 30 Poets with 3 NEW BLOGS from last week’s challenge of LIFE and View and their haiku. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

 

fall haiku challenge poets collected japanese maple with black and white background


Ritu Bathal | But I Smile Anyway…:  Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 333 Life and View | But I Smile Anyway…


The Zeisy Geist | Deviating Vibes: https://deviatingvibes.wordpress.com/challenges/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge/333-life-and-view/


Don’t Forget the Half: Let’s Be Better Humans – Don’t Forget the Half


Ear to the Ground:   https://eartotheground.blog/2020/11/24/life-view-haiku/   NEW BLOG TO THE CHALLENGE


William Thomas Engleson:

Wise Words

I hear, in dark times,
her wise words, “Take the long view.
Life will be simpler.”

http://www.engleson.ca


Bob Fairfield:   http://bobfairfield.org/RonovanwritesHaikuchallenge333


Geetha Balvannanathan’s Blog:  https://geethaprodhom.wordpress.com/2020/11/25/the-way-of-the-breath/


Denis | Haiku Hound:   life cycle – Haiku hound


Regina | Help from Heaven:     The Joy of Nature’s Beauty – Help from Heaven


Laura McHarrie @ The Hidden Edge:   Awesome – (Weekly Haiku Prompt #333) – Laura McHarrie @ The Hidden Edge   


J-Dubs Grin and Bear It:    Haiku – Life & View ~ 11/23/20 – J-Dubs Grin and Bear It   


Alice | Malham Magna:   The past is present in the future | Malham Magna


Kat Myrman | Like Mercury Colliding:   off the edge | like mercury colliding…


MMA Storytime:   A New Perspective


Mukhamani (Lakshmi Bhat}:    Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 333 Life and View. – Mukhamani


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:       Hoarfrost #Haiku #Poem | Mystical Strings


Night Owl Poetry | Dorinda Duclos :      On man’s inhumanity to man ~ #senryu #poetry | Night Owl Poetry – Dorinda Duclo     NEW BLOG TO THE CHALLENGE


Lizl Bennefeld | Quilted Poetry:     https://thewrittenword.net/journal/2020/11/23/signs-of-life-poem-a-day-23-november-2020/


Ronovan Writes:  Growing Pains – a haiku a poem | ronovanwrites 


Sketching Words:   https://sketchingwords.com/2020/11/24/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-333/


Straight From My Heart:    Shaping of Viewpoints – Straight From My Heart


Tessa Dean | Author:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 333 Life and View – Tessa Dean – Author


The Bag Lady:  Ronovanwrites Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge – The Bag Lady


Lisa | The Verse Smith:  https://theversesmith.blogspot.com/2020/11/disappearances.html


KatB | The Woman with Wheels | K-POPAWHEELY: Has 2020 Changed…? – K-popawheely      NEW BLOG TO THE CHALLENGE



Tina Stewart Brakebill”  true life revealed (a haiku) – Tina Stewart Brakebill


To Wear a Rainbow:  wide angle shot | To Wear A Rainbow


Xenia | Whippet Wisdom:   Haiku: Golden Glen – Whippet Wisdom – a Highland Journey


WillWillowDot21:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 333 Life and View. | willowdot21


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© 2020- Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

The first reported case of deviled ham.

I thought I would share something from my first year of blogging. My thankful things on here are pretty much the same. I have a couple of newer ones I’ve come to appreciate and give me inspiration for living life and for continuing to live. Those to may sound the same but they are completely different. Have a Happy Thanksgiving. Give thanks for those and what you are thankful for, and what this day has come to represent in the hearts of those across the nation.

Ronovan's avatarronovanwrites

It’s early here. Especially early considering it is Thanksgiving Day in the United States. I have a blanket wrapped around my legs, the warmth makes the joints and bones feel decent. Who would have thought at my age I would need to be doing that? But then no one would have ever thought Mr. Human Heater would ever need a blanket.

So what am I thankful for today,

on this National Holiday?

I suppose I need to start with God,

and continue with that I at least still have a bod.

Family must be in the picture,

I hope that cranberry salad is of the right mixture.

Loved ones and smiling faces galore,

or the thoughts that I most adore.

Creativity and my imagination,

are two things needing appreciation.

Of course my friends here and there,

and those most loved everywhere.

You come upon a holiday and wonder what to…

View original post 379 more words

Décima Challenge 32 Poets Collected

12 Poets from last week’s challenge of SLEEP and their Décimas. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

Sleep led to many different interpretations this time. I know poetry should be that way, but often with such polarizing times in the world thoughts run along the same paths. This week we branched out from politics to slumber, to some complete nonsense (waving my hand on that last one).

Decima Challenge Poets Collected Image


CSNelson | Don’t Forget the Half:  Let’s Be Better Humans


L | EASTELMHURST.A.GO.GO:  Apple Tea


http://www.engleson.ca

Vaccine Love

The dark snakes in, the dusk is frost,
The wind is fierce, the snow is deep.
My heart pumps slow, a restless sleep,
The covers creased, dreams nightmare-tossed.

We have paid a ferocious cost,
This Covid war, lost dividends,
of joy, of breath, my foes, my friends,
as ‘cross the globe the virus spreads.
Sweet vaccine thoughts invade our heads;
seeking innoculated ends.


Frank Hubeny | Poetry, Short Prose and Walking:   Nightmares on the Gentlest Tier of Hell


Kat Myrman | Like Mercury Colliding:   dare to hope


Mindfills:  https://mindfills.wordpress.com/2020/11/21/fizz-a-decina/


MMA Storytime:  Knockout!


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:    Mystical Strings


Revived Writer:  Lullaby To Open Eyes


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:  Penitence


Ronovan Writes:   Only One Mutton


willowdot21:   Tides of Madness



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© 2020- Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Ronovan Writes Décima Poetry Challenge Prompt No. 33: (BLIND) in the C rhyme line.

You may, if you wish, make some kind of link between the Haiku Challenge prompt of (LIFE and View). and BLIND.

The 2 CHALLENGES are SEPARATE but CAN BE combined if YOU CHOOSE to do so.


Welcome to the Décima Poetry Challenge. Each week we’ll be attempting a Décima, also known as an Espinela, poem.

If you don’t know how to write a Décima, click HERE to go to a post on How to Write an Espinela or Décima Poem.

Or…

Keep reading and find out, with an example included.


  • To last week’s links Décima Poets’ poems written for the prompt for SLEEP, click HERE for all the links in one post. A good opportunity to check out some examples of Décima.

THE CHALLENGE

If you can’t come up with a Décima using the given prompt, you can use a Synonym instead. I don’t want to stall your creativity, and with the possibility of a synonym, you will certainly write something amazing…or in my case, something that rhymes.

Sites to help:

RhymeZone.com
Thesaurus.com
Merriam-Webster.com  Use this site for syllables. I’ve used several online counters and too many have given different counts for the same word, so I use the dictionary now. Also, in some parts of the English speaking world, the syllables may come out in the spoken language a bit differently. And that’s okay. Write to enjoy, too learn, and yes, try to get the syllables right, but above all create and enjoy.

Here is the quick description of a Décima:

There are 10 lines of poetry that rhyme. 8 syllables.
There is a set rhyming pattern we must stick to. abbaaccddc

The prompt word given (in the post heading) must appear at the end of one of the given rhyme lines, either A, B, C, or D.

Let’s look at the rhyme pattern once again and you will see what I mean.

The rhyming pattern is abbaaccddc with a choice of a break between lines 4 and 5, then being abba accddc, which I use in my example below.


For example, if I say in the subject line of the post:

“…(FALL) This week it’s the B rhyme line.”

my Décima might be…

NO!

As the end wept upon the land,

we could hear the approaching fall.

Justice answered the trumpet’s call,

trusting the fight to her troop’s hand.

 

Fate trembles with haste to expand,

through misdeeds by her shameless foe.

Past foolish decisions now crow,

“Wait—no—this was not meant to be.”

They beg the nation, “Hear our plea.

Heal honor, shout, no…no… NO!”

 

Notice the example prompt word ‘FALL’ is in line 2, the first B line, and its rhyme is in line 3, matching the rhyming pattern of abba accddc.


For today’s challenge, the word BLIND must be one of the C line words. Then the other C line(s) word(s) must rhyme with BLIND.

Sometimes you break the rhyme into two stanzas using the following rhyme pattern. abba/accddc.

Once you complete your poem and post it on your blog, copy the link and place it in the comments in this post. That way other people can visit your post and check out your poem. You can also put the link of this challenge in your post to let your followers know where to go if they want to participate. This is called a Pingback. This is not mandatory to join in or to put your post link in the comments. Click HERE to find out how to do a Pingback.

Reblogging is great as well.

Some people like to copy and paste the challenge image into their posts. That’s okay with me.

Ronovan Writes Decima Challenge Image

 

 

 


 

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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Upside Down – a poem.

Upside Down

 

Been in disguise since I was twenty-five,

never knowing if I should live or die.

Always thinking this world left me alone,

feeling it deeply through blood and bone.

Needing answers with these decades of doubt,

reaching for a handhold before I shout.

Then I met a small Carolina town,

flipping this Southern boy’s world upside down.

So close it hurts can touch but not feel it,

thrown up obstacles I fight to not quit.

This mask is slipping, years I’m passing through,

with no doubts I’ll live now that I found you.

 

ronovan writes poetry black words on transparent background


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Growing Pains – a haiku a poem

~*~

*

~*~

life view’s ebb and flow

with time’s changes and stages,

our hope grows and grows

~*~

*

~*~

 


A poem for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge of LIFE and View.

IF YOU HAVEN’T VISITED ALL OF OUR POETS SO FAR THIS WEEK, MAKE CERTAIN TO CHECK OUT THE ONES THAT HAVE COME IN RECENTLY. SO MANY GET OVERLOOKED BECAUSE THEY AREN’T ABLE TO GET TO THE PROMPT AND FREE TO WRITE AS QUICKLY AS, SAY, THE GUY THAT COMES UP WITH HE WORDS AND CAN WRITE HIS POEMS LAST WEEEK FOR THIS WEEK IF HE WANTED TO.

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background

How to Write a Haiku in English Form


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© 2020 Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.

Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 333 Life and View.

A new Seasonal Badge for the Challenge is below if you would like to use it. Some of you may have noticed in the reader the badge has returned to the usual one. This is because our poets are accustomed to seeing that one, so I set it as my featured image. We’ve been missing a few of our regulars for the past couple of weeks since I changed the image, and I’m worried the new image might have lost them. I hope they come back soon.


Check out the COMMENTS for entries this week, and come back throughout the week to see more links to poems as they come in.

Drop by on Wednesday for the Décima Poetry Challenge. Sometimes the two challenges have similar themes you can unite over the week.

Click HERE for last week’s collected links for easy access to the poems of last week’s poets. (EBB & Flow)

Click HERE. To learn about the new style I’ve created called Shi Rensa Haiku and how to write one, maybe even for the challenges.



An updated How to Write Haiku in English. that has just a little more detail and for knowledge and perhaps craft. And how to do a Pingback.

Useful Links.
Thesaurus: LIFE, View
Thesaurus.com
Merriam-Webster Dictionary

The Guidelines:

  1. Take the two words and write a Haiku. I use Haiku in English (the link shows you how) as my style, which is 5 syllables for the first line, 7 for the second, and 5 for the third, but you can use what you like.
    • The link above has links on how to write Haibun and Tanka. You can also do the 3/5/3 form if you like instead of the 5/7/5 that I usually use. Write, share, and have fun. For syllable help,
    • For syllables for each word, and different definitions, you use the definition that works for you Haiku. You can also use SYNONYMS. Go to Thesaurus.com for synonym help.
  1.  
  2. Copy the link of your finished haiku URL and paste in a comment below so we can all go and visit your Haiku.
    • You can do a pingback. What’s a pingback? Place the URL from the address bar up top from this post as a link within your post. Your inclusion of the link encourages others to try the challenge, be creative, and join a community to find friends and more followers (hopefully). I honestly gain nothing with more people visiting the post. I don’t have ads running that generates revenue by your visit or by clicks on whatever WordPress has put up.
    • Click HERE for a detailed post on PINGBACKS.
  3. If you like, copy the image in this post and place it within their post, just to show the Haiku is part of this challenge.
    • I am not saying you need or even should, but if you would like to do so then go ahead.


The Challenge Words!

LIFE and View

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white backgroundSEASONAL BADGE


 


 

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@RonovanWrites

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Haiku Challenge 332 Poets Collected.

Links to the 29 Poets with 3 NEW POETS for last week’s challenge of EBB and Flow and their haiku. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

 

fall haiku challenge poets collected japanese maple with black and white background


Bend Branches:   On a Distant Shore: Pull Up a Seat.   NEW POET THIS WEEK!


The Zesty Geist | Deviating Vibes:  https://deviatingvibes.wordpress.com/challenges/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge/332-ebb-and-flow/   6 This week. Visit and get a vocabulary lesson. He did.


William Thomas Engleson:

Tsunami Dreams

Pandemic tide, we
chart your ebb, your deadly flow,
your tsunami dreams.

 

Tsunami Dreams-shi rensa

Pandemic tide, we
chart your ebb, your deadly flow,
your tsunami dreams.

Your tsunami dreams,
your virus soars, crests in rage,
poised to spread your curse.

Poised to spread your curse,
amoral, effervescent,
thoughtless to a fault.

Thoughtless to a fault,
Covid-19’s deadly surge
shrouds the waiting earth.

http://www.engleson.ca


Geetha Balvannanathan’s Blog:   Goodbye to Royalty    Her 6 this week.


Regina | Help from Heaven:    How I Miss the Ocean!   


Laura McHarrie @ The Hidden Edge:   Fashion    


J-Dubs Grin and Bear It:  Haiku – Ebb & Flow ~ 11/16/20


Kat Myrman | Like Mercury Colliding:   dare to hope


Let’s read our words:   Weekly Haiku Prompt | Let’s read our words  NEW POET THIS WEEK!


Lauren | LSS Attitude of Gratitude:   https://lssattitudeofgratitude.wordpress.com/2020/11/16/ronovan-writes-haiku-ebb-flow/


Alice | Malham Magna:  The Tide | Malham Magna


Mindfills:  Petunia   


MMA Storytime:  Rise & Fall


Mukhamani (Lakshmi Bhat}:     Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 332 EBB & Flow – Mukhamani 


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:   Lifetime 3TC 


Lizl Bennefeld | Quilted Poetry:     The Tides of Love


Ronovan Writes:

Balancing – haiku

Life’s Ebb and Flow – a Shi Rensa

a haiku a poem


Sketching Words:   https://sketchingwords.com/2020/11/16/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-332/


Sound Mind Journey:    the tide is singing


Straight From My Heart:   Sunset On A Wintry Day  


Oneta Hays | Sweet Aroma:   WELCOME, WEE ONE


Tessa Dean | Author:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 332 EBB & Flow – Tessa Dean – Author


The Bag Lady:  Ronovanwrites Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt 11-16-20 – The Bag Lady


Kenneth | The Lotus:   ebb and flow – The Lotus     NEW POET THIS WEEK


Lisa | The Verse Smith:   https://theversesmith.blogspot.com/2020/11/weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge.html


The Tenth Zodiac:  Ronovan Weekly Haiku Prompt Challenge #332 – The_tenth_zodiac


Pat | Thoughts and Entanglements:  Ebb & Flow | thoughts and entanglements


Xenia | Whippet Wisdom:   tidal secrets


WillWillowDot21:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 332 EBB & Flow | willowdot21


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© 2020- Ronovan Hester Copyright reserved. The author asserts his moral and legal rights over this work.