Haiku Challenge 336 Poets Collected.

Links to the 29 Poets with around 37 Poems from last week’s challenge of MAD and Sane and their haiku. All links open in a new window when clicked on.

Please visit the blogs you haven’t yet. Visiting and clicking that like, if we like the poem, is something of an encouragement. No, we don’t NEED likes, but they’re nice to have.

Here are Four of our Poets who’s offerings jumped out to me this week. I don’t like doing this very often, because I do like everyone’s poetry. It’s just some have a message or accomplished something with how they put their piece together I wanted others to check out. Just scroll down for their links.

WillowDot

Mindfills

Revived Writer

The Zesty Geist | Deviating Vibes

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


Annette Rochelle Aben:   No Never Mind


But I Smile Anyway… | Rita Bhathal:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 337 MAD and Sane | But I Smile Anyway…


Tessa Dean | Author: Insane


The Zesty Geist | Deviating Vibes:   Anxiety    Peace     Puzzle (Three Haiku this week)


Don’t Forget The Half:  Stop the Madness


Ear to the Ground:  Why Now? Three Haiku (includes some nice artwork)


Endless River:  lucid Dreams


William Thomas Engleson:

A December 14th,2020 Electoral College Series of Moments

E-College voting:
A slightly mad process…still
sane is as sane does.

A December 14th,2020 Electoral College Series of Moments-a Shi Rensa

E-College voting:
A slightly mad process…still
sane is as sane does.

Sane is as sane does,
We hop, skip, jump ‘cross the land,
tallying the votes.

Tallying the votes,
is a fractured procedure-
Fractured and fractious.

Fractured and fractious
though it may be, it will end
With a beginning.

http://www.engleson.ca


Bob Fairfield:  https://bobfairfield.org/2020/12/14/ronovan-writes-haiku-weekly-prompt-336/


Guarded Heart Tapestry | Jael Stevens:   Mad or Sane…


Haiku Hound | Denis:  state of mind (includes nice sunset photography)


Help from Heaven | Regina:      Keeping Fulfilling Your Dream!


Malham Magna | Alice:  I pity you  A Tanka


LSS Attitude of Gratitude  | Lauren:   Ronovan Writes Haiku – Mad and Sane – ❀ Welcome To LSS Attitude of Gratitude❀


Mindfills:    Bashful


MMA Storytime:  Fighting For Sanity


Mukhamani (Lakshmi Bhat}:    Mad Bites (my name for it, R)            


Mystical Strings | Dr. Crystal Grimes:   Tidings   


Quilted Poetry | Lizl Bennefeld:     shelter from the storm


Revived Writer:  Insanely Mad and Nervous


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:  https://arthurrichardson.org/2020/12/15/haiku/


Ronovan Writes:  

Fraudzilla (the littlest tyrant)

THE FRUSTRATED

THE FOOLISH…


Scribblans:    Sometimes I Don’t Rhymes: Ronovan Writes – Mad and Sane – Scribblans


Sketching Words | Diane Puterbaugh:  Two for one, The husband just had to get in on th challenge this week. But that’s okay, got a cat picture included.  (link verbiage mine, Ron)


Sound Mind Journey:  Rise above a storm.


Straight From My Heart:    A Thin Line


The Bag Lady:  Ronovanwrites Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt 12-15-20 – The Bag Lady


The Verse Smith | Lisa:   While Mad Men Rage


WillowDot21:  Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 336 MAD and Sane | willowdot21


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

FRIDAY FICTION with RONOVAN WRITES Prompt Challenge Holiday Special.

Prompt for Challenge

  • ‘Santa arrives at the home of Harry Potter where the Potter children have left cookies and milk for Santa to eat. He does. What happens next?’ REQUIRED (Don’t worry if you don’t know much or anything about Potter. It’s a world of magic.)

  • Word Count is 500 words or less. REQUIRED

  • Copy and paste your URL in the comments of the challenge post, or do a pingback to this post. Click HERE to see how to do a pingback.

For proofreading of your work, you might check out Grammarly.com. They have a free option that you can use in your browser as well as an add-on that works right here in the WordPress Post Editor. It also works in the comments of sites. An additional feature is you can turn Grammarly off and on for each site you visit.

Useful links:
Grammarly.com
Click HERE for STRIPPING for FICTION or HOW TO WRITE FLASH FICTION.
Click HERE for Dialogue Tags, Action Beats, and the Dialogue Comma.
Click HERE for What’s a GL and PSS got to do with writing.

 


 

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@RonovanWrites

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

…THE WISE – A poem.

…THE WISE

They believe the Old are obsolete.
They burn bridges and widen rifts.
Not grasping with wisdom comes gifts,
and balance makes a base concrete.
Two can get twice done in one beat.
Walk the halls with something to add,
setting the futures launching pad.
But as the recent past tells us,
none listens enough to discuss.
Hope falls before a power-grab.

 

A companion poem to my haiku THE FOOLISH… for the Haiku Challenge this week of MAD and Sane.


How to write an Espinela or Décima poem.

My entry for this week’s Décima Poetry Challenge NO. 36 GIFT.


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

THE FOOLISH – a haiku a poem

THE FOOLISH

rabid with triumph

the legion lays waste to foes

scorning wise guidance

 

 

 

A companion poem for …THE WISE, a Décima poem for this week’s challenge.


How to Write a Haiku in English Form

A haiku for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge.

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background


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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. 36: (GIFT) in the B rhyme line.

You may, if you wish, make some kind of link between the Haiku Challenge prompt of (MAD and Sane). and this Décima Challenge of GIFT in the B rhyme line. This means you could write a haiku post using the prompt words. Then do a Décima post 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.
  • For last week’s Décima Poets’ poems written for the prompt for KNOCK, click HERE for all their links in one post. A good opportunity to check out some examples of Décima.

****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

THE QUICK DESCRIPTION OF HOW TO WRITE A DÉCIMA:

  1. There are 10 lines of poetry that rhyme.
  2. 8 syllables per line.
  3. There is a SET RHYMING PATTERN we must stick to. ABBAACCDDC OR  two stanzas of ABBA/ACCDDC.

THE CHALLENGE PART:

  1. The prompt word given (in the post heading) must appear at the end of one of the given rhyme lines given (in the post heading), either A, B, C, or D. Let’s say for an EXAMPLE we use the word (STABLE) in the D line. ALWAYS DEFER TO THE WORD AND RHYME LINE IN THE POST HEADING. Sometimes I might miss changing those spots in the challenge post.
  2. The other rhyme line(s) should rhyme with the given word (STABLE). Then the other (D) line should rhyme. Words such as Able, Cable, and Fable.
  3. Once you complete your poem pingback and/or copy/paste your post link into the comments blow.

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.


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.

 

ONCE YOU COMPLETE YOUR POEM PINGBACK AND/OR COPY/PASTE YOUR LINK INTO THE COMMENTS BELOW.

  • 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.

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.

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 35 Poets Collected

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

We had several of a holiday season and along with that vein the true overall why the holiday should be celebrated and honestly how one can be a complete part of it.

All the poems are great this week and deserve a visit and read. Not one is weak. Sometimes we kind of make our missteps but not this time.

Some poems that were outside the holiday theme that stood out this week:

MUST READS

The Dressmaker by  Arthur Richardson

Lost at Birth by Nima Mohan

Ruby by the Willowy one herself Dot

 

Decima Challenge Poets Collected Image


Ritu Bhathal | But I Smile Anyway…:    Do You Believe?


L | EASTELMHURST.A.GO.GO:   The Wraiths


http://www.engleson.ca

The Visitor

I hear the ticking of the clock,
time chiming away in the night,
shadows swaying in the moonlight,
the chatter of night sounds: night talk.

Barely awake, there comes a knock,
A stranger in the forest, lost,
disoriented, chilled from frost,
And so, a late-night rum toddy,
A winter thaw of the body,
A COVID kindness, a bridge crossed.


Bob Fairfield:  https://bobfairfield.org/2020/12/09/ronovan-writes-decima-challenge-35/


Frank Hubeny | Poetry, Short Prose and Walking:   Knocking   


Dr. Crystal Grimes | Mystical Strings:    The Open Door


Rant Along:   RONOVAN WRITES : Knock | Two on a Rant


Revived Writer:  A Knock on the Door


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:   The Dressmaker


Ronovan Writes:   Do they know…


Nima Mohan | The Tenth Zodiac:  Lost at Birth


willowdot21:   Ruby



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

THE FRUSTRATED – a haiku a poem

THE FRUSTRATED

sanity speaks to

those possessing intellect

grow mad with the fool

 


How to Write a Haiku in English Form

A haiku for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge.

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background


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

Fraudzilla (the littlest tyrant) – a haiku a poem

FRAUDZILLA

the mad tyrant stomps,

to smash cities, citizens

with no sane support

 


How to Write a Haiku in English Form

A haiku for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge.

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background


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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 336 MAD and Sane

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. (CURL and Paw)

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: MAD, Sane
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!

MAD and Sane

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


 


 

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@RonovanWrites

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

 

Haiku Challenge 335 Poets Collected.

Links to the 24 Poets from last week’s challenge of CURL and Paw 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:   Mangy Mane | Annette Rochelle Aben


Ritu Bhathal | But I Smile Anyway…:   Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 335 CURL and Paw | But I Smile Anyway…


Don’t Forget The Half:   Haiku: Pesky Pups – Don’t Forget the Half


Ear to the Ground:   https://eartotheground.blog/2020/12/08/haiku-words-and-worlds/


William Thomas Engleson:

Old Cats

Once in a long while,
Our old cat stretches her paws,
curls up at my feet.

 

Old Cats-Shi Rensa

Once in a long while,
our old cat stretches her paws,
curls up at my feet.

Curls up at my feet,
my toes strain, shift the blanket,
and then she pounces.

And then she pounces,
playful, frisky, like old times,
those lost pre-Covid days.

Those lost pre-Covid days,
When old men, old cats recalled
how simple life was.

http://www.engleson.ca


Bob Fairfield:    https://bobfairfield.org/2020/12/08/ronovan-writes-haiku-challenge-335/


Guarded Heart Tapestry | Jael Stevens:    Can’t Refuse Curled Paw – Guarded Heart Tapestry


Regina | Help from Heaven:    A Dog’s Comforting Love: RonovanWrites Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge – Help from Heaven


J-Dubs Grin and Bear It:     Haiku – Curl & Paw ~ 12/7/20 – J-Dubs Grin and Bear It


Alice | Malham Magna:   Reassurance | Malham Magna


Lauren | LSS Attitude of Gratitude:   Ronovan Writes Haiku – – ❀ Welcome To LSS Attitude of Gratitude❀


Florence | Meanings and Musings: fear/trust #haiku – MEANINGS AND MUSINGS


MMA Storytime:    Dropped to the Canvas


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


Lizl Bennefeld | Quilted Poetry:     Puppy Time | Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 335 – Quilted Poetry


Ranting Along:

Unconditional
love curled next to my body,
paw rests on my heart.


Arthur Richardson | Poems, Polemicks and Licks:   https://arthurrichardson.org/2020/12/08/curl-and-paw/


Ronovan Writes:   Envious Kitten – a haiku a poem | ronovanwrites


Scribblans:    Sometimes I Don’t Rhymes: Ronovan Writes – Curl and Paw – Scribblans


Straight From My Heart:    Excitement – Straight From My Heart


The Bag Lady:  Ronovanwrites Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt 12-7-20 – The Bag Lady


Lisa | The Verse Smith:   https://theversesmith.blogspot.com/2020/12/morning-lap-time.html


The Tenth Zodiac:  Ronovan’s Weekly Haiku – #335- Curl and Paw – The_tenth_zodiac


WillWillowDot21:    Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 335 CURL and Paw. | willowdot21


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

Do they know… – A poem.

Do they know…

Ever closer ticktocks the clock,
nearing the minute, the hour,
of the day some think sweet, some sour.
All wait to glimpse the holy frock.

Tots faking sleep wait for the knock,
be it on the roof or the door,
as long as they get more, more, more.
Don’t fret to wrap in bows or twine,
cause all you’ll hear is mine, mine, mine.
Don’t they know why the day is for?

 


How to write an Espinela or Décima poem.

My entry for this week’s Décima Poetry Challenge NO. 35 KNOCK.


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

Envious Kitten – a haiku a poem

LIFE REMAINS

paw curls around door

playfully asking entry

jealous of her aunt

 

There’s a somewhat, or not so recent addition to the cat menagerie of the house. Actually, there are only two now. Things happen, and I’d rather not think about them. But Fluffy is still here, the daughter of Kitty, who helped me when she showed up one day and stayed for years. Now we have Stormy. She started at as a gray furball of a kitten, born to the bonkers, psycho cat you’d ever meet. She became a biter, or was already but became more so. Stormy on the other hand is the sweetest, if not the most ADD cat I’ve ever seen, but she is still mostly a kitten, not even a year yet. Not even close.

She has the nices markings. I’ve never seen the stripes go around the neck and chest before. When she lays on her side and stretches out, you see all her white hair with the dark gray stripes and it’s a shocking contrast, and she is the longest cat. Her legs are…she would be a runway model of cats if they had one, they’re that long. But she’ll let you pick her up and cuddle, her motor vibrating your chest and ear. Until she wants down. Her coat is the softest I’ve ever felt. It’s like stroking, well I can’t really think of anything this luxurious. It’s smooth, thick, not long, but not super short either.

All around an entertaining cat that figured out how to come inside for mealtimes with her Aunt Fluffy, not by blood. Fluffy is more like a mother than an Aunt. You can see Stormy watching her and copying everything she does. And Fluffy catches chipmunks and mice to show Stormy what her job is around the house, but Stormy just thinks the lifeless things are toys. She’s never tasted wild game so far.

Make sure to click on Fluffy’s photo to see her eye color.

 

 

Image of Stormy, a young gray female catt with darker gray stripes and yellow eyes.

Stormy

 

Adult brown/sable cat with green eyes.Fluffy


How to Write a Haiku in English Form

A haiku for this week’s Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge.

fall haiku challenge badge japanese maple with black and white background


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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. 35: (KNOCK) in the A rhyme line.

You may, if you wish, make some kind of link between the Haiku Challenge prompt of (CURL and Paw). and this Décima Challenge of KNOCK in the A rhyme line. This means you could write a haiku post using the prompt words. Then do a Décima post 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.

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

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

THE QUICK DESCRIPTION OF HOW TO WRITE A DÉCIMA:

  1. There are 10 lines of poetry that rhyme.
  2. 8 syllables per line.
  3. There is a SET RHYMING PATTERN we must stick to. ABBAACCDDC OR  two stanzas of ABBA/ACCDDC.

THE CHALLENGE PART:

  1. The prompt word given (in the post heading) must appear at the end of one of the given rhyme lines given (in the post heading), either A, B, C, or D. Let’s say for an EXAMPLE we use the word (STABLE) in the D line. ALWAYS DEFER TO THE WORD AND RHYME LINE IN THE POST HEADING. Sometimes I might miss changing those spots in the challenge post.
  2. The other rhyme line(s) should rhyme with the given word (STABLE). Then the other (D) line should rhyme. Words such as Able, Cable, and Fable.
  3. Once you complete your poem pingback and/or copy/paste your post link into the comments blow.

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.


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.

 

ONCE YOU COMPLETE YOUR POEM PINGBACK AND/OR COPY/PASTE YOUR LINK INTO THE COMMENTS BELOW.

  • 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.

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.

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 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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@RonovanWrites

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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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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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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.