Friday, February 26, 2016

Tricubes: Therapy, Peaceful Pond, Elusive, Sleepless Night, Curtain's Up!

Tricubes are a form of poetry that was recently discussed in Robert Lee Brewer's poetry blog. According to his column, "the rules of Tricubes are:
  • Each line contains three syllables.
  • Each stanza contains three lines.
  • Each poem contains three stanzas."
I've been practicing this poetry form and having some fun with it. There are no rules for them as far as meter or rhyme, but I like adding rhyme to them. They are quick and easy to write, so I wrote several. I posted them with some of my photos to help bring them to life.

Therapy

Yellow birds
adorn shrubs.
Time to eat.

Red berries
draw them in,
juicy sweet.

My green eyes
watching them:
life complete.


Peaceful Pond

Turtles perch
on a log
in the sun.

Ducks circle,
bottoms up,
splash for fun.

Bullfrogs croak.
Sun goes down.
Day is done.



Elusive

Enchanted
dragonfly,
grace in flight.

Gossamer
wings reflect 
the sunlight,

help her to
flit away
out of sight.



Sleepless Night

Train rumbles
far away
down the track.

Keeps going,
chug-a-chug,
can't turn back.

Lullaby
late at night,
click-click-clack.



Curtain's Up!

Theater 
marquee lights
can't compare

as sunset's
orange glow
fills the air.

Neon sky
steals the show
on town square.


Thursday, February 18, 2016

Hidden


Hidden

Crocus buds wait to bloom
beneath the layered snow.
Dormant seeds left behind
wait their turn to grow.

Bunnies burrow below the shrubs,
huddled against the wind.
Frogs retreat to frozen mud,
submerged 'til season's end. 

Winter's blanket covers all
in frozen, muffled white.
Then spring leaps out from under it.
Surprise! Surprise! What sweet delight!


Friday, February 12, 2016

Young Girl's Retreat



It's 22 degrees here today and everything is covered with snow, so I thought I'd post something to get my mind (and yours) off the cold. I wrote this quite a while ago. It is based on summertime memories I have of playing near a creek when I was a child.


Young Girl's Retreat

Driving by, you would have missed it.
It was a small creek, not much to see,
but from the seat of my bike, it was an oasis.
It sauntered through a corn field,
bubbled over rocks, gurgled peacefully.

I leaned my bike against the guard rail
and scrambled down the bank.
I stirred up dragonflies from the weeds 
and took a seat at water's edge
on an old wooden plank.

Turtles sunning themselves on a log
were startled by my noise
and slipped into the murky green.
Minnows in the water 
darted into the shadows
hoping they hadn't been seen.

Dirt filtered down from the road above
when cars rumbled by.
I'd swing my hand through the air
at the nearby buzz of a pesky horse fly.

I'd float little boats down the stream
made of Queen Anne's Lace.
They'd swirl and dip and careen
in a wet, frilly flower race.

I'd toss stones into the water
just to hear them splash.
Flip crawdads over with a stick.
They'd flip back in a flash.

I left my troubles there
on the banks of that stream.
Midst the cattails 
where the red-winged blackbirds flew.

I'd return home with not a care in the world, 
except for maybe, too much sun 
on my cheeks and nose
and a bit of creek mud stuck 
to the bottom of my shoe.

---from Musings 2013, copyright © 2013 Williams County Writers Group

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

The Dancing Rhino

I saw a short video on Facebook that showed an orphaned baby rhino and a lamb who became friends and played together. I loved it so much that it inspired me to write the children's story poem below. You can see a longer version of the video and read more about the true, real-life story of the rhino and lamb who became friends here. (The names of the rhino and lamb in the poem have been changed to protect the innocent.)

The Dancing Rhino

Rex the baby rhino wanted to frolic
like his friend Lily the lamb.
Lily leaped into the air,
as if she were on springs--as if she had wings!
Rex lunged, lurched, and lumbered.
WHAM, SLAM, WHAM, BAM!

Full of glee and enchantment,
Lily bobbled, bubbled, and bounced.
Clumsily, Rex heaved his weight.
He thundered, trampled, and trounced.

"Stop! Stop!" cried the birds at poor Rex.
His stompings shook the trees.
The birds tumbled from the branches.
"Stop your stompings," cried the birds, "Stop it, please!"

Rex felt sad to be scolded.
He wanted to dance and prance,
but he was too big and clumsy.
He couldn't do it--not a chance!

Kind Lily encouraged her friend,
knowing patience and practice pays off.
She showed him how again and again,
giving no heed to the grouchy birds' scoff.

Soon Rex was light on his feet.
He frolicked with sweet Lily by his side.
Who knew a rhino could learn to dance?
Shuffle, shuffle, step, step, glide.


Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Unique

Unique

“If everyone else jumped off a bridge,
would you jump too?
You need to be yourself, be unique.
To your own self, be true.”

“Why do you have that wild, purple hair?
Don’t you want to fit in?
People are laughing at you.
Don’t you care?”

It seems to me there’s a fine line
between fitting in and standing out.
Sometimes it takes a lifetime
to know what life is all about.

We struggle to make our marks;
to be our own best selves,
because we all want to be special
...just like everyone else.


***********

My book giveaway ends tomorrow. If you haven't yet entered for a chance to win a copy of my book, Rainbow Chaser, you still have time. Please read my previous post here for details on how to enter. Feel free to tell your friends about the giveaway too. Good luck!
  

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Dance in the Fountains ... And a Giveaway!



Dance in the Fountains 

You won't have a choice.

You will spend much of your life 
worrying and working
and doing things you don't want to do.

So to nourish your soul
and revive your spirit,
make sure you also do things 
to take care of you.

Make sure you take time
to dance in the fountains.
Feel the joy of the spray 
as you splatter and splash.

Dance away your troubles
as the water falls around you,
catching the sun 
in sparkle and flash.

**************


ENTER FOR A CHANCE TO WIN! ANNOUNCING A GIVEAWAY!

If you don't yet own a copy of my book, Rainbow Chaser, and you would like to, or if you do own a copy and would like to have another to give to a friend, I am holding a giveaway through Amazon for a free paperback edition.  

Here are the requirements for participation:

 * This giveaway is only open to legal residents of the 50 United States and the District of Columbia.

 *Entrants must be 18 years of age or older to participate.

 * Entrants must have an Amazon account and follow Connie Biltz on Amazon. (You can easily follow me from the link to enter below. Following me will allow you to have occasional updates from Amazon and from me about my work.)

Click on this link for your chance to enter to win:  


ENTER GIVEAWAY HERE!

 NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Giveaway ends the earlier of 1/20/16 at 11:59PM, or when all prizes are claimed. See Official Rules. The official rules for an Amazon Giveaway can be found at this link.

GOOD LUCK, EVERYONE! 

Monday, January 4, 2016

Beckoning Beach


Beckoning Beach

Blue twilight skies
hold iridescent clouds
that hide the sinking sun.
Rolling white caps
whisper and whoosh
keeping sandpipers on the run.

The waves embrace 
the cold, wet sand,
sidling closer until within reach.
A gull cries overhead
as the waves retreat 
from the enticing, beckoning beach.

"Come, come, come to the beach.
Write your worries in the sand;
the water will wash them all away.
Collect some shells;
watch the hermit crabs dance."
The beach is beckoning, calling,
"Come, come, come to the sea today."