fancy flourishes
filigree flagrantly free
fantastic flashes!
Jeanne Poland's Poetry Blog
01 May 2015 1 Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: fancy flourishes, fantastic flashes, filagree flagrantly free, flourishes, John Stevens
20 Apr 2015 Leave a comment
Did you doodle with your mouse?
Gobble words; chew the house?
Savor wisdom, burp the glutton?
Clothe the truth, close the button?
31 Dec 2014 Leave a comment
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
A New York City subway train holds 1,200 people. This blog was viewed about 4,300 times in 2014. If it were a NYC subway train, it would take about 4 trips to carry that many people.
11 Dec 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: desire to create, Family, gestation of ideas, insights, literary moments, On Writing Vertically, perspective, Ripatrazone, Rowlands, storytelling, Storytelling Slowed Down, tension, time
Ripatrazone talks about his own writing habits,
and his attraction to moving down within the page, rather than across it:
I write vertically.
I have never been a writer with a lot of time to write.
I am thankful for that. I am not sure what would happen if I had hours to work.
It makes me not want to squander the moments when I sit with a story.
This is a necessary tension.
I am not a writer first.
I have a family, and without them I would have little reason to want to write — or to do anything else.
My desire to create is held in silence during the day, so that my literary moments can be focused and absolute.
“Gestation of Ideas: On Vertical Writing and Living” is a lovely read, no matter if you’re a writer of fiction or nonfiction.
Ripatrazone shares insights on the writing life,
the benefits of slowing down and letting ideas unfold naturally,
and the importance of time and perspective when telling the stories within us.
Storytelling, Slowed Down: On Writing Vertically
by Cheri Lucas Rowlands
10 Dec 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: code, Common Business Oriented Language, computer language, computer programs, definition, Grace Hopper, math, waves
It’s the birthday of one of the people who helped invent the modern computer: Grace Hopper, born in New York City (1906).
She began tinkering around with machines when she was seven years old, dismantling several alarm clocks around the house to see how they worked.
She was especially good at math in school.
She studied math and physics in college, and eventually got a Ph.D. in mathematics from Yale.
Then World War II broke out, and Hopper wanted to serve her country. Her father had been an admiral in the Navy, so she applied to a division of the Navy called WAVES, which stood for Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service.
She was assigned to work on a machine that might help calculate the trajectory of bombs and rockets.
She learned how to program that early computing machine, and wrote the first instruction manual for its use.
She went on to work on several more versions of the same machine. In 1952, Hopper noticed that most computer errors were the result of humans making mistakes in writing programs.
So she attempted to solve that problem by writing a new computer language that used ordinary words instead of just numbers.
It was one of the first computer languages, and the first designed to help ordinary people write computer programs, and she went on to help develop it into the computer language known as COBOL, or “Common Business-Oriented Language.”
10 Dec 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: burgeoning, chaotic, colliding, contemporary Poetry, definition, fractious, growing cultural profile, healthy, inclusivetradition, poetry, squawking, Thomas Lux, true innovation
It’s the birthday of Thomas Lux , born in Northampton, Massachusetts (1946).
He’s known for his surreal, funny poems with titles like
“Commercial Leech Farming Today,”
“Traveling Exhibition of Torture Instruments,”
“The Oxymoron Sisters,” and
“Walt Whitman’s Brain Dropped on Laboratory Floor.”
His books of poetry include Memory’s Handgrenade (1972), The Blind Swimmer: Selected Early Poems 1970-1975 (1996), God Particles (2008), and most recently Child Made of Sand (2012).
He describes contemporary American poetry as
“Burgeoning,
chaotic,
many, many good poets,
a growing cultural profile,
a healthy, squawking, boisterous, fractious, inclusive, tradition and
(true) innovation marrying or colliding.”
13 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: bailbuzzard, clear lieration, closely outlined, definition, determined, halietus, osprey, word significance
word significance
closely outlined – determined
clear liberation
09 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: beholds majesty's grace, david Schulz, definition, exults, insignificant, praise, rises, sings
05 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: buy now, credit, definition, Egret, interest, Maria Oswald Rego, no wings, pay later, rip-tide, UScredit
04 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: Alvin Ailey, choreographer, credit, dancers, definition, musicians, performance, show