Comfort Hoards Its Hope
Winter white, pearl, iced blue, cotton crape:
which color of a tear drop held
against the light foretells what
we, alone, imagine?
In time our comfort
hoards its hope, grieves
our promise
to pray
faith.
© 2011 Maureen E. Doallas
My audio recording of the poem:
Audio Recording of Comfort Hoards Its Hope ~ A Nonet by mdoallas
______________________________My audio recording of the poem:
Audio Recording of Comfort Hoards Its Hope ~ A Nonet by mdoallas
This poem, inspired by the colors in a mood board by photographer Kelly Sauer, takes the form of a nonet, a poetic form that was the subject of a post at One Stop Poetry. The form requires nine lines on any subject, rhyming optional; the first line has nine syllables, the second has eight, and so on until the final line, which comprises a single syllable.
My thanks to Kelly for the inspiration and to Corbie Sinclair for the explanation of the form.
The form is new to me. Writing to a form can make the result seem forced and false. This hasn't happened here - if, indeed, that is what you did. The poem moved me very much.
ReplyDeleteThis is lovely.
ReplyDeleteOh this really is lovely, a bit wistful, but gentle, sweet. I like it very much!
ReplyDelete"In time our comfort hoards its hope." Lovely.
ReplyDeleteoooh
ReplyDeletehow cunningly smooth
and
nonet to me
is new
oh i much like the image of color of a tear drop held
ReplyDeleteagainst the light...beautiful and gentle write
smooth as silk on the tongue...beautiful
ReplyDeletemmm...smoothly done maureen...have seen the form before and you do very well by it...
ReplyDeleteYes, there are worlds we cannot imagine in a single tear drop.
ReplyDeleteLoved the winter images and colors.
Beautiful.
love those words, in time our comfort hoards its hope...hope has been an ongoing theme in my writing, this is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteVery nicely done Maureen...
ReplyDeleteflowed very smoothly... a peaceful and comfy poem. great
ReplyDeleteDifficult to do this much, this subtly with only nine lines, rigidly formatted--here invisibly formatted, and flowing without inhibition. Which color, indeed, can tell what we imagine.
ReplyDeleteYour voice adds comfort to your words.
ReplyDeleteExquisitely and ardently crafted, showing your linguistic genius and heart for the beauty even in apprehending not-white things-- love too the title- xxxj
ReplyDeleteBeautiful.
ReplyDeleteThis nonet must be difficult to pull off as nicely as you have done hear..... very good job! I'm going to try this......
ReplyDeleteStunning, Maureen!
ReplyDeleteVery well written. Have always liked the form. You definitely did it justice. Really enjoyed the piece, thanks
ReplyDeleteThis is beautiful, Maureen.
ReplyDeletethis flow so smoothly and such a lovely write. Love your blog and thank you for sharing
ReplyDeletehttp://gatelesspassage.com/2011/08/29/unsuspecting-creatures-of-the-night/
This is beautiful, and your words fit the form seamlessly.
ReplyDeleteTight, exquisite beauty, Maureen.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed hearing your read...
ReplyDeletethe color of a tear drop is such a beautiful, gentle thought. This made me feel aware and thankful in my grieving state that I am quietly surprised by 'hoarded' comfort slowly warming me with hope from the blanket of faith foundations.
I'm always in awe of poets who can write such expressive work while working within the constraints (though they really aren't) of a certain form. I loved everything about this nonet, Maureen--image, pace, diction. Just wonderful.
ReplyDeleteLove the poem's diminishing form - it works really well here. // Peter.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this vivid, skillful nonet, especially the second half with r and p consonance before the a assonance.
ReplyDeleteAlong with Patricia, I liked hearing you read, and look forward to absorbing more of your resonant writing.
Our comfort hoarding hope...what a thought - but so true...we hold on to it cradle it --very nice..thank you Maureen always enjoy your work..bkm
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteYou sound and read so 'natural' in this form. The verses are so understated and true, and with a perfect, quiet finality in the last word. Very nice.
ReplyDeletegreat express of word done with such a light touch
ReplyDeleteI'm so intrigued by the variations of white in the first line. I'm not a poet, but I do always enjoy finding such creativity within such constraints.
ReplyDelete