DPF / Wright

For a favorite poet and sweets, from Poetry Magazine, November 1981. Yes, this is the year I graduated from high school. And, prose poems, from a fellow Ohioan? Yes, again!

from Against Surrealism / by James Wright

In France, all the way down south in Avallon, people like to eat cake. The local bakers there spin up a little flour and chocolate into the shape of a penguin.

DPF / Wayman

PIA: from August 16, 2014.

One of my favorites for teachers, from Poetry 180. When a student asks if s/he missed anything when s/he was absent, you might consider referring the student (4th-12th grade+) to this poem. Full poem here:
http://www.loc.gov/poetry/180/013.html

from Did I Miss Anything? / by Tom Wayman b. 1945

Nothing. When you are not present
how could something significant occur?

DPF / Strand

PIA: from June 5, 2016.

For wishes, from poetryfoundation.org.

from The Minister of Culture Gets His Wish / by Mark Strand

The Minister of Culture goes home after a grueling day at the office. He lies on his bed and tries to think of nothing, but nothing happens or, more precisely, does not happen.

DPF / Brontë

PIA: from August 24, 2015.

For houses empty and full and also for those empty though full, from Poem A Day, Volume 2, edited by Laurie Sheck.

from All Hushed and Still within the House / by Emily Brontë (1818-1848)

Through rain and through the wailing wind,
Never again.
Never again?

DPF / Tate

For fairy tales and missing fathers, from return to the city of white donkeys.

from It Happens Like This / by James Tate (1943-2015)

The officer leaned forward to touch him, then stopped
and looked up at me. ‘Mind if I pat him?’ he asked.
‘Touching this goat will change your life,’ I said.
‘It’s your decision.’

DPF / Pineda

PIA: from August 21, 2015.

For river paths and daughters, from poets.org’s Poem-A-Day today.

from Daughter / by Jon Pineda

all the way to the broken edge
that overlooks the bend,
& hold hands until

we can no longer tell
where the river ends

DPF / Wright

PIA: from June 19, 2016. 

For Ohio, from a fellow Ohioan, and from poetryfoundation.org.

from Youth / by James Wright

I know his ghost will drift home 
To the Ohio River, and sit down, alone, 
Whittling a root. 
He will say nothing. 
The waters flow past, older, younger   
Than he is, or I am.

DPF / Dove

PIA: from August, 2015. For the season of school beginnings.

For 5th grade, from Poetryfoundation.org.

from Fifth Grade Autobiography / by Rita Dove

I was four in this photograph fishing
with my grandparents at a lake in Michigan.
My brother squats in poison ivy.
His Davy Crockett cap
sits squared on his head

DPF / Padgett

For one kind of lesson (from a repeat poem) on the night before all the lessons begin again for the 2016-2017 school year. Class of ’17+, your first day is tomorrow! From How to be Perfect.


from History Lesson / by Ron Padgett
I think that Geoffrey Chaucer did not move

the way a modern person moves.

He moved only an inch at a time, in what

we call stop action. 

DPF / Sweeney

PIA: from August 26, 2014.

For sisters, from the 2009 James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poetry, How to Live on Bread and Music.

from The Three Sisters / by Jennifer K. Sweeney b. 1973

How many times have I peered
into the sloop and slag of childhood
as if shaking up a snow globe