DPF / Wayland

For children and their dreams, and may some of the good ones come very true, from poetryfoundation.org.

from Big Dreams / by April Halprin Wayland

The scruffy house cat
aches to fly—
she dreams all day of
wings and sky!

DPF / Milton

For the milkmaid, the plowman, the mower and the shepherd, from The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Fourth Edition, Volume 1.

from L’Allegro / by John Milton

Such sights as youthful poets dream
On summer eves by haunted stream.
Then to the well-trod stage anon.
If Jonson’s learned sock be on,
Or sweetest Shakespeare, fancy’s child,
Warble his native wood-notes wild.

DPF / Berryman

For more ars poetica and more rain, please, from Love & Fame.

from Monkhood / by John Berryman

The only souls I feel toward are Henry Vaughn & Wordsworth.

DPF / Khalique

For the angels watching over, from lyrikline.org.

from For Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966) / by Harris Khalique

Time flows, we meet once in a while
your great works, my poems, your son, my loves,
the problems of our times
you lend me a hand when I tremble.

DPF / Kocot

For the box is always there whether you open it or not, from Bigger World.

from Pandora / by Noelle Kocot

But she found love at the bottom
in the faces of her truest friends.
She hesitated, but only for a second,
Which seemed like an eternity,
And joined her light with theirs.

DPF / Friedman

For no one would exactly call this a heat wave, with our current temperatures in the high 70’s, but starting Friday, we’ll see our fireplaces back on, so this is for the brief heat and capris, from poetryfoundation.org.

from The Record-Breaking Heat Wave / by Jeff Friedman

          a day
when you hear
the wasps under the roof
drumming lightly
the paper walls of their nest

DPF / Eliot

For National Poetry Month, which I’m supposing is our month because of Eliot, from The Waste Land. 

from The Waste Land / by T.S. Eliot

April is the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.

 

DPF / Zucker

For another one for mothers and blooming lilac and happy first day of National Poetry Month, 2017, and for daughters who are like blooming lilac, from the pedestrians.

from pedestrian / by Rachel Zucker

            I
have an idea for a website where mothers shoot
home movies & I upload them as part of my ongoing
project to “accurately depict women’s lives”

DPF / Rossetti

For the day’s way of clearing the clouds and blue-ing the sky, from poetryfoundation.org.

from Who Has Seen the Wind? / by Christina Rossetti

Who has seen the wind?
Neither I nor you:
But when the leaves hang trembling,
The wind is passing through.

DPF / Tufariello

For our poet-nurse, amazing Catherine, from Keeping My Name.

from Chemist’s Daughter / by Catherine Tufariello

Thumping the dinner table, Dad would say 

it too was atoms – massed in galaxies 

made mainly of empty space.