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Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Yesterday's long rain was dank and raw but it still did good work, greening the grass, swelling the tree buds. Midday I walked out into the garden and saw that pea shoots were finally pushing through the soil. Now the last heavy-headed daffodils are beginning to open, and a few violets are unfolding in the grass. It might be possible to hang sheets on the line today. It might be possible to plant a few more seeds.

I spent most of the rainy day working on class plans, but I also did a better thing: I started a new poem--and so today I have two embryos (this poem and the essay I began 10 days ago) to cogitate over and fiddle with. I like the dangling prepositions in that last sentence; they replicate the state of my writing mind . . . direction without detail, sound without substance. I wonder is the house where I am living.

My friend Ruth wrote to tell me she has been teaching a Tu Fu poem to kindergartners. "It is XXVII, 'Far Up the River.'  Little Fiona, an ethereal creature with a very pronounced lisp, suddenly said, 'The words are just floating like a river. They are so pretty, we could dance to them.'"

The words are floating just like a river.

Last week, I taught kindergartners too. This is the poem the children wrote together:
White clouds are moving in the sky
and the sun is shining like a big fire.
In the blue sky the hawk leaves his wings still
and then flaps them again.
A huge straight oak is budding.
My friend is swinging.
i hear laughing, squeaking, cars going by.
Ants are crawling in the short green grass, eating crumbs.
Having just read a Nikki Giovanni poem with me, they were very firm about the importance of keeping the i lowercased.

And the hawk description--they spent so much time hunting for words to describe the movement of its wings. To sit back and let that happen is one of the things I have learned about working with very young students. It is always, always tempting to put words into their mouths. And the problem is that they usually let us do it.

4 comments:

  1. I am going to share the poem that "your" students wrote with mine. They love to read other children's work. We've been responding to Frost's The Pasture and wrote about I am going out to __________. I shan't be gone long, you come too. How correct you are about the urge to provide the words.
    Can't wait to see you soon.

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  2. I am curious which poem of Nikki's you used.

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  3. The title is "Winter Poem," and with young kids I usually write it out on chart paper line by line so that they can predict what words might come next. I like this poem because it leads the kids through the idea of transformation in a way that seems recognizable to them: they know that winter leads to spring, that snow and rain are related, that a snowball melts if you squeeze it; and Giovanni uses those "science facts" as the structure of her imaginative link between the speaker and a flower.

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  4. I thought that might be the one. It seemed to lead to the poem you all creatted. Thank you

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