~ Seed as noun and verb ~
"I spend most of my time listening instead of writing. A shard of language might come: a phrase, a word, an anagram, and I’d just keep it in my pocket, like a little seed, warming in my fist.”―
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Seed as a verb: Many things, including seeds, can be seeded widely with the help of neighbors, birds, wild animals, classrooms, ministers, etc.
SEEDS. Maybe you start them indoors and transplant them, maybe they are in the ground gaining strength all winter. Maybe they are in each of us. Maybe we cook with and eat seeds.
What do you hope will grow?
Examples of where "seed" might take you:
by Wendell Berry
The seed is in the ground.
There is big excitement in C block today.
On the window sill,
in a plastic ice cream cup
a little plant is growing.
This is all the men want to talk about:
how an apple seed germinated
in a crack of damp concrete;
how they tore open tea bags
to collect the leaves, leached them
in water, then laid the sprout onto the bed
made of Lipton. How this finger of spring
dug one delicate root down
into the dark fannings and now
two small sleeves of green
are pushing out from the emerging tip.
The men are tipsy with this miracle.
Each morning, one by one,
they go to the window and check
the progress of the struggling plant.
All through the day they return
to stand over the seedling
and whisper.
Touch-me-nots by Mary Oliver
The touch-me-nots
Were still blooming,
Though many had already gone to seed—
Jewel of weeds, orange, beloved
Of the hummingbirds
For their deeply held sweets,
And the ripe pod, when touched
So quick
To open and high-fly
Its seeds into the world.
I was walking
Down a path
Where they grew, succulent and thick
In the damp earth near
A stream, when I saw a trap
With a little raccoon inside,
Praying,
As it felt, over and over,
The mesh of its capture,
And I had time—
Just time—
To stumble down to the stream, and open the trap
And say to the little one:
Run, run
And the little one flew—
I did not touch him—
And climbed high into a tree.
And then I too, knowing the world,
Ran through the jewel weeds
As someone, unknown and not smiling
Came down the path to where
The trap lay, stamped upon
By my very own feet,
And while I ran, the touch-me-nots
Nodded affirmatively
Their golden bodies—
I could not help but touch them—
And dashed forth their sleek pods,
Oh, life flew around us, everywhere.
❤❤❤
Please link one poem that is your response to this prompt.
After you link your poem, please visit others,
and
Don't forget to include this link in your post.
Thanks for the inspiration, Susan. This is the time of year when gardeners excitedly gather their seeds and plot their gardens. A timely topic.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sherry. I don't plan and plant anymore, but I'm enjoying how most others I know do. The poet Marge Piercy, for one, is busy with seedlings and a greenhouse, getting her seeds ready for planting. How I admire her! 89, and still working. Remember her poem about that?
DeleteWelcome all poets! What is planted, growing for you? (I see I posted early, for which I apologize.) I'm looking forward to your poems especially in this crazy unsettling April. Have a good day!
ReplyDeleteThank you for adding my link Susan - I will be back in the morning to read/comment - Jae
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome, Jae Rose. Mary or Sherry must have posted it. It's always good to see you here!
DeleteI've been out all day, and when I came home and saw the prompt, I thought of an old poem I wrote last year that fits the bill. We have cherry blossom and the tulips are about to open - so many seeds to choose from!
ReplyDeleteSounds wonderful!
DeleteA lovely prompt Susan & a timely one. I love Wendell Berry's poem. In my little patch of land a guava tree popped up, and I am seeing tiny guavas coming out. I hope they attract birds, when they ripen.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sumana. How nice to have a guava tree and birds in your yard.
DeleteI like the quote at top from Ocean Vuong but I hated his book "On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous." What an overwritten, overrated pile of borrowed misery. I had a good time eviscerating it in my review on Goodreads. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3232356079
ReplyDeleteIt's good to see you, FireBlossom. I only know his very strange poetry, not his novel. But I like the quote for the seed warming in his fist.
DeleteThanks so much for the inspiration Susan.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful poem! I'm happy you joined in!
DeleteHola Susan, thanks for this great prompt! I needed to go light (and a bit silly) with mine since I'm doing this whole poem a day thing this month!
ReplyDeleteThanks for joining in, Jennifer!
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