[stylist] A poem share

Jacqueline Williams jackieleepoet at cox.net
Sun Feb 26 00:51:37 UTC 2012


Myrna,
I like your poem very much. I will try to find mine  about a collaboration
with my mother. 
How is a soliloquy different from a dramatic monologue?
I am hearing rhyme, perhaps not a pattern.
Again, I could not open your attachment without down loading a Pac because
of a different version of Word.
Since you and Lynda have a later version, I will make an attachment to this
and see if you can open mine with your later versions.
The collaboration you share is beautiful.
Jackie
Myrna, I could not attach that poem. I scanned it from the newspaper some
years ago, and it needs a converter to be pulled up. I tried, but It started
with Japanese, and I haven't a clue of what I am looking for. Sorry
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of KajunCutie926 at aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, February 21, 2012 11:14 AM
To: stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: [stylist] A poem share

I do hope it is understood but as my writing been  sporadic of late I'm 
never sure... it is also attached for those of you who  prefer it.   Also
this 
is written in a poetry form called a soliloquy,  developed by a dear friend 
of mine.
Myrna
 
Collaboration

Together, life's  companions
Writing of nature and time,
Spilling ink of prose and  rhyme,
Are the muses of sorrow and joy.

A sincere collaboration
In  silence and verse,
Unbridled and unrehearsed,
Reveling in  spontaneity.

Stars and moon, sun and cloud,
Find their way into  conversations
Of differing views and destinations
And we, the readers,  reap poetic rewards.

Frolicking before unexpected mirrors,
Weeping  through another's journey,
Eagerly following blindly
The paths taken by a  writer.

Seamstress and stylist,  inked companions,
Creating art  in shadows and in joy,
In comfortable collaboration
Of thought and  spontaneity.
Differences meld, but will not cloud,
Nor cheapen unexpected  rewards
Reflected by the collective mirrors
Found within the heart and  soul of a writer.





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