Category Archives: Poetry on the Move

Wonderful Entries: More Poets on the Move~

Here are more Poetry on the Move contest entries.  You will agree with me that there is much talent on the move in the county.

Enjoy! And if you care to leave a comment, I know the poets would love hearing from you.

Poetry on the Move is a project of the Santa Clara County Poet Laureate. All poems remain the property of the authors.

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

* * *

Mornings at SLAC

Steel-toed next to running shoes
(we run to catch beam),
old work boots to the ankle
with nearby sandals and socks,
the richness of penny loafers.
A pair of European calves’ leathers
joins forces with ragamuffin cousins.
Merveilleux!
Each morning we return,
voting with our tired feet.

Janice Dabney
Mountain View

* * *

Don’t relent, invent
Review an old ethic
Traverse the parking lot
With care, a sweeping politeness.
Never rush your shopping cart
On a tear from produce to fresh fish.
The morning walk, rich in eye contact
Vibrant “hellos” to neighbors
Don’t relent, invent, not a gadget
But the simple moment
Of awareness of the other.

Judy Darling
Sunnyvale

* * *

2 Part Invention

part 1 (prelude):

Orchards => Semiconductors;
Canneries => Computers;
Garages => Geeks;
Electronics => Entrepreuners;
Railroad => World Wide Web;
Valley Oaks => Silicon Valley;

part 2 (fugue):

Plant

Look

Imagine

Take

Make

Change

The

Outside

The

A

It

The

Seed

The

Possibilities

Chance

Happen

Entire

Box

Universe

 

Karen DeMello
Mountain View

* * *

On the Path

Late sun molds the purple hills

where I pass clefts of watercress

and hardy chapparal, coyotes’ home.

I find my proper size–a moving point

along a path, as in those Chinese scrolls

of men on mountain roads, bent figures

almost disappearing in white space.

It is enough to be a part of this,

 hair like grass, stirring with every breeze,

 feet falling in rhythm with my heart.

Maureen Draper
Cupertino

* * *

Invention?

Our fragile minds reel at the prospect.
We can do anything! But can we?
Only if we let the mind sing and listen to the chorus.

Anne Dunham
Saratoga

* * *

Grow the Power

Collards and chard
Stir fried or steamed
Sing praise with garlic
Oh happy bones

Parsley, peppers
Anything goes
Hallelujah hair
Testifying teeth

Urban garden
Patience for parsnips
Born again biceps
Pumpkins for joy

April Eiler
Palo Alto

* * *

The sun comes up;
the engineers and entrepreneurs
daily explore all the implications
of digital forms;
they are inventors and schemers,
not designers;
the Great Designer
of user experience is dead;
what’s left?
the specialized ants
who don’t know the color
of the sky.

Bruce England
Sunnyvale

* * *

Alchemy

Can you tell me
What alchemy
Can turn a blooming cherry tree
And a stream of mercury
Into electric energy?
In this valley, we all know
Is where the mind can undergo
Bright, inventive overflow.
It must be in the earth below
What’s planted here, can’t help but grow.

Anne Ewbank
San Jose

* * *

Focal Point

Landscapes shape shift;
Motion blurs everything to gray.
I long to invent a way
to slow the streaming tints:
Pause time for clarity
of sight and mind.

The movement goes on.
I am carried toward what I fear;
I can’t leave this train until I understand
where I’ve been.

Kristina Fluitt
San Jose

* * *

Ocean

At first it may seem improbable
The fountainhead of civilization
Is but the mere human mind.

Yet like a mountain spring,
ideas trickle forth unending;
Consolidate into streams;
Persist into rivers.

Soon enough the torrents betray
The tranquility of the source.
Man has created an ocean,
Which he cannot tame.

David Fong
San Jose

# # #

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Wonderful Entries: More Poets on the Move~

During National Poetry Month, I am posting all of the Poetry on the Move contestants’ terrific entries. You will agree with me that there is much talent on the move in the county.

Enjoy! And if you care to leave a comment, I know the poets would love hearing from you.

Poetry on the Move is a project of the Santa Clara County Poet Laureate. All poems remain the property of the authors.

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

* * *

Your Mission

Growth and renewal
The latest techie thing
Yet pause to TASTE a mango
In our eternal spring

Create, Celebrate
On a virtual cloud
Or write it with a pencil
Then sing your song out loud

Old, new combining
Accelerating ride
Striving to invent your SELF
Should not be put aside.

by Karen Booth
San Jose

* * *

Invention

With a loud “Whoosh!”
a boy on a bike plows
through a pile of wet leaves.

The rain does not dampen
his fervor to share
the news of the contraption

that finally works
after three cold weeks
and one roll of duct tape.

by Peter Bosel
San Jose

* * *

Valley of the Dahls

Los Gatos legend
Gary Dahl got it right:
the creative mode
imposes fresh conceit
on what is known;
entertain short-term
madness, consider what
the world needs now,
aha!–Pet Rock
in a Box—genius
tempered with silliness
yields long-term success
& again aha! why didn’t
didn’t  I  think of that?

by Jade Bradbury
Los Gatos

* * *

At the Park in Front of the Sainte Clare Hotel

The jacaranda trees are in full bloom, scattering
lavender petals onto the grass.  The sun lingers

as musicians all over the city raise their violins and oboes,
the singers standing warm-throated in the wings,

their movements as precisely choreographed as the workings
of clocks.  Everywhere, stagehands draw open the curtains.

by Leah Browning
San Jose

* * *

Invention’s Family

If necessity is the mother of invention
then hard work is its father.
Project teams are
its often unruly siblings.
Even that bratty nephew, argument,
Is indispensable.
Sure, having fun and adequate time away
help refresh body and mind,
but invention’s family does not grow couch potatoes.

by Richard Burns
Santa Clara

* * *

Silicon Valley

Spawned from orchard dirt,
ideas that changed our world
first sprouted here.
So, sit back, and relax…
breathe in the fruited air.
We’ll get you there and back,
while you dream innovative  products,
create  new jobs,
and  help get our country back on track.

by William Burns
Palo Alto

* * *

Creativity

~an active word with the potential and power to transform ~ to fulfill.
Original and timeless – it touches others with its breath,
Freeing one to the wonders of discovery.
None remain untouched by its sublime influence.

by Cheryl Chelemers
Milpitas

* * *

How do I board thee?
Inspired by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

How do I board thee? Let me count the ways.

I board thee to the level of new platforms
Alighting is safe and swift.

I board thee with the tap of a card
Smart technology invents thy commute.

I board thee with anticipation
Boundless journeys begin and end with thee.

by Brandi Childress
VTA

* * *

Begin
With what you have.
Your head, your heart.
An inkling, thread, or thought.
Turn on the light
To long nights
Of wonder, of making.
Some small space –
One quiet corner
Of the room. Perhaps
The garage
Could be a portal
To your discovery.

by Kelly Cressio-Moeller
San Jose

* * *

Invention

Spark trips over question
lands on need.
This outsider has room to see
the will to do.
It must be.

Takes what is available,
connects the improbable,
forces experts to perform the impossible.

Now you need it.
Gotta have it.
Will pay whatever to get it.
Another millionaire is born.

by Cathyann Cusimano(Fisher)
Mountain View

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Wonderful Entries: Poetry on the Move Contestants!

During National Poetry Month, I will be posting all of the Poetry on the Move contestants’ terrific entries. You will agree with me that there is much talent on the move in the county.

Enjoy! And if you care to leave a comment, I know the poets would love hearing from you.

Poetry on the Move is a project of the Santa Clara County Poet Laureate. All poems remain the property of the authors.

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

Blue Tooth

Intersection of Moorpark and Winchester:
Twelve contented seagulls line up
on the obsolete telephone wire
looking down on the traffic
vehicles full of people
jabbering away
into thin air.

by Mimi Ahern
San Jose

* * *

Silicon Perspective

A giant bay laurel grows in the park,
A sapling when Ohlones gathered nuts
Full-trunked when apricots ruled
Caught whispers from high-tech wizards
Dug deep to hold its ground.
Micro-chips, iPods, internet
Create nothing to rival me yet
Invent away, my silicon peers
I’ve lived for two hundred years.

by Beverly Ainscow
Sunnyvale

* * *

On the Move

Oh travel back to the Valley of Hearts Delight. Do we
remember the fields of yellow mustards, growing with wild
abandon? If you look hard and quickly you will see some out the
window, in the fast  disappearing soil of our towns.

by Lucy Amico
Los Gatos

* * *

A Lightbulb Moment

Inventions, Inventions, a spark in your mind
You run to the garage to see what you can find
You have been tinkering for about 3 hours
Inside you, this feeling of power
You test one last time, fix a missing part,
It works, it’s done, Your work of Art!!

Zahra Attarwala, 11 years old
Saratoga

(Note: Brava, Zahra!~ You jumped right in with your own “work of art.” Keep writing! Sally Ashton, Santa Clara County Poet Laureate)

* * *

Invention

Necessity gets all the credit
As mothers sometimes do,
But what of curiosity, tenacity, and dreams?
Those fathers surely sowed their seed
In this most fertile valley
Where the art of engineering
And the job of making beauty
Share a fine ambitious romance,
Dance a complicated tango,
Ever-changing,
Still evolving.

by Sheila Banning
Sunnyvale

* * *

In My Garage

In my Garage I shape the future,
Pour, knead and mold.
In my mind’s eye I nurture,
a seed of change to grow.

Into reality I can see it spring,
Vibrant and alive.
All of humanity waits in wonder,
As a new frontier it brings.

by Charles Barber

* * *

The Frustration Process

In frustration I
threw down the big
new pen

What was meant to be
Was just not streaming

Buffering and loading
Pausing
Stopping altogether

A dysfunctional download
Paper disconnected from brain
As data from screen

Inventor discouraged
Inventee disappointed

An App review…
Appreciation?

by Maya Bhatta
Cupertino

* * *

Fable

Orchards once bloomed wild and strong
Scattering fragrance all day long
The tide of time swept over the land
The soil is tilled by strange new hands
The sun is gathered on silicon shades
The grass grows greener in plastic blades
Songs of sparrows reappear
In glassy fruit we press to our ears.

by Sandip Bhattacharya
San Jose

* * *

Invention Heritage

She gathers soap root in the
Dazzling light of June
Transforming the hairy bulb
Into a small brush
Using ancient technology
She watches swallows
Pack rich mud securing their nests and
Beavers constructing a dam with precision
She climbs the stairway
To an office where Peregrine falcons
Soar past windows

by Marianne Bickett
Campbell

* * *

Silicon Valley

Conceived thru innovation; born from a silicon womb.
Raised on an unstable earth; inspired to challenge status-quo.

Re-inventing itself; new ideas always taking shape.
The imagined now the norm; the unimagined tomorrow’s break-thru.

Diversity fueling social connectedness; igniting collaborative success.
Imagination taking flight; endless possibilities.

by Diane Blum
San Jose

A big round of applause for all ten contestants! Stay tuned for more installations. Subscribe to receive alerts.

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Car Cards: Poetry on the Move

In case you haven’t had a chance to see them on a bus or light rail car yet, here they are! Local award winning artist Joe Miller, also a poet, created these vibrant designs which themselves convey motion.  Let me know when you see them in county transit. Thanks again to all who collaborated in this venture.

I’ll begin posting contest entries this week. It’s an amazing collection of poems I can’t wait to share with you. I salute the writers of Santa Clara County! Happy National Poetry Month!

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

(images below © Joe Miller; poems are the property of their respective authors)

"From the Platform on First Street," Samantha Lê, San Jose

"Accelerate," Dennis Noren, Campbell

"Gravity," Mark Heinlein, San Jose

"Tangents of Invention Early On," Diana Clarke, Sunnyvale

"The Inventor," Danielle Roberts, Santa Clara

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Coming atcha: Poetry on the Move!

I am so proud and excited to announce the winners of the Santa Clara County Poetry on the Move contest. The contest, which ran from mid-December through January 31st, asked Santa Clara County residents to, “Send your best poem, 50 words or less, that in some way relates to the contest theme, ‘Invention,’ poems that celebrate who we are and what we do in Silicon Valley. Write about ‘Invention’ as a subject or a theme, or think of your poem as an invention. In it, capture the spirit of ‘making new’ that shapes our county.”

Over 100 residents answered the call! Through a careful process I curated of first and second readers and a final judge, Jennifer K. Sweeney, author of two books of poetry and the recipient of the 2009 James Laughlin Award, five poems were selected to appear on “car cards” in VTA buses and light rail cars throughout April, National Poetry Month. YES, ride public transit to see their poems overhead AND on free “Take One” fliers. (take one, and pass it on!)

Of her decision judge Sweeney writes, “I felt these five poems best captured the daily human experience and the unique world of the journey–that strange collective life in transit–while simultaneously celebrating the locale in a striking way.  I am excited for the creative offering of this project and for these fine poems which will live in motion shuttling back and forth across the South Bay.”

As am I~Poetry will indeed be MOVING throughout the county. What a fantastic way to celebrate National Poetry Month. AND, I will post Poetry on the Move contest contributor’s poems throughout the month as well, so stay tuned and subscribe, at left, for updates.

And the winners of the Poetry on the Move contest are:

Diana Clarke, Sunnyvale: “Tangents of Invention Early On”
Mark Heinlein, San Jose: “Gravity”
Samantha Lê, San Jose: “From the Platform on First Street”
Dennis Noren, Campbell: “Accelerate”
Danielle Roberts, Santa Clara: “The Inventor”

# # #

Tangents of Invention Early On
by Diana Clarke, Sunnyvale

Seldom is she smooth
as glossy tile,
graceful as windsong,
more jagged, undefined,
a wildflower sprouting
beside a twisty rail.
No spontaneity—
this, too, can be forced
like a bulb out of season.
She longs to soar on a thermion
in a glowing white mist.

# # #

Gravity
by Mark Heinlein, San Jose

The full moon – golden as December
maple leaves, purity of white
orchids in spring –
possesses enough pull to move oceans,
to maneuver titanic levers of tides.

Down here, we need some heavenly
invention to draw us closer,
body to body, as we move
through the days like the moon.

# # #

From the Platform on First Street
by Samantha Lê, San Jose

a dispassionate rain sprinkles colors
onto glassy morning tracks
faded creatures in shapes of blue and sleeplessness –going

gone the warning whistles of the watchful conductor gone
the smoke that caught the wind
and stained the air

# # #

Accelerate
by Dennis Noren, Campbell

perhaps soon you will span
improbable places
impossibly               spaced
perhaps a gritty clarity
will accelerate from waypoint
to waypoint       perhaps you
will footprint here
to there

# # #

The Inventor
by Danielle Roberts, Santa Clara

You smelled of melted wax and feathers,
and made wings from anything

you could place your palms upon:
typewriter teeth, broken rulers, stained

piano keys, broken helixes of DNA—
grizzled like the steel wool of Einstein’s hair—
scorched from soaring too close to the California sun.

# # #

These poems will begin to appear in public transit as of Monday, April 2. Bravo to these terrific local poets! Bravo to the generous contributions of the  sponsors who made this project MOVE: VTA; the City of San Jose Office of Cultural Affairs; Arts Council Silicon Valley; and my terrific graphic artist Joe Miller who designed these beautiful cards. Please ride public transit and check them out for yourself. And please, let me know what you think. It gets lonely out here.

Note: All are invited to a news conference this coming Friday, April 6, in the News Conference room at County Offices, 70 West Hedding, San Jose, Lower level at 10:30 am.

Wooooooooooooot!
Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate


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Poetry on the Move: Submissions now closed

With over 100 poems collected during the month of January from enthusiastic Santa Clara County resident writers, the submission period for Poetry on the Move has now ended. It’s time to begin the judging process. From what I’ve seen, I know it won’t be easy. But I’m looking forward to spending time with the collected poems, to enjoy the craft, sentiment, and varied expressions around “Invention,” the contest’s theme. Each poem in itself is an invention of the imagination and a tribute to what it means to live here in our county.

The contest is “blind,” meaning that the poems have been separated from their author’s identity. Each poem will be read and considered in light of the contest guidelines by a select series of readers who will help determine the finalists to be passed on to the outside judge, poet Jennifer K. Sweeney, winner of the James Laughlin award. She will select the five winning poems that will appear in VTA light rail and buses in April this year, National Poetry Month.

I can’t wait! But no, it’s not an easy task, and I want to take this moment before the reading and weighing and deciding begins to thank each and every poet who took the time to consider our life together in the Silicon Valley, who picked up a pen or sat at a keyboard and gave the effort I know each poem represents. Thank you for making my task difficult!

Winners will be announced by April 1. We are all fools for poetry!

Stay tuned.

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

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One week left to submit: Poetry on the Move

Don’t be left out. Submit your poem to Poetry on the Move this week. Submissions close January 31st, next Tuesday. Full details, submission guidelines, and online submission manager can be found at the Poetry on the Move link. >>>>

Don’t be left out!

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

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Poetry on the Move: Submissions open!

Call to Santa Clara county residents:

Submit your best poem, 50 words or less, to Poetry on the Move that in some way relates to the contest theme, “Invention.” I’m looking for poems that celebrate who we are and what we do in Silicon Valley. Write about “Invention” as a subject or a theme, or think of your poem as an invention. In it, capture the spirit of “making new” that shapes our county. Winning poems will be placed in light rail and buses throughout the county in April for National Poetry Month.

Submissions of your original poem can be made online only through the submission manager. Click HERE or in the sidebar “Poetry on the Move” link for further detail and complete submission guidelines. Find poems that feature the required word length under the “Sample Poems” page in the blog header.

Contest closes January 31.

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Resuming Favorite Poem Posts: Watch for Contest Details

I’ll be resuming posting Santa Clara County’s Favorite Poem submissions as of tomorrow and into the New Year, 2012!

As announced below, my project for the coming year is the poetry contest “Poetry on the Move,” in collaboration with VTA. Please stay tuned for a forthcoming announcement regarding the submission period in January. Further contest detail is in the link above.

In the meantime, please enjoy the poems and thoughts posted here, and poets, keep writing.

Happy New Year to all!

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

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