Rest, Don’t Quit! for Lens-Artists Challenge 283, Jan 20, 2024

 

“When you are tired, learn to rest. Don’t quit.”
Click on photos to enlarge.

For Lens-Artists Challenge we were to Illustrate a quote or poem.

Hue-bris for dVerse Poets, Jan 20 2024

Hue-bris

I painted every living room wall,
but did not like the hue at all.
It didn’t match the sofa right.
It was too orangey and bright.

And so I sought to alter it
with another color over it.
A watery glaze applied with care
cancelled out that awful glare.

I did not like the yellow alone,
but thinly o’er the other tone
it did the trick and looked superb.
One color did the other curb.

Carefully on a section ample
I painted out a color sample
to show the painter what to do–
watered yellow over orangeish hue.

He was an artist and had an eye
for form and structure, grass and sky
but his talent was not English or
my talent was not Spanish, for

when I came home at end of day,
my cry was one of real dismay.
What had he done, this artist fellow,
but take the undiluted yellow

and cover all the orange up?
The room looked like a buttercup!
I shook my head in real distress.
It clashed with sofa, hair and dress.

Next day, the paint store saw me coming.
The owner smiled and started humming.
Money in hand, I came each day
to pay and pay and pay and pay.

Alas, selections were not ample.
I knew they did not have a sample
right for me and so I got
ten liters of yellow and also bought

orange and white and brown and green,
blue and every hue between.
I took them home and mixed them up–
tint after tint in a gallon cup.

And pretty soon I had a stew
of every little shade and hue
and when I put one on the wall,
I found it was the best of all!

It matched my sofa and my eyes.
It clashed not with the lawn nor skies.
It went with pictures, sculpture, table.
I mixed as much as I was able,

then called the painter and asked him when
he could paint my room again.
This time I watched as he covered up
wall after wall from my mixing cup.

Now four layers grace my sala wall
each over each, one under all.
White, then orange, yellow and
that lovely concoction mixed by my hand.

In other rooms, each wall I made
a different hue of blue or jade
or red or mustard, orange or gold.
My house is varied and very bold.

Guests say they like the colors I chose
but when they see the gold or rose,
they cannot possibly suppose
how many colors are under those!

For dVerse Poets  we were to write a poem including Emily Dickinson’s line,
“Frequently, the woods are pink—” But instead, I used the line as inspiration in my choice of poems and hope after reading it that you can imagine that tree painted pink just outside my sala window!

Fibbing Friday for Jan 19, 2024

For Pensitivity’s Fibbing Friday  the prompts to define are:

1. Biscotza: A pizza with a biscotti crust.
2. Blabbermaul: Mobster’s girlfriend who turned informant
3. Brutz : Mean men
4. Buss: Transportation for serpents
5. Doplich: A strap with which you lead a dop around.
6. Schnickelfritz: Your answer to your friend’s query about your very bad cheap permanent.
7. Strubbly: A short person with an effervescent personality
8. Glickleck: A French request for a hickey.
9. Grex: Your second husband’s response when your first husband strides into the room.
10. Schnitz: A thin, fried cutlet of meat with a bite taken out of it.

Image by FreePik

Jan 19 Mystery Flower

Can you tell me what flower this is? Yes, I do know what it is.
I took the picture! Wanna see if you know.

What are the Chances??? For “Thursday Trios”

I really did roll this in one roll a week or so ago!  It yielded 2400 points in one roll.  Blue, who was my opponent, said that qualified as an automatic win, but sadly not by my rules  and we continued and I lost the game. So much for being noble.  We were playing 10,000 which is sorta like Farkle but with different rules. I wasn’t thinking of Thursday Trios when I took this photo. Blue said I should take it just to chronicle  my feat.  Glad I minded her.

For Mama Cormier’s Thursday Trios prompt.

Looking Through Doors: For Thursday Doors, Jan 18, 2024

I love looking through doors, either from the outside or the inside. Click on photos to enlaerge.

For Thursday Doors

Strawberry Rose, Jan 18, 2024

Strawberry rose decorating my tiramisu at Romeo and Julieta’s restaurant in Chapala!  Yummy for eyes and tummy.

Imagination Test: What Do You See?

I see a fox, a bird, a man in a hat facing away from me, a bull, a native American, a masked man. Oh, and an elephant.  Every time I look at this wall, I see a new creature in it. How many of them can you see and do you see any new things? If so, please share. So far, seven creatures.

 

Small Town South Dakota

Believe it or not, this was our main street, two blocks long!

Still Life With A Small Town Girl

For many years when I was small and far into my teens,
my summer days were filled with little else than magazines
and books and all the other things a girl in a small town
brings into her summers just to make the days less brown.

Day after day of reading soon led to dreaming, and
my shade beneath the cherry tree became a foreign land.
I did not know the name of it, but in this foreign place
the people did such lovely things. They kept a faster pace.

There were many things to see and people who liked doing—
circuses and carnivals, badminton and horse-shoeing,
imaginings and plays and travels. People who liked dancing.
Instead of trudging down the street, these people would be prancing.

I dreamed such dreams of bigger towns, and far-away towns, too.
All summer, I lay in the grass, dreaming what I’d do
when I was so much older and could go out on my own.
I’d wander off into the world. Explore the great unknown.

Now six decades later, I have done it all—
so many of those things I yearned to do when I was small.
I’ve been to places far and wide—Africa and Peru.
In England, France, Australia—I found so much to do.

Plays and concerts, dances, films, museums, garden walks.
Lectures, movies, workshops, classes, roundtables and talks.
Tours and treks and trips and sorties—guided meditations.
Somehow life seemed fuller packed with exotic vacations.

But now that I am seventy-six, I’d appreciate
if all this activity would finally abate.
I dream of slower days that I’d spend dreaming in the shade
where all my memories of days spent doing would just fade

into the past and leave me to dream here in this place,
swinging in my hammock, at a slower pace.
Leaving my activity to stream from head to pen,
filling up the page with all the places I have been.

Thus making sense of why I had to go and go,
speeding up the days that back then seemed to me so slow.
I guess I had to travel to find others of my kind
to teach me that life’s riches are mainly in the mind!

 

For dVerse Poets, we are to write a poem about a city. If you’d like to see more photos of my small town and environs, go HERE. And you can see how others responded to the prompt HERE.

The New and the Old, Hibiscus, Jan 17, 2024

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