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somethingdarker ([personal profile] somethingdarker) wrote2012-08-13 11:34 pm

Potential Titles: Months, Days of the Week, and Holidays [category]

January.


February.


March (month).


April.


May (month).


June.


July.


August.


September.


October.


November.


December.


Month.


Sabbath.


Monday.


Tuesday.


As I close my eyes for silence on a Wednesday - Emerald ᏃᏈᏏ GoingSnake "Someday I'll Love--"

To experience Wednesday twilight - John Wieners "au rive"


Thursday.


On Friday the eagle flies - Langston Hughes "Consider Me"

God goes out for whiskey Friday night - Robin Coste Lewis "Reason"

Properly transformed into Friday - Pablo Neruda "The Long Day Called Thursday" transl. by Alastair Reid

For Sorrow's fast on Friday - "The Song of the Seven Archangels" transl. by Ernest Rhys


Saturday.


Sunday.


Weeknight:
Empty on a December weeknight - Christian Gullette "Tattoo"


Carnivale:
Masked Carnivale raccoons & fat possum shadows - David St. John "Venetian Farewells"

Christmas:
Curtailed by the ever-growing Christmas trees - Nwuguru Chidiebere Sullivan "Gosh, It's Too Beautiful to Exist Briefly in a Parallel Planet"

Easter:
An Easter egg cut-out of grass and trees - Sarah Getty "The Wash"

Equinox:
Which blow through equinox - Cass Donish "You, Emblazoned"

The year poised on the equinox - Marilyn Hacker "Nearly a Valediction"

Eve [time of day or night before].

4th of July:
The stars sizzling like 4th of July sparklers - G. O. Clark "Sound Check"

Halloween:
The neighbors were still dancing in their Halloween best - Edgar Kunz "Fixer"

Holiday.

Lent:
Burning in Lent's black-bordered dress - Emily Pauline Johnson "Easter"

Daubed with ashes of myriad Lents - Dorothy Parker "Ballade at Thirty-Five"

Scattered into flight the Vows of Lent - Helen Rowland "The Rubáiyát of a Bachelor"

In one swift Lenten smear of ash - Ann K. Schwader "Slouching Towards Entropy"

New Year.

Solstice.

Thanksgiving:
Warm Thanksgiving fires are burning - Miriam Clark Potter "Thanksgiving Kitchen Song"

Valentine/Valentine's Day:
The oak trees are scattering valentines over the snow - Ted Kooser " In a Light Late-Winter Wind"



Calendar.


Date.


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