Sunday, March 8, 2026

A Thought for March 1860 /
Charles Tennyson Turner


A Thought for March 1860

Yon happy blackbird's note the rushing wind
Quells not, nor disconcerts his golden tongue,
That breaks my morning dream with well-known song;
How many a roaring March I've left behind,
Whose blasts, all-spirited with notes and trills,
Blew over peaceful England! and, ere long,
Another March will come these hills among,
To clash the lattices and whirl the mills:
But what shall be ere then? Ambition's lust
Is broad awake, and gazing from a throne
But newly set, counts half the world his own;
All ancient covenants aside are thrust,
Old landmarks are like scratches in the dust,
His eagles wave their wings, and they are gone.

~~
Charles Tennyson Turner (1808-1879) 
from Sonnets, 1864 

 [Poem is in the public domain worldwide]


Sara Lindgren von Bothmer, Blackbird singing for spring, 2019.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

First of March / Frederick Tennyson


First of March

    I.

Thro' the gaunt woods the winds are shrilling cold,
    Down from the rifted rack the sunbeam pours
    Over the cold gray slopes, and stony moors;
The glimmering watercourse, the eastern wold,
And over it the whirling sail o' the mill,
    The lonely hamlet with its mossy spire,
    The piled city smoking like a pyre,
Fetch'd out of shadow gleam with light as chill.


    II.

The young leaves pine, their early promise stay'd;
    The Hope-deluded sorrow at the sight
    Of the sweet blossoms by the treacherous light
Flatter'd to death, like tender love betray'd;
And stepdames frown, and aged virgins chide;
    Relentless hearts put on their iron mood;
    The hunter's dog lies dreaming of the wood,
And dozes barking by the ingle-side.


    III.

Larks twitter, martens glance, and curs from far
    Rage down the wind, and straight are heard no more;
    Old wives peep ont, and scold, and bang the door;
And clanging clocks grow angry in the air;
Sorrow and care, perplexity and pain
    Frown darker shadows on the homeless one,
    And the gray beggar buffeting alone
Pleads in the howling storm, and pleads in vain.


    IV.

The field-fires smoke along the champaign drear,
    And drive before the north wind streaming down
    Bleak hill, and furrow dark, and fallow brown;
Few living things along the land appear;
The weary horse looks out, his mane astray,
    With anxious fetlock, and uneasy eye,
    And sees the market-carts go madly by
With sidelong drivers reckless of the way.


    V.

The sere beech-leaves, that trembled dry and red
    All the long Winter on the frosty bough,
    Or slept in quiet underneath the snow,
Fly off, like resurrections of the dead;
The homy ploughman, and his yoked ox,
    Wink at the icy blasts; and beldames bold,
    Stout, and red-hooded, flee before the cold;
And children's eyes are blinded by the shocks.


    VI.

You cannot hear the waters for the wind;
    The brook that foams, and falls, and bubbles by,
    Hath lost its voice — but ancient steeples sigh,
And belfries moan — and crazy ghosts, confined
In dark courts, weep, and shake the shuddering gates,
    And cry from points of windy pinnacles,
    Howl thro' the bars, and 'plain among the bells,
And shriek, and wail like voices of the Fates!


    VII.

And who is He, that down the mountain-side,
    Swift as a shadow flying from the sun,
    Between the wings of stormy Winds doth run,
With fierce blue eyes, and eyebrows knit with pride;
Though now and then I see sweet laughters play
    Upon his lips, like moments of bright heaven
    Thrown 'twixt the cruel blasts of morn and even,
And golden locks beneath his hood of gray?


    VIII.

Sometimes he turns him back to wave farewell
    To his pale Sire with icy beard and hair;
    Sometimes he sends before him thro' the air
A cry of welcome down a sunny dell;
And while the echoes are around him ringing,
    Sudden the angry wind breathes low and sweet,
    Young violets show their blue eyes at his feet,
And the wild lark is heard above him singing!

~~
Frederick Tennyson (1807-1898)
from Days and Hours, 1854

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Frederick Tennyson biography

Glyn Baker, Early Spring in Crowsheath Wood, March 2015.

Monday, March 2, 2026

March's featured poem


The Penny Blog's featured  poem for March 2026:


[...]
I would give anything to stay
The little wheel that turns in my brain;
The little wheel that turns all day,
That turns all night with might and main.
[...]

(read by Rhonda Fetterman for LibriVox.org)


Sunday, March 1, 2026

Penny's Top 30 / February 2026

In February, for the first time ever, Penny had 20 poems receive more than 100 page views in a month. While welcome, that crowded out most of the month's new poetry. Rather than have the latter fail to chart, Penny is provisionally expanding the monthly chart to a Top 30. 

Penny's Top 30

The most-visited poems on  The Penny Blog in February 2026:

  1.  Poem for Kathy, Will Dockery
  2.  Afterglow, George J. Dance
  3.  February, Ina Coolbrith
  4.  United Dames of America, Wallace Stevens
  5.  The Great Willows, Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau
  6.  Cherry-Ripe, Robert Herrick
  7.  The Blue Heron, Theodore Goodridge Roberts
  8.  To the Sea Angel, Will Dockery
  9.  Drifting Away: A Fragment, Charles Kingsley
10.  Winter Nightfall, Robert Bridges

12.  A Dirge for Summer, Sebastian Evans 
13.  A Rhyme of Summer, James Berry Bensel
14.  Penny, or Penny's Hat, George J. Dance
15.  "Whan That Aprille . . .", John Dos Passos
16.  The Man with the Blue Guitar, Wallace Stevens
17.  A May Morning, John Davidson
18.  January 1939, Dylan Thomas
19.  Fern Hill, Dylan Thomas
20. Ode to Sport, Pierre de Coubertin

21.  I'm Not Just February, Annette Wynne
22. Winter's Muse Calling, JD Shirk
23. Haiku and Triolet, R.S. Mallari
25. Skating, William Wordsworth
26. Winterworld Descending, Will Dockery
27. Large Red Man Reading, Wallace Stevens
28. Vowels, Arthur Rimbaud
29. February, Sophie Jewett
30. A Valentine, Lewis Carroll

Source: Blogger, "Stats" 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

February / Sophie Jewett


February

Last night I heard a robin sing;
And though I walked where woods were bare,
And winds were cold, life quivered there,
As if in sleep the heart of spring
Were moved to dim remembering.
To-day no promise haunts the air;
I find but snow and silence where
Last night I heard a robin sing.

~~
Sophie Jewett (1861-1909), 1893
from The Pilgrim, and other poems, 1896

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Sophie Jewett biography

Kenneth Allen, Winter Robin, Mullaghmore, 2013. CC BY-SA 2.0, Wikimedia Commons.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Winter's Muse Calling / JD Shirk


Winter's Muse Calling


Soodiasadi, Winter hiking
 in Switzerland, 2020 (detail).
I will not venture far outside today
Where things are frozen solid anyway
There wind is howling through the naked trees
I doubt there's really all that much to see

There's ice I'm sure that's covering the lake
Bare rocks and such whatever trail I take
All birds and creatures of the wooded park
Are hibernating somewhere safe and dark

Still, looking out my window I can muse
If winter could by chance be holding clues
To secrets known to those who cannot stay
Indoors on even coldest winter days

Of course you know I say all this the while
I'm buckling boots and going for a mile

~~
JD Shirk, 2022

[All rights reserved - used with permission]

Saturday, February 21, 2026

I'm Not Just February / Annette Wynne


I'm Not Just February


Frances Tipton Hunter (1896-1957),
Our Valentine Party, from The Children's 
Party Book, 1923. Wikimedia Commons.
I'm not just February
With winds that blow
All day, and piled-up snow;
I'm Washington and Lincoln, too,
Who kept our country's flag for you!
I'm Valentine of airy grace —
With golden hearts and hearts of lace
And pretty cards that people send,
Quite as a secret, to a friend.
Though I am short of days and small,
I'm quite a big month, after all!

~~
Annette Wynne (1889-1952)
from For Days and Days: A year-round treasury of child verse, 1919

[Poem is in the public domain in
Canada, the United States, and  
the European Union]