Authors: Sharon Creech
I felt like there were
feathers in my brain
when you brought out those
objects
and we practiced doing
ALLITERATION
on them
like with the
p
urple
p
ickle
and the
p
olished
p
encil
and the
ch
ocolate
ch
alk
but
the pickle was not purple
and the pencil was not polished
and the chalk was not chocolate
so
my uncle Bill would probably say
we are WRONG
even though it is fun
to imagine
a purple pickle
a polished pencil
and chocolate chalk.
Something I am wondering:
if you cannot hear
do words have no sounds
in your head?
Do you see
a
          silent
                         movie?
So much depends
upon
a red wheel
barrow
. . .
The wheelbarrow poem
again
?
Did you forget we read it last year?
Okay, here's one:
So much depends upon
a creeping cat
crouched in the tree
beside the yellow bus stop
.
(I bet you're going to ask me
“
Why
does so much depend upon
a creeping cat?”
Right?
Remember:
the wheelbarrow guy
didn't say why
so much depended upon
the red wheelbarrow and
those white chicky chickens.)
ONOMATOPOEIA
made my ears frizzle
today.
All that
buzz buzz buzz
and
pop! pop!
and
drip
and
tinkle
and
trickle
â
the sounds are still
buzzing and popping
in my head.
And the bells bells bells
in that poem you read
by Mr. Poe
(is he alive?)
all those bells bells bells
all those tinkling and jingling
and swinging and ringing
and rhyming and chiming
and clanging and clashing
and tolling and rolling
all those bells bells bells
and that tintinnabulation
what a word!
Tintinnabulation!
I only understood about half
the words in that poem
but like you said
sometimes that is okay
because we
felt
all those
bells
and we
heard
all those
bells
crazily ringing in their
tintinnabulation!
But I bet my uncle Bill
wouldn't like Mr. Poe's
bell poem.
My uncle Bill would probably say
that Mr. Poe repeats himself too much
and needs to find a synonym for
bells
but I don't care
I love all those bells bells bells.
I thought of some more
onomatopoeia words:
gurgle
burble
wiggle
.
Are those right?
And what about
purr purr purr
?
And did your cat
really have kittens?
I don't really like
creepy cats.
You should get
a delightful dog.
Something I am wondering:
if you cannot hear
what happens when you read
purr purr purr
or
gurgle
or
chocolate chalk?
Can you somehow
feel
the
purr purr purr
the
gurgle
the
chocolate chalk?
Do you
feel
the sounds
instead of
hear
them?
Hear the dogs with their yips
squeaky yips!
What a funny squeaking sound
coming from their lips!
How they ripple ripple ripple
in the shadow of a pickle
In the yipyipabulation
through the air
from the yip yip yip yip
yip yip yip
from the squeaking and the rippling
of the yips.
(P.S. I'm not quite sure how that
pickle got in there.)
If you could not hear
you wouldn't hear
all those funny
yip yip yips
but you could
see
the dog
bouncing his head up and down
his mouth flapping
and maybe you would get the idea
that he was making
the same sound
over and over.
Maybe.
But how would you even know
what
         Â
sound
                       is?
I like Maggie's
buzz
poem
you put on the board
on that orange paper
and yes
you can put my
yip
poem
up there
and you can put
my name on it
too.
In my head are so many
bells and buzzes and yips
all jingling and clanking around
bumping into each other.
Very noisy in my head.
If you cannot hear
it must be so
quiet
in your head.
How are your purr purr kittens?
I would write a
purr
poem
except that I don't really like
C
A
T
S.
When you read that kitten poem
by Miss Valerie Worth
(is she alive?)
I could see that black kitten
dancing sidewise and leaping
and crouching with
her eyes round as oranges
and I could see that black kitten
pouncing with her cactus claws
on a piece of fluff.
It made me laugh,
that black kitten.
It reminded me of my dog Sky
how he would dance around
a skittering leaf
as if it were alive
and he would cock his head
and wag his tail
and scoot backwards
and then yip and pounce
on the fluttery leaf.
He made me laugh, that Sky.
And I hate to admit it
but the kittens you brought
to class
were not creepy.
I'm not saying
I like cats
(dogs are much much better)
but those kittens
were
f
antastically
f
unny
the way they were
skittering
around
and
purrrrrrrrrr
ing.
I guess I never saw
a kitten up close before
only big
c
reepy
c
ats
that look like they would
love to scratch you.
I told my dad
about those furry kittens
you brought in to school
and he asked me
if I would like one
and I said
no no no no no.
He is coming to parent conferences
tonight
and I just wanted you to know
that I said
no no no no no.
Why?
Because kittens grow up
to be
cats
and what do cats do?
Do they play ball with you
or jump up on you
and lick your face
all slobbery kissy
to show you
they love love love you?
I know one fat black cat
(I hate that cat)
who is meaner than mean
(I hate that cat).
And besides
even if you had a nice cat
that you loved
it might run outside
and into the street
and get
squished
by a car
going
fast
with many many miles to go
before it sleeps.
Or it could get
sick
really really sick
and never get better.
Or it could
run away
or
get lost
and end up
somewhere
else.
I hope I did not hurt
your feelings
but cats are cats
and dogs are dogs.
P.S. Thank you for saying
nice things about me
to my dad last night.
He liked my
yip
poem
up on the wall
and he likes you, too.
(For true.
I am not just saying that
to make you feel good.)
P.S.S. No I cannot write
about my mother.
That would be
IM-POSS-I-BLE.
Yes, I know
that all those bad things
could happen to a dog, too,
which is why
I
don't
want
a
dog
either.
I already had
a dog
my dog Sky
my funny furry
smiling dog Sky.
It's strange that now
when you read a poem to the class
I hear alliteration popping out
everywhere.
I never heard it before
or maybe I heard the sounds
but I didn't know why they were
sticking in my head.
Yesterday after you read the eagle poem
by Mr. Tennyson
(is he alive?)
those first two lines stuck stuck stuck
in my head:
He clasps the crag with crooked hands
Close to the sun in lonely lands . . .
And I could see that eagle
all day long
clasping the crag with his crooked hands
in those lonely lands
just sitting up there watching
watching
before he
F
A
L
L
S
boom like a thunderbolt!
Does he swoop into the sea
and snatch a fish?
Or a little mousie on the hillside?
Or a creepy cat?
Sorry. Just kidding.
He pats the kitten with puffy paws
near the window draped with gauze
and yawns and opens up his jaws.
The wrinkled rug beneath him lies.
He watches with his big black eyes
and like a lazy boy he sighs.
Well.
At least the dog
did not
EAT
the kitten.
Those kittens of yours
surprised me
they got so big
and they are so funny
(especially for cats)
and that black one
with the white spot
on her forehead
she fell asleep
right in my lap
even though I didn't
pet her
well, only a tiny bit
and she was
purrrrrrrr
ing
while she slept
so I think she was happy
but
don't get me wrong
a dog is still much better
than a cat.
So much depends upon
a red-headed mailman
walking up the drive
holding a blue postcard.
Did you BELIEVE
the postcard I brought in?
Did you BELIEVE
that Mr. Walter Dean Myersâ
my all-time favorite poet
who visited our class
last yearâ
that Mr. Walter Dean Myers
himself
sent me a postcard?
I
didn't believe it
when I saw it.
I sat right down on the steps
and read it about fifty times.
And do you BELIEVE
That he mentioned his
C A T ????
His CAT !
I love that postcard
love love love it
but I'm still a little surprised
that Mr. Walter Dean Myers
has a CAT.
I thought he would have
a dashing dog
or maybe a hearty horse.
It is hard to picture
Mr. Walter Dean Myers
with
a
CAT.