And this month's project at Cafe Writing included a prompt to think about this quote:
I have the opportunitythen write a poem about one of those things. Enjoy!]
Once more to right some wrongs,
To pray for peace, to plant a tree,
And sing more joyful songs.
~William Arthur Ward
Wanted: Contralto Solos
I search, and hunt, and strive to find,
achieving only grievous hitches,
the alto solos which I've pined
for – gorgeous pieces – honest riches,
yet nothing shines, I'm like as blind
and suff'ring from a jokester's switches.
I dimly peer into the murk
and seek again contralto work.
The opera brings three kinds of roles:
the first are hags that seek to irk;
and next are evil women – trolls
who seek a sheath for poisoned dirk;
and finally lads off tending foals
or scheming how their jobs to shirk.
They feature itches, molls, or ditches,
playing witches, bitches, or britches.
Perhaps I should give up this grind,
and all the heartache that it brings.
Yet on the shelf must be the kind
of piece that I so want to sing,
that binds a heart and intertwines
all noble and uplifting things.
The poignant search continues long
for blissful, joyous alto songs.
5 comments:
Annie, this is brilliant! I absolutely love it. Any poem that immerses me in a world I know nothing about, like opera, and yet in my own daily world at the same time...fantastic! I've read 9 poems so far this morning, and this is my absolute favorite of the bunch.
Thanks, Laura, although my name isn't Annie. I should also confess that I don't really sing opera, though I am a low contralto and am indeed quite frustrated at trying to find solos for my voice range. I'm so glad you like it.
Made me grin too :-)
I definitely enjoy more the songs that I can croak along to.
Must be why I have various Dire Straits albums in the library :-)
Hi, Sleepypete. :-)
Have you looked at Widerstehe doch der Sünde, BWV 54 by J. S. Bach? Goes down to F3 and doesn't go above C5 from what I remember... http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Widerstehe_doch_der_S%C3%BCnde,_BWV_54
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