Proverbs of My Seasons: Poetry of Transition

Pat Stanford's poetry is a collection of the many topics and events that naturally occur in a person's life. There is a road travelled that is not necessarily a straight and easy one, which weaves through the seasons of life. Her reflections are shared with you, the reader. A connection to be made? Or perhaps just a reflection of your own life made easier to visualize. Some are raw emotions, and some are written tongue-in-cheek; some are about the turbulence of youth written with a youthful perspective, and some show a more mature person. Some will make an immediate connection, and some may need to be read again.

The author meditates on love, friendship, nature, religion, personal identity, poetry in general, and some seriously fun things. While there are no erotic love poems, there are a few that might make you think this poet has had nothing but unhappy relationships, but that is not the case. Many of the poems are observations of other people at a park or the mall, and how they seem to relate to each other. Same holds true for the friendship poems - half seem to be from someone who lost their best friend, and that is just the observation of how friendships can go. Nature is observed in its many seasons from stormy summer weather to winter snow.

Since poems that are rhymed and in quatrains are what she cut her teeth on, Pat wrote most of the poems are in that style, but she takes a stab at a few other styles as well. I hope you will enjoy the journey.

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Proverbs of My Seasons: Poetry of Transition

Pat Stanford's poetry is a collection of the many topics and events that naturally occur in a person's life. There is a road travelled that is not necessarily a straight and easy one, which weaves through the seasons of life. Her reflections are shared with you, the reader. A connection to be made? Or perhaps just a reflection of your own life made easier to visualize. Some are raw emotions, and some are written tongue-in-cheek; some are about the turbulence of youth written with a youthful perspective, and some show a more mature person. Some will make an immediate connection, and some may need to be read again.

The author meditates on love, friendship, nature, religion, personal identity, poetry in general, and some seriously fun things. While there are no erotic love poems, there are a few that might make you think this poet has had nothing but unhappy relationships, but that is not the case. Many of the poems are observations of other people at a park or the mall, and how they seem to relate to each other. Same holds true for the friendship poems - half seem to be from someone who lost their best friend, and that is just the observation of how friendships can go. Nature is observed in its many seasons from stormy summer weather to winter snow.

Since poems that are rhymed and in quatrains are what she cut her teeth on, Pat wrote most of the poems are in that style, but she takes a stab at a few other styles as well. I hope you will enjoy the journey.

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Proverbs of My Seasons: Poetry of Transition

Proverbs of My Seasons: Poetry of Transition

by Pat Stanford
Proverbs of My Seasons: Poetry of Transition

Proverbs of My Seasons: Poetry of Transition

by Pat Stanford

eBook

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Overview

Pat Stanford's poetry is a collection of the many topics and events that naturally occur in a person's life. There is a road travelled that is not necessarily a straight and easy one, which weaves through the seasons of life. Her reflections are shared with you, the reader. A connection to be made? Or perhaps just a reflection of your own life made easier to visualize. Some are raw emotions, and some are written tongue-in-cheek; some are about the turbulence of youth written with a youthful perspective, and some show a more mature person. Some will make an immediate connection, and some may need to be read again.

The author meditates on love, friendship, nature, religion, personal identity, poetry in general, and some seriously fun things. While there are no erotic love poems, there are a few that might make you think this poet has had nothing but unhappy relationships, but that is not the case. Many of the poems are observations of other people at a park or the mall, and how they seem to relate to each other. Same holds true for the friendship poems - half seem to be from someone who lost their best friend, and that is just the observation of how friendships can go. Nature is observed in its many seasons from stormy summer weather to winter snow.

Since poems that are rhymed and in quatrains are what she cut her teeth on, Pat wrote most of the poems are in that style, but she takes a stab at a few other styles as well. I hope you will enjoy the journey.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940181547797
Publisher: DocUmeant Publishing
Publication date: 07/24/2025
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

Table of Contents

Introduction

PART ONE: SPRING

Key to My Heart

Lonely Road

Touched by Love

Solitary Question

It Wasn’t Bad

It’s So Hard

The Survivor

Only Love

Love is Like an Old Sock

Afterglow

How It Used to Be

Love of the Loved

Things Not Said

A Retrospect

I’m So Tired

The Error

Phantom

The Two of You

Air for a Flute

Phantom II

Moody Like Me

The Sigh

Temporary Insanity

First, You Cry

Fall in Love

Lighthouse

Goodbye

PART TWO: SUMMER

Carry On, Regardless

Prospecting Friends

A Best Friend is Forever

Death of a Friendship

Verse to a Friend

Always Third

If I Laugh

Don’t Bother Me

Happy Birthday to a Friend

I’ll See You in My Dreams

To One Who Inspired

Iron Lady

Desolation

On Survival

In Appreciation

To Susan

River

Broken Arrow

A Patch of Briars

Trinity

Dark Side of the Moonchild

Duck Shit Sunday

PART THREE: AUTUMN

Paths

The Undefeated Ocean

Destiny

Night Harbor

Painting of a Storm

Storm at Sea

Serenity

Early in the Morning

Sky Beasts

Tragedy

Souvenirs

The Lonely Traveler

To Evening

In Memoriam

Keep On Growing

The Park

Ode to a Canary

Destiny of Frogs

Sunday Morning Tragedy

The Fiend

Sleeping Earth

Boomerang

The New Season

The View from the Porch

Uncomfortable Repose

Patterns

PART FOUR: WINTER

A Lifetime

An Old Song

Wisdom of Water

Mountain of Truth

Woodard’s Garden

Alone in the Dark

I Looked Away

I’m Going to Neptune

Life in a Goldfish Bowl

Old Woman of the Road

Prophesy

Silence

My Soul and the Wind

Drift Away

Like Dreamers Do

After Work

The Savage

Graduation

Beware the Grapevine

Memories

Paper

Fighting the Same War

Island in the Sun

Pipe Dreams

Poetry

The Child

Ascension

Pulitzer

Advent

Acknowledgments

Additional Works by Pat Stanford

From the B&N Reads Blog

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