Poetry Friday: Poems from Third Grade, Part 4

Welcome to Poetry Friday! Mary Lee Hahn is hosting this week’s link-up at her blog, A Reading Year. Hope to see you over there!


Happy Poetry Friday!


 


 


 


 


 


 


I hope you brought your appetite. The Northfield E. S. third graders have more food poems to share with you today.


But before we feast on lemonade, bubble gum, ice cream, pizza, and chocolate chip pancakes, I’d like to share a favorite poem by Naomi Shihab Nye. This week, the Poetry Friday community is celebrating Nye, our new Young People’s Poet Laureate.


Naomi Shihab Nye’s “The Lost Parrot” is a poem that I think about and reread every time I do a school poetry residency. “The Lost Parrot” recounts a visiting poet running a series of workshops for young students. One boy, Carlos, writes about the same subject, no matter the prompt: his lost parrot.


I hope you’ll take a moment to listen to the poem. For me, Nye’s “The Lost Parrot” captures the way a visiting poet interacts with young writers — encouraging their stories and creativity without pushing an agenda, rarely getting to know the children beyond the poems they write. Sometimes we get bursts of insight into their lives, sense of humor, and interests. Other times, visiting poets are left with a question or mystery, as Nye experiences in “The Lost Parrot.”


Now on to today’s delicious poems (and one salty cake).


Awesome Awesome Tacos!

By Aaron L.


I smell the spices,

the melted cheese,

then I immediately

know what’s for dinner.

Awesome

Awesome


TACOS!


I feel the warm

taco

shell in my

mouth

Awesome

Awesome


TACOS!


I hear my family

crunch the tacos.

Crunchy

Crunchy

tacos.


Yummy, the best

kind of tacos.


***


Sweet Chocolaty Chocolate Chip Pancakes!

By Coco W.


I jump out of the car.

My mom says slow down.

I hug Papa and my

Grandma. When we get

Inside, Papa knows the people.

We get some good seats. I sit next

to my cousin. My other cousin screams!

“The food is arriving.” I smell the sweet

dough. I see the melty chocolate laying on

my plate. My cheeks get very gooey with

chocolate on my face. I get to take a bite.

It is the biggest of them all! Delicious

dough mixed with chocolate melting in my mouth.


***


My Pecan Pie

By Misha W.


My family comes to the party-like feast.

Then the pecan pie comes in on a white dish.

My grandma made the best pecan pie around.

I smelled the sweet pecans and the pie crust.

I see the pecans popping out of the pie.

When everyone grabs a piece, the yelling dies down

and replacing it is a crunch and a munch.

It’s finally my turn to feel the pecan pie.

I feel the rough and moist crunch touching my hands.

When it touches my mouth, I feel the warmth.

I taste my sweet pecan pie.

With the bready crust.

“Burrrrp! Excuse me,” I say.

“Can I have some more?”

And my mom says no.

I got the biggest piece of them all.


***


Salty Cake

By Reed S.


Ew! Blah! My cake tastes like salt.

It looks good, but is disgusting. It

Smells chocolaty, but tastes like

salt. Everybody is making faces!

I can’t believe salt and sugar

got mixed up.


***


Yummy Meatloaf

For Anna

By Ella O.


2 hours in the oven

To cook the meatloaf

We’d run

Straight from the park

I run to my house

1 block

Then the house I reach

That smells like meat

You ran

Because you had the energy

1 loaf of yummyness

Everything on the meatloaf

Except mustard

Dash that meatloaf

Onto plates and splash on

All the sauce to splash on

Red tomatoes on the side

Avocados piled up on the side

Shoveled up onto a plate

Meatloaf for us to hold hot

On our forks

Plates on the table

Sit down

Good meatloaf

We’d eat

Fast till there was nothing left

But little tiny pieces of meat

And even a tiny bit of tomato sauce

I would eat it all

We’d touch

The little food we would have left

You humming

Me whistling


***


Good Cotton Candy

For My Dad

By Hiba S.


1 dollar a piece

to eat our dessert.

We’d run to the cashier

instead of the car.

Two blocks from our next

destination (that smelled

very sweet). You paid because

you had the money.

3 cotton candies and

2 strips of ribbon. Even

jelly inside. Eat those cotton

candies. Lil’ sister picking

her food. All that good stuff

on top. White sprinkles and

blue sprinkles. Stuck inside

the cotton candy. Rolled up

in a plastic cone. Dollars on

the counter, sit down, good

cotton candies. We’d eat

fast till there was nothing

left. But blue and white

sprinkles. Even cotton on

my face! We’d finish. You driving

and me saying, “Thank you.”


***


Good Ice Cream

For Sara

By Alisha K.


1 dollar apiece

To eat our dessert

We’d run, me and you

Straight from home

Instead of the park

Two blocks

Then the store

That smelled like ice

I ordered

Because I had the money

Two ice creams with two scoops for here

Nothing on the ice cream

Except M and Ms

Dash those ice creams

Into cones and dump on the flavors

All that good stuff

Chocolate ice cream and M and Ms

And Skittles piled on top all

Rolled up in a napkin

For us to hold cold

In our hands

A dollar on the counter

Sit down

Good ice creams

We’d eat

Fast till there was nothing left

But leftover Skittles and M and Mss

The little colors of Skittles and M and Ms

We’d eat

You humming

And me with a smile


***


Lemonade

By Brian W.


1 dollar a cup to drink our lemonade.

I rush straight from school. Instead

of home, I got the other way. Then

to the stand that smelled like snow.

I ordered because I am thirsty.

two lemonades and two ice for here.

Everything on the lemonade

except straws. Stir those lemonade

into drinks and splash on

all the good stuff, lemons and mini

umbrellas and ice on top all

in a cup, paper for us to hold cold

drinks in our hands.

Dollars on the counter.

Sit down. Good lemonade.

I drink fast till there was nothing

left but mini umbrella and lemons

even the little cold ice of cubes

we’d slurp up the lemonade, you

drinking and me buying more.


***


Pizza

By Henry R.


1 dollar apiece to eat my lunch.

I would jog straight from school

instead of home. 5 blocks

then the store that smelled

like pizza. You ordered because

you had enough money for

2 pizzas. Everything on the

pizzas. Dash those pizzas

with all that good stuff

and throw on some

pepperoni and some pineapple.

covered up with wax paper nice

and warm. Quarters on the

counter. Sit down on the concrete.

I would eat the greasy and yellow pizza

fast till there wasn’t even

a bite left. When I was finished

I trembled back home with a full

fat stomach.


***


Bubble Gum

By Evan R.


The sweetness of the taste

so chewy in my mouth.

The pink bubble splats in my face

With my baseball teammates around laugh.

I stiff have parts of the bubble on my face.

I watch the game still blowing bubbles.

Me and my teammates smell the fresh air

blow by our faces.

I try to blow another bubble

but the air is too strong.


***


Thanks to the Northfield community for allowing me to share the third graders’ poems!


For more of this year’s student poems, please check out:

Poems from Third Grade, Part 1 — List Poems (Ms. Spencer, Ms. Sochol-Solomon, and Ms. Scavo’s classes)

Poems from Third Grade, Part 2 — List Poems (Ms. Hilliard and Ms. Trodden’s classes)

Poems from Third Grade, Part 3 — Food Poems (Ms. Hilliard and Ms. Trodden’s classes)



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Published on May 30, 2019 19:00
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