Wednesday, April 23, 2008
April PAD Challenge: Day 23
Posted by Robert

It's hard to believe that a week from today I'll be posting the last prompt of the month. We're already almost a month older than we were at the end of March. Time just continues to fly by--even in a poetry challenge, huh?

Well, today's prompt is sympathetic of the fact that time continues its march and that things continue to change and stay the same all at once. Today's prompt is to write about getting older.

No matter your age, everyone gets older with every. single. second. and. heart. beat. Seriously, even my 4-year-old laments over how he's getting older and misses the good old days of not going to preschool and having "to learn stuff."

So, you can lament over your glory days, express your insecurities of being in transition, or brag about how you're at the perfect age to live life completely content (lucky you). I'm guessing y'all will have a lot of fun with this one.

Here's my poem for the day:

"Today"

"Your hard work will pay off today."
                       -Fortune Cookie

Sometimes I wonder if today is the day
that everything comes together, and I
get the raise and the girl and the parade
through downtown. Is this when I get
my "pay off" for trying? But then, I think
maybe my "pay off" comes every day.
Maybe it's simply the process of getting
from here to there. Maybe my "pay off"
is hard work and two boys who love me,
that moment outside the laundromat
late at night, listening to her voice and
the stillness of a spring evening suddenly
broken by bikers cruising the streets
on their hogs. I'm still just a teenager
at heart and in love with the world, but
sometimes I wonder if today is the day.

 


Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2008 | Poetry Prompts
4/23/2008 10:12:22 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [187] 
Day 11 Highlights
Posted by Robert

Paper clips! There were a lot of paper clip poems written on Day 11--when I asked you to write a poem describing a thing. Actually, I found that your focus on description led to some really, really great poems. One of my favorites, in fact, is a poem about--you guessed it--the paper clip "Bent into a 'u', then bent again,/another 'u' into itself, this bit of wire/we entrust to keep our documents secure." Check out all of today's highlights below.

*****

 

Calendar Above My Desk

 

Every month a new world

bubbling brooks

scarlet sunsets

sailboats idling in the harbor

words like

Winnipesaukee

Ammonsoosuc

Mt. Monadnock

days morph into months

months yearning for vacation

a glance up from my monitor

is a journey away from here

 

 

Teri Coyne |tmc329AT NOSPAMaol dot com

 

*****

 

Everything Must Go

 

In the parking lot, behind the dollar general, at 2

in the afternoon, a young man thrust hands

into pockets of an old three-button suit fit

for someone half his size—as if he might

have fished it from a thrift-store or a pile

of clothes at a yard-sale, estate sale, auction

for the peeling home behind the elementary

school where people pick and peck at tables

on the outgrown lawn, silent as hungry

blackbirds after grubs. Nobody looks

into windows, knocks on doors. Nothing

to see here. Nothing they haven’t seen before

on every street in town. Another sign goes

up. Another. And someone gets a tax break

when they buy the place on Market for half

of what its worth. And damn, if they’d a let us

pay that price to start, we could a kept

the bastard. Or if the Ford plant didn’t move or if

And the walls ache empty as the stomachs

of strays who wade sunsplashed in river water

with a girl off route 222. Everything idles,

engines low on gas, turn, sputter out a grinding

song. Everything’s for sale. For rent. Fore

closed. Everything must go. And the young man

hums a melody that could be a spiritual, though

he doesn’t look like a boy to sing spirituals. Too

mod, too hip, too fashionably poor. And no-one

sings those old songs anymore, having lost the feel,

the touch that looks you up and down and says, “I know”

because we do. Or should. After all, it’s nothing

we haven’t heard before: the way we mutter

to ourselves, taking as we do what falls

to us with hands open as any supplicant’s. How

many doors swing idly in and out? And tell me who

wore the jackets we are wearing now?

 

 

Joel Peckham |joel_peckhamAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

The Nose

 

Well, as the old saying goes.

The thing you overlook’s your nose

A nose is such an odd looking thing

A bump, two holes, graced with wings

It blesses you with fragrant smells

Like cookies, lilacs, caramels

Or it curses you with things malodorous

Skunks, dirty diapers, a diesel bus

But above all, its kindest grace

Is to keep your glasses on your face

 

 

Connie |CoFun77AT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

WINDSHIELD WIPERS

 

Back and forth

back and forth

We wipe the tears of the sky

off the glass shield

to give you safer travels

while on slick roads

back and forth

back and forth

We remove debris and dirt

that has piled up in your neglect to clean

as often as you should

back and forth

back and forth

We grow weary from the frequent use

but keep going at whatever speed you choose

back and forth

back and forth

You get frustrated with us because

we aren't as sharp as we once were

Smears and smudges leave a trail

because YOU refuse to keep us up

The next time you are squinting from the

glare of oncoming lights

because there is no more fluid

and we can't wipe the glass clean dry

maybe you'll decide to stop going

back and forth

back and forth

without giving

CHANGING THE WIPER BLADES

a try!

 

 

Christa R. Shelton |c_writesAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 

*****

 

In Consideration of My Left Eye

 

Today will I consider my left eye.

Not my metaphorical eye,

nor the third eye my sister's friend

the astrologer says is wide open

even when I sleep. No, today

I will look directly into my own left eye,

taking into account everything I see.

 

First, my upper lid obscures the iris

unless I pretend to be surprised. The fine

window cracks of blood vessels in the whites

flow like mapped roads, driving beneath

the skin where I cannot follow.

 

On the inner wall of my pupil, beneath

the green ring which precedes the blue

for which I have received so much praise,

something geometric grows, straight, angled,

and a complete mystery. It catches the light,

making the study of whatever it is

quite impossible.

 

Approaching the mirror, I can see in the black,

the reflection of me, looking at myself. I am

small, as if I have captured myself, imprisoned

more than my reflection, more than myself.

 

When I turn and look straight at my eye,

I notice how part of my eyeball is darker,

almost jaundice. I pause to consider the line

between bright and dull, wonder if it cuts me

in half in other ways, intersects my life,

determines for me who I really am.

 

With nothing more to observe worth mention

inside my left eye, I think it best to avoid

the symmetry of my right eye, or perhaps

the disappointment of learning

they are in fact not the same as each other.

 

My final consolation is this:

At least I was, after all has been seen and said,

wise enough to avoid observing my nose.

 

 

Justin Evans |evjustinAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

Moss

 

When we say “moss” in the South,

we specifically mean Spanish moss,

 

that kinky, grey wig that drips

from the old oak branches,

 

that red bug-infested parasite

that (with the smell of wet

cow pastures) reminds me of home.

 

 

JL Smither |jlsmitherAT NOSPAMgmail dot com

 

*****

 

Manure

 

Every time you

spoil the lilt of my potpourri,

every time you stick to my feet or

my thoughts along

that path I want pristine,

I need to remember

that you are the Limburger cheese

behind all things verdant.

 

 

Maria Jacketti |medusashairdresserAT NOSPAMmsn dot com

 

*****

 

The Tree

 

stood in the front yard, next to its

brother on the other side of the

walkway. Small maples, beautiful

lush leaves. One of the reasons we

bought the little fixer-upper in the

first place, the nice visual at the

 

front door. One tree continued to

grow and thrive. The other seemed to

shrink into itself. As the seasons flew

by, the brother grew tall and strong,

while the sibling’s branches stopped

growing and curled up toward the

center. Then the bark started to peel

 

off, and we knew the end had come.

It was time to cut our losses and let

it go. I watched the saw cut into one

of the reasons we bought this small

fixer-upper and felt a sense of loss.

 

 

Susan M. Bell |maylandwritersAT NOSPAMgmail dot com

 

*****

 

The Treadmill

 

Symbol of my hope, my will,

rubber walk on frame of steel,

How I wonder how you feel,

my poor neglected treadmill.

 

She who walks you nowhere goes,

yet we keep you, I suppose,

not for walking, heaven knows.

I need a place to hang my clothes.

 

 

Nancy |nposeyAT NOSPAMembarqmail dot com

 

*****

 

Paper Clip

 

Bent into a “u”, then bent again,

another “u” into itself, this bit of wire

we entrust to keep our documents secure,

has been attached to unexpected lore.

The story goes that some Norwegian

was the first to patent this invention,

and much later, in the Nazi occupation,

his countrymen wore paper clips

on their lapels, a secret solidarity

against the Reich and for their king.

Eventually this morphed into a symbol

of the Holocaust, and recently some kids

from Tennessee collected paper clips,

six million plus, to represent

the Jewish victims of that hellish time.

A humble turn of wire for a soul,

something we must fasten,

never to forget.

 

 

Bruce Niedt |jackbugsAT NOSPAMcomcast dot net

 

*****

 

Baby Fingers

 

Impossibly small

Perfectly formed

Lilliputian mimics

Of my ten digits

So tender and soft

Pink and clean

Translucent

Like a sea anenome

Exploring, reaching

Waving at the breeze

Giving my Gulliver sized

Finger a squeeze

 

 

SaraV |slvinasAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

his ear

 

shiny skin pulled tight over stiff cartilage

soft down covers boneless earlobe

the swirl and whirl of light and shadow follows

the sinuous curve which doesn't seem to end,

like a nautilus circling ever more tightly

around the auditory canal, which waits to

hear the words, "I love you..."

 

 

A.C. Leming |fackorfAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 

*****

 

Spoon

 

It's a big and made of plain metal

with a wood handle worn by use,

by washing. It stirs the pasta

or the onions, the peppers in olive oil,

it serves wherever it is needed.

 

How bright the sun poured

as we walked out our new door,

under the thick leaves of old trees,

past the jail, circles of razor wire catching the light,

and onto the broad boulevard,

or that's what it was called.

 

Our first night in our first apartment

together, our first morning

and a trip to the diner for breakfast.

We lingered by the tables

of the church ladies' sidewalk sale,

and we bought this practical spoon--

our first utensil in our new life.

 

After two decades,

I'm on the other side of the country

and the husband has passed,

but the second-hand spoon keeps

its place in the drawer, more

treasured than the meat fork it came with

or the glass bowl I bought

when I was twenty, even

the colander handed down

from my grandmother

that has a dent and is missing

both handles and that I can almost

let go of. The spoon stays.

 

 

Joannie Stangeland |joannieksAT NOSPAMmsn dot com

 

*****

 

My father’s shirt

 

My father’s shirt,

Soft brown cloth

The color of his cigars

When he smoked them

 

With the stitched deer head

On the pocket

That I’d snuggle

My cheek against

 

I snuck it from

The garage sale box

And wore it

For a few years

 

Now it’s folded

In my drawer

Sometimes

I take it out

 

To trace the stitches

On the pocket

And hold the worn cloth

Against my cheek again

 

 

Mike Barzacchini |mjbarzAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

My Parents’ Marriage

 

It will be 52 years this summer

And it is a hand played with finesse.

I watch them and soak them up,

Their fealty, concern for other.

How tenderly and diligently she

Cushions his world as the Parkinsons advances,

How dignified he is as his body cripples.

No trumping each other, though there were the years of that too,

Now transcended.

 

And when they were describing the accident

To me

(20 years ago, now?)

Each of them said, separately,

How when the car started to spin out of control

That they instinctively just

Reached

For the hand of the other, and held on.

No panic, like that, together.

 

 

Corinne |c dot dixonAT NOSPAMtelus dot net

 

*****

 

Canvas

 

What colors cast their spells

against this void of fabric

and gloss, blended from brushes

 

and thinners into magic potions

or portraits of the serene. Bleeding

fingertips of horses’ hair splash,

 

sling, and dapple, creating the shadows

and highlights, and highlights

inside the shadows of faces, of hands,

 

of trees. Reality is captured

or captured and bent through a diffuse

set of eyes and a prismatic lens

 

to give the world a taste and a glimpse

of something as pure and intangible

as a snowflake on the tongue.

 

It’s a hymen, a gateway, to all secrets untold,

but before that, it’s blank,

like this empty page, I filled with words.

 

 

Jay Sizemore |vader655321AT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 

*****

 

Sleek brown fox

peers over his shoulder

at his identical mate.

Ears sharply alert,

eyes deep and penetrating.

He poses with one paw

held in mid-air.

A sentry on my mantel;

Carved by great grandpa,

now guards our family.

 

 

Sue Bench |hd_ultra_96AT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

and i will make you a mixtape

 

music holds

a history: i laugh

at my age

when a girl

asks me

about cassettes

and how

we used them

in the wayback

and bygone

era

 

i still

listen to tapes

and their hiss

and watch

as the toothy

gears spin

inside

the deck

 

the sound-

track of three

years

together and three

apart, the friendship

spanning

an ocean, a first

boyfriend, the saddest

songs known: all

recorded

magnetically

for me

and frozen

in time

 

i have sat

for hours

pushing record

and pause

to give someone

a rectangular, musical

reminder of who

we were

if only

for a little

while

 

sometimes

a love letter

finds its way

into the case

or a collage

from old

magazines

and sometimes

just the handwriting

from a friend: every

song inside

a little gift

 

 

k weber |ilovehateyouAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 


Poetry Challenge 2008 | Poets
4/23/2008 9:47:08 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [16] 
 Tuesday, April 22, 2008
April PAD Challenge: Day 22
Posted by Robert

Today is Earth Day! Yay!

I think most people can agree that this planet is a good thing. However, wars are fought over how we should use it and/or live on it. So, today's "2 for Tuesday" prompts will play off the opposing sides of the environmental coin.

Prompt 1: Write a nature poem. This can about how much you love or hate nature. It can be optimistic or not so. You can write about global warming or about that time when a deer walked up so close you could almost pet it. I'll leave the specifics up to you, but it should be about nature.

Prompt 2: Write an industrial poem. This can be a poem about the benefits of transportation or the joys of urban living. It can cover technology, the comfort of cruising around in your car, etc. Of course, as with the nature poem, you can be optimistic or not so. I'll leave that up to y'all.

Here's my poem for today:

"It takes a car"

to get me there. And I walk along
a paved path before reaching
the post with green, red and blue
dots. The path becomes dirt
and rocks. My stride lengthens as
I head downhill toward the creek
that's perfect for wading in during
the summer. And I breathe deep,
realizing I can't hear any cars
or smell any exhaust. These trails
quiet my sense of anxiety, but
it takes a car to get here.

 


Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2008 | Poetry Prompts
4/22/2008 10:51:06 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [181] 
Day 10 Highlights
Posted by Robert

On Day 10, I asked you to pick a location and write about it. I feel so redundant, but these poems just keep getting better and better. Seriously. I actually had to do a couple rounds of cuts to get a manageable highlights list. Great job everyone! Here are the highlights.

*****

 

ROOM

 

Dirty jeans tossed on the green rug,

an old geometry test crumpled by the bed;

Harry Potter on the bookshelf,

and Western Philosophy by the computer,

fill the room by the attic stairs.

 

A few more months and he'll be gone,

but now the air smells of push-ups,

a first girlfriend, deoderant,

and Dr. Pepper.

Bed sheets are pulled from the mattress,

emo posters forgotten on the wall.

Red sneakers, white baseball caps,

black sweatshirts -

what's dirty? what's clean?

A mother's nightmare of a room;

will it disappear? will he?

 

 

ann malaspina

 

*****

 

where i am will always be

 

the city is simple:

a freckle

on a heart-

shaped state

 

anytown, usa

with a twist:

emilio estevez

once lived here

 

the litter of broken

glass sleeps

beside a dumpster

at night

 

and daytime

is a forecast

of grey and a 50%

chance of happiness

 

would we be

any different

if we wandered

anywhere else?

 

i change

my hair color

every few weeks

but no matter what

 

longitude

my chair sits on

home is still

that little river

 

city on a midwestern

map

 

 

k weber |ilovehateyouAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 

*****

 

Fear of Heights

 

In Battery Park

we board the ferry

boat blasting its horn,

ride across the chop

to Liberty's feet, climb

up and up, then

down and down

while the stairs

sway in the still air.

 

 

Margaret Fieland |infoAT NOSPAMmargaretfieland dot com

 

*****

 

Record Store

 

Brick-and-mortar dinosaur,

endangered species, whose habitat

is encroached by downloads,

mail-order websites and big-box

superstores – why am I still drawn

to it, why do I still walk right into

its welcoming mouth? It must be

the organized jumble, alphabetic chaos

of racks and racks of cases and sleeves,

CD’s and vinyl LP’s lined up

like thousands of ribs. What is it

about the air inside that renders me

amnesiac, forgetting everything else

to do in the world, as I flip methodically

through the rows, searching for treasure?

I could hunt for hours, the stack

of booty growing in my hands –

a used Miles Davis CD, a cut-out

copy of Bach cantatas, a mint-condition

vinyl of Dark Side of the Moon.

If the guy at the register plays

something I like, I could languish

all afternoon.. There’s something

real here, the slightly musty smell

of old records, the rainbow sheen of

the CD surface I inspect for scratches,

the lost art of the gatefold sleeve,

even just the heft of my catch,

that one can never get from watching

the crawling bar on a monitor

and the message, “Download Complete”.

 

 

Bruce Niedt |jackbugsAT NOSPAMcomcast dot net

 

*****

 

My Bathroom

 

Thank goodness walls can't talk.

These walls have seen me naked,

popping zits, throwing up in the toilet . . .

not all at the same time.

I keep my strawberry bubble bath

on the tub's ledge, seek solace

in its calming waters,

catch up on my reading,

work a few crossword puzzles.

This is where, tired of burned ears,

I learned to curl my own hair,

and later, to shave my legs.

This is where I first sat on the floor

as the now-familiar wave of nausea

that comes with migraines washed over me.

All my little soldiers line up

on the window sill,

the cucumber shampoo,

shea butter extra moisturizing body wash,

apricot face scrub, and the rebellious

razor that reclines where everything else

stands at attention.

 

 

Sarah |MusicToKnitToAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

Backyard

 

I can see between

the blades of grass, never

cut short, soft to bare

 

feet, hand mower chuck-a-

chuck-a, the blades then

the release. Daddy never tries

 

to beat the dandelions—

good for making wine,

so we gather the little

 

sunshines for him and blow

away the ones turned shivering

white. Buttercups paint your

 

chin yellow if someone loves you,

says my mother, checking my

chin and smiling.

 

I tend my one row of sturdy

orange carrots. In fall I will collect

apples before they can turn to mush,

 

make butter and pies, breathe

the cinnamon steam.

All summer my big brother

 

shines like a sea animal,

all baby oil and swimsuit

in the lounge chair. In a family

 

of fair skin his turns to milk

chocolate while my own skin

quietly flakes away.

 

The grass is soft. I try to see

it from the insects’ point of

view and fear nothing.

 

 

Elizabeth K. Keggi |lilyclarissaAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 

*****

 

Apartment 1

 

The day

begins with:

echos of life

racing down asphalt

warm coffee in hand

and not enough sleep.

and the pitter patter of neighbors' dogs

old couch cushions tilting

and my love handing out kisses

as we head out into the frey.

The night

ends with:

the next doors talking to loud

the across the courtyard

conversing on cellphones disregarding echo

while two floors up an argument flares.

In the alleyway

dog tags jingle

for one last

sniff before bed

and

inside this Apartment

is life

snuggling up for a

crime show episode

and dinner on the fly.

 

 

Jennifer Fagala

 

*****

 

Driving to Meet His Family

 

This is where, he says,

I lived until my parents were divorced.

He shows me his first school

as he takes me to

the only other home he’s ever known,

drives past the places of his childhood

points out where he first kissed a girl,

the school where he graduated before

settling down in his life. He brags about

the famous names that came from his hometown,

the third largest in his state, while I

try to remember how many places I called home.

I smirk at his pride, belittle it with

my descriptions of my big city memories,

moving from Chelsea

to the west side

to Alphabet City and,

very briefly, to Staten Island.

I mock his third biggest for being

Andy Griffith quaint but I don’t know

the exact location of where I had

my first kiss from a boy whose name

has also been lost in the crowd.

 

 

satia |satia62AT NOSPAMyahoo dot com

 

*****

 

“A Place In The Country”

 

The sound in the cafe was deafening

the clatter of dishes

the chatter of voices

human insects rubbing their legs together in unison

to create a symphony devoid of any real substance.

 

Yet somehow I felt comfortable inside this beehive

sucking in the energy from both inside the corner eatery

and from the world outside through the bright windows

and the parade of two and four-legged passersby

providing momentary diversions as they entered stage left

and exited stage right.

 

I thought of sitting in a country field miles from all this

and wondered if I would be more comfortable there

or if the quiet stillness would smother me.

 

A place in the country and a small city apartment

would be perfect for us she always said.

Now she was living in the country while I languished in the city

licking my emotional wounds, laughing at myself.

I thought she meant together.

 

 

Marcus Smith |sleeperdesuAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com

 

*****

 

Up on Kail Road

 

Past the dark henhouse,

with its feathers in the corners,

the shed made by odds

and ends of two by fours,

and the plain white cabin,

past the line where the grass

was no longer mowed

and then to the top of the hill,

the pump that drew no water,

we ran through the sun

to the summer pond

with empty coffee cans,

waded into the water,

brown and green, warm

at the edges, cupped our hands

to catch the small frogs,

quick and as colorful

as gems that, left alone,

would sing to us all night.

 

 

Joannie Stangeland |joannieksAT NOSPAMmsn dot com

 

*****

 

In The Tepee

 

A tepee is the Indians' pyramid, he said as

we lay staring up through the smoke-hole,

I spooned his ancient bones to keep him warm

while stars, turning in endless night,

fell to the fire and sparked gold

against deep red-grey coals,

shadows danced across the canvas,

the old man's stories braiding

dreams, memories and being, the smoke of

sage, sweetgrass, and cedar scenting the hides,

layering time in blue, curling tendrils

above the blankets and circle of stones,

knowing nothing would to be the same again,

I slipped my hand into Kipapanan's

and whispered to tell me more.

 

 

Lorraine Hart |lorrainehartAT NOSPAMgmail dot com

 

*****

 

Platform Attacks

 

13th Street Station

March 26, 2008

“36-year old Starbucks manager killed by group of youth,

(An asthma attack the official cause of death).”

 

Every second Wednesday,

I stood on this platform

At the same time of day.

Often I would stop at the victim’s store.

 

One night after Highwire Gallery

Spit us all out, post performances,

My husband pried me from a sidewalk

And inserted me into this station,

One part at a time,

Smoldering from street burn.

 

This very same March day, our friend,

An artist and musician was jumped.

The culprits did not take his new cordless drill,

Instead they broke his jaw, cracked his teeth.

 

Tunnel between 13th and 8th Street Stations

April 3, 2008

“12 youths rob and viciously beat 24-year old woman.”

 

I always refused to use the underground tunnels,

Especially when it rained or snowed.

The passages stretched too far

For any comfortable stroll.

 

They say this woman will recover.

She told police, "I have a headache

The size of Philadelphia.”

These girls and boys stole half her vision,

All of her belongings.

 

Every second and third Friday, I waited at 11 p.m.

At 8th street station. There were always youth,

But they were always attending our poetry series,

Not kicking a woman in the face for sport, or

Telling her to “watch her mouth.”

 

City Hall Station Platform

April 8, 2008 9:30 p.m.

“Woman is raped behind pylon.”

 

This was the scariest of all for me

As I walked alone from the Broad Street line

Onto this platform exactly one hour before.

Police say that this woman recanted her story,

But it still makes me shake every evening.

 

I used to say that as soon as

I get into SEPTA concourse, I am safe.

The Philadelphia night seemed much worse.

Now the city seems so hollow,

Gnawed out by rats, decorated by pigeons,

Skyscrapers that spell out Phillies light shows.

 

When I ascended to Fifth Street last night,

I felt my pulse in my feet,

My eyes survey a few times faster,

Shelter seems an anxious flashback.

 

 

Bonnie MacAllsiter |bmacallisterAT NOSPAMearthlink dot net

 

*****

 

Virtual Rock on Cape Cod

 

Flat planes shine in the sun

Inviting me to sprawl and

Spread out my Sunday newspaper.

My rock is surrounded by dark blue water,

And under the surface,

Yellow-green Fucus stems

And pretend-leaves swirl

And breathe in the soft

Surf of the Buzzard’s Bay.

My body takes up the rock’s heat,

Warms within as it bakes

without in its own right.

I give up on the newspaper

after the book review.

I lie on my stomach

And watch the tiny

Snails navigate the Fucus,

Watch the algae dance

Their minuets in rhythmic surges

Feel at one with the water..

 

 

Laural |lhoopesAT NOSPAMpomona dot edu

 

*****

 

Dog Park

 

Airedale anarchy

Beagle bedlam

Corgi chaos, collie commotion

Dachshund din

Elkhound excitement

foxhound fuss

Husky hullabaloo, Havanese hue and cry

Labrador lawlessness,

Malamute mayhem, Mastiff melee

Newfie noise

Poodle pandemonium

Rottwieler racket, Ridgeback rumpus

Samoyed scuffle

Terrier tumult

 

 

Kate |kberne50AT NOSPAMhotmail dot com


Poetry Challenge 2008 | Poets
4/22/2008 10:22:36 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3] 
 Monday, April 21, 2008