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		Rules: Write a poem for national poetry month on the topic or form described. Each poem should appear as a separate reply to this thread. The goal is to, at the end of the month have written 30 poems for National Poetry Month. 
 Topic 18: today's prompt was sent to me by a friend who says it was from a book of prompts - write a poem about what is under your house.
 Form : any
 Line requirements: 8 lines or more
 
 Questions?
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		CORru/GATed/ IRon sheetsunderNEATH/  the HOUSE
 FROM the/ SHED that/FELL over.
 underNEATH/ my BLOUSE
 HEAR my/ HEART a’/ RACing as
 there  beNEATH/ the SHEETS
 PEEK i/HOPing/ THERES nothing
 in beTWEEN/-reTREAT
 BACKwards/WHEN un/EXPected
 by me SNAKE/ apPEARS
 SHOULD have/ LEFT it/ WELL alone
 its been THERE/ for YEARS
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Not a poem just a flow of free thoughts that i can use anothr day.  (Under my house there is soil, cow poo and the odd bone...not very inspiring , so...)
 There’s a marmalade mine under my house
 
 In Permian red rocks,
 strands of orange peel were deposited in the sands
 of a desert, at a time when Britain lay close to the equator,
 somewhere around two hundred and fifty one million years ago.
 This desert was created by intense erosion of wild orange groves
 that grew on mountains that were formed by vast crust upheavals
 in the preceding Carboniferous period.
 
 There is a fault line
 that runs from left to right through Devon;
 because of a unique combination of substructures
 it erupted in a Pyroclastic Flow
 of coarse cut marmalade, breccias and lime pebbles,
 that boiled up through six other layers to be exposed at Solland.
 
 The resultant confection was then cooled by mineral
 water, filtered in lime and glass lined tunnels
 which directly connects the Alps to the marmalade seams.
 In constant use from early times, the marmalade
 is highly sought after as a local delicacy
 and to water proof home made coracles.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-20-2014, 12:09 AM)cidermaid Wrote:  Not a poem just a flow of free thoughts that i can use anothr day.  (Under my house there is soil, cow poo and the odd bone...not very inspiring , so...)
 There’s a marmalade mine under my house
 
 In Permian red rocks,
 strands of orange peel were deposited in the sands
 of a desert, at a time when Britain lay close to the equator,
 somewhere around two hundred and fifty one million years ago.
 This desert was created by intense erosion of wild orange groves
 that grew on mountains that were formed by vast crust upheavals
 in the preceding Carboniferous period.
 
 There is a fault line
 that runs from left to right through Devon;
 because of a unique combination of substructures
 it erupted in a Pyroclastic Flow
 of coarse cut marmalade, breccias and lime pebbles,
 that boiled up through six other layers to be exposed at Solland.
 
 The resultant confection was then cooled by mineral
 water, filtered in lime and glass lined tunnels
 which directly connects the Alps to the marmalade seams.
 In constant use from early times, the marmalade
 is highly sought after as a local delicacy
 and to water proof home made coracles.
 
You know when I saw this prompt I actually thought to myself that I would need to consult a geologist to write this one.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Under the boards and beams of a house from 1893
 Lumpy, bumpy, bricks of clay
 Wormy, squirmy, squiggles away
 A jar of coins, a marble, a nail
 what could you see if you tunneled there?
 A bone, a wire, a sewage line
 All these treasures trapped in time
 Lumpy, bumpy, bricks of clay
 Wormy, squirmy, squiggles away
 
"With every brush stroke, so goes a piece of my soul"
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,827Threads: 305
 Joined: Dec 2016
 
	
	
		There's a bull snake under my house,I like him fine cause he eats the mouse,
 at least until he's up in the walls,
 and rattles my teeth and dishes and all.
 But still I am fond of him, he does as he should,
 and though I dislike snakes, this one is good,
 and should he pass, and be no more,
 I'll have to get another one from the store!
 
How long after picking up the brush, the first masterpiece?
 The goal is not to obfuscate that which is clear, but make clear that which isn't.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,325Threads: 82
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		Securely planted, deep in place 
atop a solid granite ledge,  
attached into the mountain face 
securely planted deep. In place 
of freedom, settled in its space, 
an eaglet with no urge to fledge, 
securely planted, deep in place, 
atop a solid granite ledge.
 
  (04-20-2014, 05:42 AM)painter not a poet Wrote:  Under the boards and beams of a house from 1893
 Lumpy, bumpy, bricks of clay
 Wormy, squirmy, squiggles away
 A jar of coins, a marble, a nail
 what could you see if you tunneled there?
 A bone, a wire, a sewage line
 All these treasures trapped in time
 Lumpy, bumpy, bricks of clay
 Wormy, squirmy, squiggles away
 
Welcome to pigpen NaPM.   
billy wrote:welcome to the site. make it your own, wear it like a well loved slipper and wear it out. ella pleads:please click forum titles for posting guidelines, important threads. New poet? Try Poetic DevicesandWard's Tips
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Digs under House
 We bury things beneath our homes,
 normally unmentionables.
 Odd treasures most could do without,
 but one day, have a need for them:
 
 Chocolate bars grandma gave to us
 just before our daily meals.
 Mother deemed it sabotage,
 but it was grandma buying love.
 
 Yellow pills that mother swallowed
 when we were behaving badly.
 Curious, we pilfered them
 to know what made her happy.
 
 Cans of baked beans and baby peas
 that my tasteless Dad made us eat.
 They will keep for centuries,
 until the next apocalypse.
 
 Gory horror magazines
 my parents would not let us read;
 those images kept me up at night,
 but now I'm awake for no reason.
 
 R-rated movie videos
 that babysitters let us watch,
 less disturbing than the nightly News
 with body counts from Viet Nam.
 
 Tumblers our aunts offered secretly
 filled with cocktail potions,
 which made the silly games we played
 the center of attention.
 
 Tainted panties cousins flashed,
 on those special holidays;
 I’ve never looked at Tweety Bird
 in such a naughty way.
 
 Knobby knees of distant uncles
 that had us straddle them like ponies;
 I'm glad that was the only thing
 that pounded against my hiney.
 
 Mr. Rodger’s Play Boy collection
 boxed up high in the attic.
 We never saw those girls next door,
 they were from another planet.
 
 Beat generation poetry,
 flaunting homosexuality,
 but Ginberg’s hairy anatomy
 scared us straight eternally.
 
 Ribbons of semen expelled weekly
 for models in their lingerie.
 Thank you Cosmopolitan-
 for showing us what to do with these.
 
 Some things we hide in the crawl space,
 where they are less conspicuous,
 but we can dig them up again
 when the madness of life digs at us.
 
My new watercolor: 'Nightmare After Christmas'/Chris
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 574Threads: 80
 Joined: May 2013
 
	
	
		 (04-21-2014, 05:52 AM)ChristopherSea Wrote:  Digs under House
 We bury things beneath our homes,
 normally unmentionables.
 Odd treasures most could do without,
 but one day, have a need for them:
 
 Chocolate bars grandma gave to us
 just before our daily meals.
 Mother deemed it sabotage,
 but it was grandma buying love.
 
 Yellow pills that mother swallowed
 when we were behaving badly.
 Curious, we pilfered them
 to know what made her happy.
 
 Cans of baked beans and baby peas
 that my tasteless Dad made us eat.
 They will keep for centuries,
 until the next apocalypse.
 
 Gory horror magazines
 my parents would not let us read;
 those images kept me up at night,
 but now I'm awake for no reason.
 
 R-rated movie videos
 that babysitters let us watch,
 less disturbing than the nightly News
 with body counts from Viet Nam.
 
 Tumblers our aunts offered secretly
 filled with cocktail potions,
 which made the silly games we played
 the center of attention.
 
 Tainted panties cousins flashed,
 on those special holidays;
 I’ve never looked at Tweety Bird
 in such a naughty way.
 
 Knobby knees of distant uncles
 that had us straddle them like ponies;
 I was glad that was the only thing
 that pounded against my hiney.
 
 Mr. Rodger’s Play Boy collection
 boxed up high in the attic.
 We never saw those girls next door,
 they were from another planet.
 
 Beat generation poetry,
 flaunting homosexuality,
 but Ginberg’s hairy anatomy
 scared us straight eternally.
 
 Ribbons of semen expelled weekly
 for models in their lingerie.
 Thank you Cosmopolitan-
 for showing us what to do with these.
 
 Some things we hide in the crawl space,
 where they are less conspicuous,
 but we can dig them up again
 when the madness of life digs at us.
 
A lot of situations to reflect on here, good stuff. As well as the metaphorical stuffing of things in a hidden place mixed with the actuality of doing so. Very sad.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 845Threads: 57
 Joined: Aug 2013
 
	
	
		 (04-21-2014, 08:37 AM)Brownlie Wrote:  Thanks, I keep trying to think of valuable things to hide under the house, but could only come up with bad things, so it became a metaphor to stash unwanted memories. (04-21-2014, 05:52 AM)ChristopherSea Wrote:  Digs under House
 We bury things beneath our homes,
 normally unmentionables.
 Odd treasures most could do without,
 but one day, have a need for them:
 
 Chocolate bars grandma gave to us
 just before our daily meals.
 Mother deemed it sabotage,
 but it was grandma buying love.
 
 Yellow pills that mother swallowed
 when we were behaving badly.
 Curious, we pilfered them
 to know what made her happy.
 
 Cans of baked beans and baby peas
 that my tasteless Dad made us eat.
 They will keep for centuries,
 until the next apocalypse.
 
 Gory horror magazines
 my parents would not let us read;
 those images kept me up at night,
 but now I'm awake for no reason.
 
 R-rated movie videos
 that babysitters let us watch,
 less disturbing than the nightly News
 with body counts from Viet Nam.
 
 Tumblers our aunts offered secretly
 filled with cocktail potions,
 which made the silly games we played
 the center of attention.
 
 Tainted panties cousins flashed,
 on those special holidays;
 I’ve never looked at Tweety Bird
 in such a naughty way.
 
 Knobby knees of distant uncles
 that had us straddle them like ponies;
 I'm glad that was the only thing
 that pounded against my hiney.
 
 Mr. Rodger’s Play Boy collection
 boxed up high in the attic.
 We never saw those girls next door,
 they were from another planet.
 
 Beat generation poetry,
 flaunting homosexuality,
 but Ginberg’s hairy anatomy
 scared us straight eternally.
 
 Ribbons of semen expelled weekly
 for models in their lingerie.
 Thank you Cosmopolitan-
 for showing us what to do with these.
 
 Some things we hide in the crawl space,
 where they are less conspicuous,
 but we can dig them up again
 when the madness of life digs at us.
 A lot of situations to reflect on here, good stuff. As well as the metaphorical stuffing of things in a hidden place mixed with the actuality of doing so. Very sad.
 
My new watercolor: 'Nightmare After Christmas'/Chris
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 848Threads: 232
 Joined: Oct 2012
 
	
	
		The dark room den
 It could have been penned by Enid Blyton,
 a bunch of kids finding a secret panel,
 peeling back the carpet in the pantry,
 a hidden door to the houses underbelly
 we even had a dog.
 
 Through a small wooden frame we found our room
 carpeted with an off-cut from the last years lounge
 this quickly became our hideaway,
 furnished with bits from the rubbish tip,
 complete with candles and a tape recorder.
 
 It was from that control centre our cases were solved,
 neatly wrote up and filed in a box,
 including the mystery of the milk bottle tops.
 When neighbours complained of damage done early
 by visiting vandals or something more scary.
 
 I would just like to say that I’m here to report
 and the dark room mob would swear this in court.
 That while number 10 slept away with their dreams,
 it was a sparrow that had it away with their cream.
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
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