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 Joined: Dec 2016
 
	
	
		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 22: write a poem inspired by a line from one of your favourite poems.
 Form : any
 Line requirements: 8 lines or more
 
 Questions?
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 848Threads: 232
 Joined: Oct 2012
 
	
	
		Ok so I have wrote five erm poems today so im entitled a cop out this is a piece of prose I would like to work as a poem so this is a start.
 
 as if suddenly the roots I had left behind
 cried out to me, the land I had lost with my childhood--
 and I stopped, wounded by the wandering scent.
 
 Pablo Neruda (Lost in the forest)
 
 
 Pockets of Gold
 
 Standing alone in my old house,
 residents carried away by cancer,
 yet still their presence remains in each coat of paint and flowerbed,
 all now partly concealed by my much needed indifference.
 The home is bare, stripped back to its shell,
 except for the ghosts of old furniture that appear,
 just for a second, as I enter each room.
 
 I place my hand on the wall to check for a heartbeat.
 Can it be that traces of lost childhood
 are captured in the fabric of a room,
 dwell in wooden handles of old tools
 or crayon scribbling’s trapped behind wallpaper.
 Can it be that if we close our eyes
 and breathe in the essence of childhood haunts
 then chemistry alone can unlock memories
 once keyless and forgotten,
 And in doing so can you retrieve something
 so precious it can twist your body,
 crumple your face and turn sobs into shouts.
 I’m shouting now as I slide down the wall;
 I felt its beat before pulling away.
 
 Such places can be found in most of our footsteps
 and if you know how to look they can almost be touched.
 But my other places do not compare to this home,
 I could linger here for an eternity, drifting as a child,
 growing on thought and melancholy,
 surviving on smiles and laughter unlocked from memories.
 
 I cannot linger,
 the house is sold to the highest bidder.
 I have offered up my most prized possession,
 my touch-stone, my portal,
 for a pocket full of gold.
 Now when I need to look,
 how can I return to these places that hold me in their essence,
 that tell my story,
 Who now will listen to the beating fabric of my old home.
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 I sing the body electric,
 the armies of those I love engirth me and I engirth them…
 
 -Walt Whitman-
 
 
 Sing the Light Botanical
 
 
 Photons
 of light conduct
 an infrared chorus
 to inspire the weeping willow,
 spark tulip blown kiss and rosehip embrace
 Photosynthetic energy
 rouses callow gardens
 with resounding
 photons
 
 
My new watercolor: 'Nightmare After Christmas'/Chris
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Gyre*
 And are we come around
 again—the falcon back to ground,
 upon the sturdy arm of the falconer?
 
 Now 14 years past, I fear,
 that point—I have yet to hear,
 of the coming of that slouching Beast.
 
 For word, look to, the East
 and hear of his entrance—at least,
 the fault lies in the multitude of none.
 
 For in seconds comes
 the words—of the news that hums,
 with light the whole world ringed 'round!
 
 
 
 *Yeats "The Second Coming"
 
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.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		One must have a mind of winter – Wallace Stevens “The Snow Man”
 One Must Have a Mind of Winter
 
 When spring births
 make joints ache
 like a change in barometric pressure.
 
 When the green, green
 grass of summer
 has the sickly glow of a neon sign.
 
 When autumn leaves
 lay beneath bare branches in a vomit of color
 like the worst mixed-drink hangover.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		a favorite of mine  is The Lady Of Shallot by Tennyson
 
 On either side the river lie
 paddocks of sheep beset by flies,
 the pebble-like dung it dries,
 I hear the sheep’s baaing cries
 in boring Boyup Brook.
 Up and down the locals go
 on Abel  Street, the traffics slow,
 trucks hauling their heavy loads
 in boring Boyup Brook.
 
 The brook it feeds into the river
 where the eucalyptus shiver
 in the wind, their leaves a’quiver
 the reeds alongside dry and wither
 in boring Boyup Brook.
 One main road, one supermarket,
 a cemetery for the departed,
 several churches that have started
 in  boring Boyup Brook.
 
 A petrol station for the cars,
 a hotel with a public bar,
 a small golf-course, nine par
 The streets are wide and long and sparse
 In boring Boyup Brook.
 The shearers and  shed hands
 there outside the pub they stand
 drinking from glasses or cans
 In boring Boyup Brook
 
 For twenty years I have dwelt here,
 the brook across the road quite near,
 to the locals it is dear
 but in it I find little cheer,
 in boring Boyup Brook.
 For a new home I have hankered,
 I wish that here I had not landed-
 I’m altogether disenchanted
 With boring Boyup Brook.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 522Threads: 48
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		My inspiration came from:- Gillian Clark – The field mouse.
 Mice and Children
 
 Two factions filed off the bus
 in tight formation and split
 according to rank and regiment.
 The attack party set off,
 lobbing word grenades.
 
 The war of hatred was halted
 when they saw it.
 Just a slight ripple, a tell
 that fell counter to the wind
 on the long march home.
 
 Slinking in single file,
 the lone child espied the stricken beast.
 His curtain of blades twitched
 by whiskers and feet;
 a mouse was enough for a cease fire.
 
 For a moment,
 it was Christmas eve replayed;
 the weapons were laid down
 and children gathered around
 to share a paradigm shift.
 
 The sun reflected
 off his eye, which gleamed,
 a tear drop refraction of light
 to pierce the leather bound hearts.
 Then the wind changed.
 
 All but one marched off.
 Two children carried the creature
 and made it a shoebox home.
 But mice and children cannot survive
 on hope alone
 
 and true to life it soon died.
 One name on a grace list
 was not enough to shift
 the ingrained mistrust and ancient
 power lust that filled the sunken roads,
 they remain war zones.
 
		
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