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 Joined: Nov 2013
 
	
	
		Did you know you can arrange the threads by number of replies? Because I didn't, at least until I had to work on these prompts xD. 2017's opening prompt was the most popular prompt for its year. It was another April Fools' prompt, actually, with Todd writing:  Quote: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: April Fools Day makes me think of Fool's Gold. Write a poem inspired by confusing or misidentifying something or someone.
 Form: any
 Line requirements: 8 lines or more
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 257Threads: 108
 Joined: Dec 2016
 
	
		
		
		04-02-2023, 10:41 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-02-2023, 11:08 PM by Quixilated.)
	
	 
		Just Desserts  
My brother always liked to tease  
especially at meals, and especially  
the sisters who were boarding with us. 
He pretended it was “etiquette” 
to “steal from the right and pass to the left” 
(by that he meant food from his own plate). 
He would snatch the best bits and bites from Jane 
then pass all his vegetables to Gayle 
(who, inexplicably, dutifully ate them). 
 
One glorious evening he was in rare form,  
and thought he saw a golden opportunity. 
On Jane’s plate he spied one single almond,  
a treasure set aside perhaps to savor later. 
Quick as lightening his hand shot out  
and popped the stolen nut into his mouth.  
His smile dropped, his face went green. 
Jane laughed in horrified confusion, 
“David! Why did you eat my olive pit?” 
The Soufflé isn’t the soufflé; the soufflé is the recipe. --Clara 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 695Threads: 139
 Joined: Jun 2015
 
	
	
		Back in the Day
 I come from before that day
 -about forty years before-
 when a dad could get away
 with cuffing a kid on the ear
 
 in the middle of the store,
 and us six boys could hear
 that other dad say, “it’s OK
 he probably deserved it.”
 
 A day I’ll never forget. That kid
 did look like one of us, and nobody
 put up a fuss. He did mess up
 those toys; we were good boys.
 
 At least for a few more years…
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 894Threads: 176
 Joined: Jan 2021
 
	
	
		Bibliophilia
 He mistook books for rooks
 and castled his King
 only to find out too late
 the volumes collected around him,
 moveable walls,
 shut out more than they let in.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 24Threads: 7
 Joined: Jul 2017
 
	
	
		 (04-02-2023, 10:41 PM)Quixilated Wrote:  Just Desserts 
 My brother always liked to tease
 especially at meals, and especially
 the sisters who were boarding with us.
 He pretended it was “etiquette”
 to “steal from the right and pass to the left”
 (by that he meant food from his own plate).
 He would snatch the best bits and bites from Jane
 then pass all his vegetables to Gayle
 (who, inexplicably, dutifully ate them).
 
 One glorious evening he was in rare form,
 and thought he saw a golden opportunity.
 On Jane’s plate he spied one single almond,
 a treasure set aside perhaps to savor later.
 Quick as lightening his hand shot out
 and popped the stolen nut into his mouth.
 His smile dropped, his face went green.
 Jane laughed in horrified confusion,
 “David! Why did you eat my olive pit?”
 
 
 
 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 254Threads: 137
 Joined: Feb 2022
 
	
	
		They bumped into each otherfrom opposite sides of the moon
 dragging along different views
 that luckily, never clashed.
 
 Through friends each
 learned of the other's origin
 and felt betrayed for having
 enjoyed their company.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 489Threads: 182
 Joined: Jan 2013
 
	
	
		I wear my finest overallsand vintage flannel shirts,
 to cocktail bars in Montreal
 to woo and gab and flirt.
 
 Some women like a rugged man
 so that's what I present,
 but in my bones I love Rembrandt
 and fuchsia, floral scents.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 695Threads: 139
 Joined: Jun 2015
 
	
	
		 (04-03-2023, 05:53 AM)Wjames Wrote:  overalls / Montreal  rugged man / Rembrandt
 Excellent slant rhymes there, Wj
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 952Threads: 225
 Joined: Aug 2016
 
	
	
		Johnny Logan Spencer was aself proclaimed white supremacist
 Grew up racist, knew other racists,
 and couldn't stand a black president.
 As awful as Johnny truly was, and is,
 his mother's death tore him open,
 a hole only ink could fill.
 The pen that spilled his pain and hatred
 sent him thirty three months to prison.
 A single poem, The Sniper.
 
Peanut butter honey banana sandwiches
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,187Threads: 250
 Joined: Nov 2015
 
	
	
		Lost Nugget
 
 I thought I had a concept for a poem–
 a starting line, a few good candidates
 for rhymes.  A closing line just out of reach
 would come, I knew, with steady application.
 
 I wrote a note - that first line and a few
 ideas that I knew would flesh it out
 into a work worth polishing, refining,
 crowned with a title and a simile.
 
 Fool that I was, I swanned off to the store
 and exercise, and video and songs
 to find my notes were nonsense, beckoning
 with unrecapturable insight, false.
 
 The tragedy is that unlike fools’ gold
 real quality was there until I balked
 at spending time when inspiration shone...
 thus “later” turns to “never,” spark to stone.
 
 Non-practicing atheist 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 400Threads: 58
 Joined: May 2022
 
	
	
		I thought I knewthat face
 in the mirror.
 
 Then I notice
 the lines
 and all the wrinkles.
 
 Who is this stranger
 that lives;
 has stolen my face.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,139Threads: 466
 Joined: Nov 2013
 
	
		
		
		04-03-2023, 03:49 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-03-2023, 03:49 PM by RiverNotch.)
	
	 
		On Reading Eliot's Burbank
 
 Once, I thought I knew the land
 of which he drew his map of man,
 the hollow moonlit streets of Rhapsody
 leading to London's aged king
 casting his line into the Thames,
 mourning the loss of his Norton.
 But synechdoche and metonymy
 must always give way to history, and
 the bridge he built between his sestieri
 can't always be ignored.
 The rats are underneath the piles.
 The jew is underneath the lot.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 894Threads: 176
 Joined: Jan 2021
 
	
	
		 (04-03-2023, 10:48 AM)brynmawr1 Wrote:  I thought I knewBears repeating for today's promptthat face
 in the mirror.
 
 Then I notice
 the lines
 and all the wrinkles.
 
 Who is this stranger
 that lives;
 has stolen my face.
   
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 894Threads: 176
 Joined: Jan 2021
 
	
	
		 (04-03-2023, 03:49 PM)RiverNotch Wrote:  On Reading Eliot's BurbankRiverNotch,
This is a memorable poem.  I did have to look up a few words.  I'm guessing this is referencing Eliot's early anti-semitism.  Anyway, I really enjoyed the read.
TqB
 
 Once, I thought I knew the land
 of which he drew his map of man,
 the hollow moonlit streets of Rhapsody
 leading to London's aged king
 casting his line into the Thames,
 mourning the loss of his Norton.
 But synechdoche and metonymy
 must always give way to history, and
 the bridge he built between his sestieri
 can't always be ignored.
 The rats are underneath the piles.
 The jew is underneath the lot.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 751Threads: 409
 Joined: May 2014
 
	
		
		
		04-04-2023, 12:13 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-04-2023, 12:21 PM by Tiger the Lion.)
	
	 
		False Positive
 I'm almost used to it now
 
 that ten-foot Q-tip
 up through the nostril,
 
 breaching some holy-nasal-wormhole
 to next to reach up and tickle the brain
 
 this time the test strip
 lights up like a Christmas Tree
 
 it means a week off work,
 
 beer
 
 and pizza.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 283Threads: 62
 Joined: Aug 2017
 
	
	
		I trace the melody through doorbellsrung in old homes by the estranged, through toys,
 games, and the weather forecast that would wake me up
 before walking in the morning fog, sometimes
 picking dandelions or common daisies
 for the crossing guard or mom. I want to find
 
 the bright mouth which breathes swarming life and leave
 the shadow puppets dancing on the roughly plastered wall
 because tomorrow soon becomes a passed-down story
 with its warm rainbow of light.
 
		
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