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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 7: Today's prompt comes from trueenigma who would like to see a "prayer" poem.
 Form : any
 Line requirements: 8 lines or more
 
 Questions?
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Prayer
 When in a congregation
 and expected to join
 I have but one prayer,
 repeated silently.
 May each of us left
 in this world be more like you,
 hearing each other with openness
 and acceptance.
 
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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		A Child’s Prayer
 Thank you for
 the sun above,
 Thank you for
 my parents’ love,
 Thank you for
 good food to eat,
 Please watch me
 while I sleep.
 
 Amen
 
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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		Salmonella Appeal
 Fear and loathing arrives,
 as respite leaves the dance;
 this guest comes unwelcome
 like a blast in the pants.
 
 Irritable colon
 harbors a demon seed.
 What put things in motion?
 I do not have a lead.
 
 Did I swallow the cull
 left by someone ill-willed,
 a high colonic of
 something crudely distilled.
 
 It’s too late to stop-her,
 that petulant pooper;
 I’m riding the hopper
 as though a good trooper.
 
 Swaying in misery,
 then frantically praying;
 grasping skinny ankles
 with buns widely splaying.
 
 Cursing all of the gods
 and Ms. Salmonella,
 but using time wisely
 to write a novella.
 
My new watercolor: 'Nightmare After Christmas'/Chris
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Church
 He’s dressed in purple robes today
 a stiff scarf rests on his shoulders
 as he chants the sacred words
 and takes predetermined steps
 around a table, chairs and candles.
 My mother’s heavy on her knees,
 chin to chest and forehead wrinkled.
 I imitate, head bumping
 into the wood of the next pew,
 until I get bored and turn around
 and continue with my crayons
 to color Jesus red.
 
_______________________________________The howling beast is back.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Oh Jesus I have promised
 Mr Blackburn bellowed
 and stabbed the sharp keys
 of the schools grand piano.
 No, no, no, no; NO!
 
 He wanted back a public school past,
 where the boys could sing in perfect pitch,
 and he would get goosebumps telling tales
 of how the audience held their breath.
 
 His compromise was comprehensive,
 and he hated everything it stood for,
 he twisted with bitterness in plain view
 and couldn't accept their version of; to.
 
 Four hours he made them stand,
 repeating the same song
 over and over
 again ! and you are not leaving until we get it right.
 
 “Oh Jesus I have promised tew serve thee tew the end”
 Stop, STOP ! Head-boy, where are you, get out here boy,
 now !
 Let us ask for some divine inspiration, repeat after me,
 
 Our dear lord,
 help us sing the word toooo,
 for we shall not go home
 until we doooo.
 
 The headmaster spat the last words through gritted teeth,
 teachers were watching closely from the wings,
 his meltdown close to the liquid phase.
 He had the Head-boy by his collar,
 presenting him to the rest of the assembly,
 a dangling ventriloquist’s dummy.
 
 The boy spoke clearly.
 Our dear lord,
 help us sing the word tew,
 else baldy Blackburn will pop a screw,
 and I really just don't give a shit,
 so fuck him,
 and fuck yooo tooo.
 
 The teaching staff moved as one
 like warders in a mental asylum,
 they wrestled the headmaster
 off the stage,
 the audience held their breath.
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		By an old friend of mine, just had to post it, haven't read it in 12 years:
 I Hate Babies
 ______________
 
 
 I hate babies who cry in church
 and their fat moms who let them
 disrupt my holy prayers for peace.
 It's so hard to be a good Christian.
 
 Milo T Briggs
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-07-2014, 11:48 PM)justcloudy Wrote:  Church
 He’s dressed in purple robes today
 a stiff scarf rests on his shoulders
 as he chants the sacred words
 and takes predetermined steps
 around a table, chairs and candles.
 My mother’s heavy on her knees,
 chin to chest and forehead wrinkled.
 I imitate, head bumping
 into the wood of the next pew,
 until I get bored and turn around
 and continue with my crayons
 to color Jesus red.
 
Very nice JC a lovely Sunday school snapshot. Best Keith
	 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,279Threads: 187
 Joined: Dec 2016
 
	
	
		The Man and the Wooden God an Aesop Fable
 Once a man inherited a gift
 of a wooden god  upon his father’s death
 and as the dying mother prays for health
 and as the mute singer prays for breath
 
 this man, without a coin, he prayed for wealth.
 When life is poor, faith’s not much more than grift
 and prayers can’t feed a child or warm a bed.
 One day, when many wasted years had passed
 
 he took the god and smashed it to the ground
 and found a stash of gold. Then, rich at last
 he should have cheered with joy at what he’d found.
 Instead, he sat down mournfully and said,
 
 “I wish that I could have you back my friend
 What good is gold when life is near the end?”
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Puyallup and the Sacred Fire
 A prayer for spring . . .
 
 There is a sound sweet as the mountain springs
 that rustles through the evergreens above
 Multnomah Falls. A wind whose whistle sings
 the song of lovers in the treeline grove.
 
 Loowit stands with curves so full and round
 two men once fought for her in a great war.
 They shook the hills and scorched the holy ground.
 Many a village was burned both near and far.
 
 And the Great Chief was saddened by the pain
 the war had caused. He turned the three to stone.
 And every winter there is endless rain -
 the tears of lovers left to stand alone.
 
 But spirits sing as spirits do inspire.
 Loowit stands snow-capped and full of fire.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I prayed by clasping folded handsAnd wondered whether god
 Could hear my buzzing breaths beneath
 The blasts of cannon law
 
 Imprinting blunt impacts in snow
 And turning frozen shards
 Into a phrase of hoary veils
 That draped our eyes in dark
 
 And set me digging up machines
 Perverting wombs inside
 The soiled cope of nightly earth
 That I would open wide
 
 To turn the nectar buried deep
 Below to cannon balls
 Of gleaming iron more rigid
 Than holy words of awe
 
 But I was just a cog, a tin
 Enshrouded youth abroad
 Who once imbibed cathedral light
 To join the battle god.
 
 Well you win some you lose some I suppose
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		More of an idea roughed out...rough and def not ready, but still having fun working on it.
 One last prayer.
 
 Not content with rescue from an overlord,
 plunder, pillars of fire, clouds of witness,
 being  adopted by their God
 parting water and bitter turned to sweet;
 a million plus - Oh and don’t forget
 asses, sheep, cattle and camels
 demanded chilled Perrier.
 
 In deep despair he waded past the tide
 of effluent, moaning beasts and faithless ingrates
 with their whiny brats and struck the rock.
 Not once but twice.  He knew he should have spoken
 commanding words to carry to their ears;
 But hang it all, after all his tears and prayers
 supplicating like grains of sand,
 a man can have the odd melt down.
 
 Grace was multiplied and his outburst
 produced a flood, that gushed from the rock.
 Who would have thought that you could surf in a desert!
 Enough for a million moaning mouths
 livestock, wives et al.
 Chilled and fresh, life giving – living water.
 The story does not relate how this much water
 was stored.  Did it simply flow into a sink hole
 or made a lake, or perhaps a giant slurry pit...
 Well all that shit had to go somewhere.
 
 Moses, friend of God, sat atop his final
 resting plot and enjoyed the view.
 Reviewing the incident of the knocking
 on the rock. "Good God, I have had my fill
 of all things flowing”.  They buried Mosses
 on that quiet, dry and rocky plateau.
 The mighty man of prayer received his answer.
 The muttering maul moved on into a land
 flowing with milk and honey - the story relates how it all got very messy!
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-07-2014, 11:48 PM)justcloudy Wrote:  Churchjustcloudy, your poem was my favorite in this bunch, as I could relate to it most. I used to color in Sunday school. They would not let children take crayons into the church. I remember drawing John the Baptist's head on a platter, Daniel in the arena with the lions and David beating up Goliath. Sounds a bit warped, boys will be boys, I suppose.
 He’s dressed in purple robes today
 a stiff scarf rests on his shoulders
 as he chants the sacred words
 and takes predetermined steps
 around a table, chairs and candles.
 My mother’s heavy on her knees,
 chin to chest and forehead wrinkled.
 I imitate, head bumping
 into the wood of the next pew,
 until I get bored and turn around
 and continue with my crayons
 to color Jesus red.
   
My new watercolor: 'Nightmare After Christmas'/Chris
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 426Threads: 41
 Joined: Feb 2013
 
	
	
		Thanks Chris and Keith! I liked this one too, I'm planning on workshopping it later.I used to sit backwards on the kneeler and color in church, and little siblings did that for years too. Probably the most interesting part. ;p
 
_______________________________________The howling beast is back.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,279Threads: 187
 Joined: Dec 2016
 
	
	
		 (04-08-2014, 01:49 PM)Brownlie Wrote:  I prayed by clasping folded handsAnd wondered whether god
 Could hear my buzzing breaths beneath
 The blasts of cannon law
 
 Imprinting blunt impacts in snow
 And turning frozen shards
 Into a phrase of hoary veils
 That draped our eyes in dark
 
 And set me digging up machines
 Perverting wombs inside
 The soiled cope of nightly earth
 That I would open wide
 
 To turn the nectar buried deep
 Below to cannon balls
 Of gleaming iron more rigid
 Than holy words of awe
 
 But I was just a cog, a tin
 Enshrouded youth abroad
 Who once imbibed cathedral light
 To join the battle god.
 
 Well you win some you lose some I suppose
 
This is really quite good, brownlie. You are coming into your own as a poet.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-08-2014, 04:32 PM)cidermaid Wrote:  More of an idea roughed out...rough and def not ready, but still having fun working on it.
 One last prayer.
 
 Not content with rescue from an overlord,
 plunder, pillars of fire, clouds of witness,
 being  adopted by their God
 parting water and bitter turned to sweet;
 a million plus - Oh and don’t forget
 asses, sheep, cattle and camels
 demanded chilled Perrier.
 
 In deep despair he waded past the tide
 of effluent, moaning beasts and faithless ingrates
 with their whiny brats and struck the rock.
 Not once but twice.  He knew he should have spoken
 commanding words to carry to their ears;
 But hang it all, after all his tears and prayers
 supplicating like grains of sand,
 a man can have the odd melt down.
 
 Grace was multiplied and his outburst
 produced a flood, that gushed from the rock.
 Who would have thought that you could surf in a desert!
 Enough for a million moaning mouths
 livestock, wives et al.
 Chilled and fresh, life giving – living water.
 The story does not relate how this much water
 was stored.  Did it simply flow into a sink hole
 or made a lake, or perhaps a giant slurry pit...
 Well all that shit had to go somewhere.
 
 Moses, friend of God, sat atop his final
 resting plot and enjoyed the view.
 Reviewing the incident of the knocking
 on the rock. "Good God, I have had my fill
 of all things flowing”.  They buried Mosses
 on that quiet, dry and rocky plateau.
 The mighty man of prayer received his answer.
 The muttering maul moved on into a land
 flowing with milk and honey - the story relates how it all got very messy!
 
I really enjoyed this A.J. I'd hang on to it if I was you. Might be good to workshop it later.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Hi true thanks for the encouragment.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 Joined: Aug 2013
 
	
	
		 (04-08-2014, 07:46 AM)milo Wrote:  The Man and the Wooden God an Aesop Fable
 Once a man inherited a gift
 of a wooden god  upon his father’s death
 and as the dying mother prays for health
 and as the mute singer prays for breath
 
 this man, without a coin, he prayed for wealth.
 When life is poor, faith’s not much more than grift
 and prayers can’t feed a child or warm a bed.
 One day, when many wasted years had passed
 
 he took the god and smashed it to the ground
 and found a stash of gold. Then, rich at last
 he should have cheered with joy at what he’d found.
 Instead, he sat down mournfully and said,
 
 “I wish that I could have you back my friend
 What good is gold when life is near the end?”
 I might revise your implied moral milo. Perhaps, ‘Better late than never’, right? Either way, he could glue it together again. I enjoyed the irony herein. Just think, if he had smashed that 'true' idol for the sake of it being his sole inheritance what a life he would have had. I love Aesop's Fables. I can espy my volume on the shelves from where I sit at this moment. They could all be retold in poetry forms, changing the cast of characters and animal species and still be as fresh and wise as they were over two millennia ago. You have done a few of these and I wanted to acknowledge how much I enjoy them. Thanks!
 
My new watercolor: 'Nightmare After Christmas'/Chris
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-10-2014, 07:45 AM)ChristopherSea Wrote:   (04-08-2014, 07:46 AM)milo Wrote:  The Man and the Wooden God an Aesop Fable
 Once a man inherited a gift
 of a wooden god  upon his father’s death
 and as the dying mother prays for health
 and as the mute singer prays for breath
 
 this man, without a coin, he prayed for wealth.
 When life is poor, faith’s not much more than grift
 and prayers can’t feed a child or warm a bed.
 One day, when many wasted years had passed
 
 he took the god and smashed it to the ground
 and found a stash of gold. Then, rich at last
 he should have cheered with joy at what he’d found.
 Instead, he sat down mournfully and said,
 
 “I wish that I could have you back my friend
 What good is gold when life is near the end?”
 I might revise your implied moral milo. Perhaps, ‘Better late than never’, right? Either way, he could glue it together again. I enjoyed the irony herein. Just think, if he had smashed that 'true' idol for the sake of it being his sole inheritance what a life he would have had. I love Aesop's Fables. I can espy my volume on the shelves from where I sit at this moment. They could all be retold in poetry forms, changing the cast of characters and animal species and still be as fresh and wise as they were over two millennia ago. You have done a few of these and I wanted to acknowledge how much I enjoy them. Thanks!
 
The original moral was something like that.  For me, I like better the irony of a man who thought all he ever wanted was money to regret smashing his god when he realised money would no longer bring him comfort but to each his own, i suppose.  I had considered 2 or three different morals as I do like to change the morals.
 
Thanks for commenting.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-09-2014, 10:44 AM)milo Wrote:   (04-08-2014, 01:49 PM)Brownlie Wrote:  I prayed by clasping folded handsAnd wondered whether god
 Could hear my buzzing breaths beneath
 The blasts of cannon law
 
 Imprinting blunt impacts in snow
 And turning frozen shards
 Into a phrase of hoary veils
 That draped our eyes in dark
 
 And set me digging up machines
 Perverting wombs inside
 The soiled cope of nightly earth
 That I would open wide
 
 To turn the nectar buried deep
 Below to cannon balls
 Of gleaming iron more rigid
 Than holy words of awe
 
 But I was just a cog, a tin
 Enshrouded youth abroad
 Who once imbibed cathedral light
 To join the battle god.
 
 Well yo win some you lose some I suppose
 This is really quite good, brownlie. You are coming into your own as a poet.
 Thank you Milo, you've helped me quite a bit. You're endorsement is quite the compliment
	 
		
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