| 
		
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 2,360Threads: 230
 Joined: Oct 2010
 
	
	
		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 17: Write a poem inspired by things we discard.
 Form: any
 Line requirements: 8 lines or more
 
 
 Questions?
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 709Threads: 74
 Joined: Mar 2017
 
	
	
		Garbage
 I wish you could discard me,
 ball up our past, throw it in a can-
 the metal might ring from impact,
 but once silence takes over,
 alone with thoughts the size of our brains,
 we'll realize the truth:
 "till death do us part," belongs with half read anniversary cards
 that rest at the bottom of dumpsters,
 surrounded by maggots, who'll one day
 sprout wings and fly away like angels to heaven.
 
Time is the best editor.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 703Threads: 141
 Joined: Oct 2017
 
	
	
		Disposable
 
 Deep well, cold water,
 life drunk by the bucketful.
 A dead girl, raped, four.
 
 Green forests climbing
 mountains, snow carpeted sky.
 A dead girl, raped, eight.
 
 Old school, classrooms wait,
 the hunger for hungry minds.
 A dead girl, raped, eight.
 
 Brick built promises,
 walls to raise generations.
 Dead girl, raped, seven.
 
 .
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,139Threads: 466
 Joined: Nov 2013
 
	
	
		The Beginning of History
 
 I promise you we'll make America great again.
 Who's we? and why do I even care about America,
 oceans and oceans away. I got my own problems.
 
 Yeah, you got your own problems,
 lil bitch, like them drugs
 or how you handle them. You shoot them up
 all gangsta, if gangsta had an academy,
 a badge, and a hatred of all things
 non-bougie. But you're non-bougie
 too. You're a piece of Americana
 and whatever that means to everyone else,
 with your turn-of-the-century, dog-eat-dog
 mentality. If you really had your own problems,
 you wouldn't have tuned in to Trump,
 to us, who see you only as a dumpster
 for our niggers' unloved pups.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 489Threads: 182
 Joined: Jan 2013
 
	
	
		Memories
 Mama’s ash tray is still collecting dust
 with the books on her nightstand
 in a two dollar storage locker
 that smells like my childhood.
 
 I don’t remember what happened
 to Papa's belts after his funeral,
 but for the one he wore
 to his grave.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,187Threads: 250
 Joined: Nov 2015
 
	
	
		Teaching Things
 
 Song, video, and story celebrate
 forgotten toys, small tragedies of fluff
 and clockwork, tearless doll-eyes’ closet fate
 to stare unmoved when kids have loved enough.
 
 But what of those purveyed as education,
 that taught to type, manipulate and phone?
 Toy barns inspired a bygone farming nation;
 doll houses built desire and set its tone.
 
 And plastic models, scaled, from first inept
 attempt, glue-fingered, matching tab with slot—
 their fate is seldom to be fondly kept:
 boys throw their worst away, then some are shot.
 
 Toys teach possession first, then to accept
 its loss — retaining memories and skill
 at loving, managing, which may be kept...
 and neat doll homes to furnish and to fill.
 
 Non-practicing atheist 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 848Threads: 232
 Joined: Oct 2012
 
	
	
		Waste water
 The duty phone vibrated
 off my bedside table,
 rubbing one eye, I sat on the edge of the bed.
 "Hello"
 "Hi is that Keith? There's been a large oil spill and we think it's got into the river"
 "Shit, close the main discharge valve, I'll be there in an hour"
 "Where's the main discharge valve"
 "I'll be there in half an hour"
 
 I squinted at the coloured lights on the phone, 3:00am.
 The unwanted night air had a silence that amplified my movements
 and the car clocks seemed brighter as I turned over the ignition.
 I imagined driving into an apocalypse on empty roads.
 
 Work was quiet only a small crew were there at night,
 no wonder they call it the graveyard shift.
 I took the shift manager to the middle of a huge concrete loading bay
 and pointed at the inspection hatch.
 " They don't pay me enough to go down there at night",
 he said, passing me the torch.
 
 We used two Tee bar keys to lift the manhole
 and I began my decent into the abyss.
 As I gripped the rusty steel ladder the torchlight
 swung around, all I could hear was rushing water.
 
 I reached the bottom, standing in water I moved the light around the chamber.
 One of our largest boreholes had burst, washing away all the ground under the slab
 A vast pool of spring water was running through the main valve down to the river.
 I closed the valve, staying in the chamber to see how quickly the level would rise.
 
 It was then I noticed a flash of silver in the water, then another and another,
 thousands of tiny fish had swam towards the light. I couldn't believe it,
 I took out my phone to take a picture and shouted back up to the top,
 " you'll never guess what's down here?"
 As I spoke something very large and very dark scattered the minows.
 
 I can honestly say I don't remember climbing the ladder.
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 709Threads: 74
 Joined: Mar 2017
 
	
	
		 (04-18-2018, 02:37 AM)Wjames Wrote:  Memories
 Mama’s ash tray is still collecting dust
 with the books on her nightstand
 in a two dollar storage locker
 that smells like my childhood.
 
 I don’t remember what happened
 to Papa's belts after his funeral,
 but for the one he wore
 to his grave.
 I quite like this Wjames. It says a lot in just eight lines. Nice work    
Time is the best editor.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 751Threads: 409
 Joined: May 2014
 
	
	
		Nocturnal
 thanks for thinking us cute
 when God painted our faces
 like bandits
 
 thanks for hacking the trees
 and paving the earth
 and giving us city hands
 to do soft city things
 
 thanks for always breaking
 your back to serve up supper
 for all and sundry
 
 thanks for the cookie factory
 a block north of the river
 and how it spits steam
 enough to warm two acres
 of bush beyond it's fence
 where we can gorge
 on discarded dough
 
 thanks for the chicken mills
 and concentrated camps of cattle
 that can't help but spill
 meat
 
 thanks for little Jill
 who's never going to finish
 her brussel sprouts
 before the truck comes
 Wednesday morning
 
 thanks for letting Billy drop out
 and discard his futon
 and the shear bliss of it's goose down
 
 thanks for never being quite awake
 at this hour
 
		
	 
	
	
			just mercedes Unregistered
 
 
		
 
	 
	
	
		Early birds
 
 Ornithologists
 charting the health of sparrows
 in urban parks
 noted differences to rural data
 in hatchling survival rates,
 attributed to fewer
 lice infestations.
 
 The city birds wove
 cigarette butts with their
 nicotine burden
 a noted pesticide
 into the walls of their nests.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,187Threads: 250
 Joined: Nov 2015
 
	
	
		 (04-18-2018, 09:18 AM)just mercedes Wrote:  Early birds
 
 Ornithologists
 charting the health of sparrows
 in urban parks
 noted differences to rural data
 in hatchling survival rates,
 attributed to fewer
 lice infestations.
 
 The city birds wove
 cigarette butts with their
 nicotine burden
 a noted pesticide
 into the walls of their nests.
 
Beautiful (and apt)!  One is moved to wonder if the starling explosion from Central Park in the late 19th century had aught to do with the prevalence of cigar butts in that time and place.  Though it's said they might have had to compete with (human) foragers seeking raw material for the lesser brands of stogie.
	 
 Non-practicing atheist 
		
	 
	
	
			just mercedes Unregistered
 
 
		
 
	 
	
	
		Thanks D.A - indeed, our discards can have unforeseen consequences on other life. This is written in an attept to banish the image of a sea turtle killed by the plastic packaging from beer cans.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 2,360Threads: 230
 Joined: Oct 2010
 
	
	
		Extinct
 rush of the current
 bell inflates beneath water
 tone struck in silence
 
 Once thought to be safe, the Grocery Bag Jellyfish found it's way to the endangered species list. Ironically, replacing its greatest enemy, the leatherback sea turtle, who had consumed the jellyfish in great quantity, and had recently been deemed extinct. Scientists expressed alarm at the risk to an animal with no current predators.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,568Threads: 317
 Joined: Jun 2011
 
	
	
		Labels
 Sometimes -- when I think of it -- I check
 labels to make sure of biodegradability. I
 don't want to burden the earth more
 than I must, but I don't always remember.
 I confess, it is this carelessness
 that led to investing in a product
 entirely unsuitable for consumption.
 
 I believed in redemption, but the
 package I once had wasn't worth
 recycling.  I left it behind and, like the hermit,
 borrowed another that I soon outgrew.
 
 They would not decompose, and so,
 in deference to the demands
 of the earth, I decay instead.
 
It could be worse
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 751Threads: 409
 Joined: May 2014
 
	
	
		Coffee Girl
 handsome
 more than a girl
 ought to be handsome
 
 your face
 part snarl
 part smirk
 part yawn
 
 you want out
 and look at my car
 
 you should come by
 for tequila and poetry
 if daddy says it's okay
 
 what a thing to say
 
 I think you could live
 with about thirty-six
 so I say thirty-five
 and fix my face
 
		
	 |