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 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 15: Write a poem inspired by an accident.
 Form: any
 Line requirements: 8 lines or more
 
 
 Questions?
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 703Threads: 141
 Joined: Oct 2017
 
	
	
		Yesterday's News.
 
 A three wheeled vehicle, makes me think of Del Boy,
 and I guess it would be funny but the four in it are dead.
 The were making 'preparations' said a spokesman, no names
 given, as if that was an explanation or even epitaph at all.
 But the reason that I mention it, this everyday stupidity,
 is the words used in the headline said the explosion,
 and their deaths, were (conveniently enough)
 a "work accident"
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 709Threads: 74
 Joined: Mar 2017
 
	
	
		Time of Departure
 Leaving would be easier
 if I could just think of you as an accident,
 the result of a makeshift passion
 because I was tired of on the one hand
 congratulating the other.
 If I could just pretend your blue eyes
 weren't mine, that I misplaced them,
 then these words would smell of wine,
 instead they reek of iron.
 
Time is the best editor.
 
		
	 
	
	
			just mercedes Unregistered
 
 
		
 
	 
	
	
		Yes, that lodge did burn down
 
 The cause? I’ve always blamed it
 on the day. First top-to-bottom skiing
 of the season, black trails open, even
 some powder, early, among the trees.
 Perfection.
 
 I worked that night, Lulus then Keller,
 others went to Rudy’s for dinner, and sauna,
 came to the Keller for the new band.
 
 Afterwards, we still needed to party.
 All invited, we crammed into the lodge.
 I remember seeing three naked men swing
 hand to hand along the roof beams
 thirty feet abve me, wearing brown paper bags
 on their heads, and the cries of recognition:
 Dunning, Farne, Duncan! above the laughter.
 
 I left soon after, had to work that morning,
 and woke to the sound of the fire engine.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,187Threads: 250
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		Long Tail of Three Cigars
 
 In September, 1862
 quite by accident some Federals
 discovered Lee’s campaign plan wrapped
 around a trio of cigars.
 
 With this, a competent commander
 should have beaten Lee
 like a drum; McClellan managed
 to produce a slaughter and a draw
 (technical victory: more Rebs
 than Federals were killed,
 and Lee withdrew a bit).
 
 Abe Lincoln used this win on points
 as occasion to emancipate
 slaves only in states which
 were in rebellion - leaving owners
 in Kentucky and in Maryland
 undispossessed.
 
 Such self-bargaining
 three-quarter measures
 lasted on through Reconstruction
 and its ending, Jim Crow,
 and its dribbling away,
 laws and court cases, all dishonest,
 then reversal into quotas
 and “diversity” still lacking
 candor, honor, and respect.
 
 Three cigars, false victory—
 false emancipation,
 bitter history.
 
 Non-practicing atheist 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I skipped a day of napm And lengthening the gap, embellishing
 Loads of crap, pimento
 From my cold wrap.  I'm
 Afraid I'm not a happy man
 This year to just slap 'em
 Together every day .  Shits too real. Loving what I'm reading though
 
Peanut butter honey banana sandwiches
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,139Threads: 466
 Joined: Nov 2013
 
	
		
		
		04-17-2018, 10:03 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-17-2018, 10:03 PM by RiverNotch.)
	
	 
		The End of History: An Accident
 
 Are we here, now, and has history ended?
 
 What do you mean?
 
 Have we moved into the future at last -- or does the very saying root us in our past?
 
 Nothing lasts.
 
 What about something? We're something, aren't we? What we see, what we hear, what we feel: they become memories. But what remembers the memories? Who beats his chest, reads his words, watches the moving picture?
 
 Something has not been proven to last.
 
 Why believe in what has not been proven, when what has is not is, and we know very well has does not last?
 
 But what do we know? What we learned then, we learn not now -- we only remember, and remembering is not knowing. The knowing -- the knowing is fleeting. Perhaps the knowing is even synonymous with nothing: if what we see, what we hear, what we feel, they become memories, then why not our thoughts, our insights? Are they not flashes of light, too, or bathtub screams of "Eureka!", or tingles of excitement down our spines?
 
 Why must remembering not be knowing?
 
 Because I didn't really know you, my love. Otherwise I wouldn't have loved you.
 
 But you know that you did love me?
 
 I remember I did -- perhaps I knew -- but I don't really know. What we remember may have been warped by how we felt, or what we heard, or what we saw: it's easy to gaslight the self.
 
 But does the knowing really matter?
 
 It does -- it does! Knowing is having faith, is believing in the power to know, is believing in that which is known. If I do not know that I loved you, if I do not continually know that I love you -- if the flash of light does not become an image, or the bathtub scream does not become a song -- then what does that memory mean? Nothing, as the knowing is nothing, and if it becomes a foundation for something, that something can easily crumble into dust.
 
 So for you to have loved me, you must still love me?
 
 I must not look back at that love, and see it as an object to be cherished -- it must not be transformed into an object of the past, an object solely to be remembered. It cannot have been the knowledge of something if it was an object in the first place, especially not of love. Yes, for me to have loved you, I must still love you: and it is not the knowing that transforms, but the love itself, just as we grow and develop. Just as you become you, and I become I, and we are always here, now.
 
 So do you still love me?
 
 I don't know. I don't even know if I've become myself, in the moment that passed since we began this conversation.
 
 What do you know?
 
 That nothing lasts.
 
 Are you sure that you aren't just gaslighting yourself? Perhaps what you see as nothing is just you blinding yourself with that damn lamp of yours -- let me see that lamp of yours. What is it? It's not love, surely, and not faith either. Is it knowledge, or the knowing, or the want for the knowing? Is it history, or the end of history, or the end of history transformed into image? What trauma transformed your history into image, your conception of time into something that wasn't, isn't, and willn't be, but is? Why do you compound our conversation now with conversations years back, with our first meeting years back, with you dancing me down some aisle and me hugging you near some gas station?
 
 Hope.
 
 Hope for what?
 
 I don't know. I remember hoping that you would love me, love me the way I loved you -- then I became someone else, myself perhaps, and now I remember that I hoped I would be loved as I loved you -- and now I remember that I had hoped I would love again, as I loved you, as I would be loved like you. But now I don't even hope that, just as I know only that nothing lasts.
 
 But then, my dear, your lamp is no longer hope, but the lack of it.
 
 No, not the lack of it, but the face of it.
 
 Ah! Despair, the bringer of hope, the archangel of death. Surely you do not wish to return to that question again?
 
 But you asked it first: "Are we here, now, and has history ended?" You opened our conversation with it, even as we first met. And the answer, I know now, is obvious: yes, we are here, now, as we will be, as we die each moment and are born each moment, as we kill one moment and give birth the next, but the fact that we live and die and murder and create means that no, my love, history has not ended. History proceeds as it always proceeds, and history is nothing: nothing lasts, and only suicide will end it.
 
 But even then it will not have ended. You said so yourself: "as we die each moment, we are born each moment." And besides, you know full well, your despair only clouds your judgment: it was always hopeless between the two of us. We were not conceived of as tragic lovers, but as two strangers, meeting again and again by accident, not like a dream but like a chronicle.
 
 ...I didn't say that.
 
 Or so you remember, but I know. Now enough: you have answered my question. Time again to go.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		The Dog Was A Lot Like Lassie
 Su Su, the Shih Tzu didn’t save
 Timmy from a well or catch
 burglars robbing the town bank.
 Su Su was as heroic as a war-hero
 politician, who had never seen combat.
 It resembled Lassie not in looks or temperament,
 but in that, it was often mistaken for a girl.
 Every day my grandmother would scrunch up
 her eyes at that bad girl, who would always
 lift her leg and pee on the carpet.
 Only, I could see the satisfaction in his hard
 marble eyes telling me that this was no accident.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 298Threads: 45
 Joined: Jul 2014
 
	
	
		left
 he turned left
 instead of right
 he  turned left
 taking a chance
 he turned left
 on too narrow a path
 he turned left
 as if i know why
 he turned left
 with his tuned up bike
 too young
 to turn left
 right into the lights
 how to finish his story
 barely beginning
 he left
 
...
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 848Threads: 232
 Joined: Oct 2012
 
	
	
		Accidental damage 
 The cold, beer-cellar bang of a daytime night club,
 sticks to the stale ale carpets and painted purple corners,
 dark enough to mask the faint smell of bleach and vomit.
 
 But at night, the lights writhe in a snake pit of colour,
 sweat arcs the air like blood splatter patterns,
 tunes revolve the room. Fuelled by shot glass harmonics,
 inhibitions burst in Prosecco bubbles, before they fall flat.
 
 Outside behind the bins the exit sign
 dims and glows above a drunken clash
 of teeth and hips, stricken sailing ships
 split masts wrapped around the midriff.
 Below decks the crew blindly follow orders,
 shot loaded and fuse set, a single cannon
 seperates the wrecks.
 
 The kitchen sink clutter of a dank tiny flat
 clings to the smell of damp washing and nappies,
 hard enough to hide the false smile of a teenage lament.
 
 But each day, the walls peel away to reveal a darker stain,
 he bought her flowers with the first pay cheque, they hang
 as a reminder. Fuelled by a cry from a cot, and a worry
 that if she starts to shake she may never stop.
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
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