Poetry Club!
Chatterbox: Down to Earth
Poetry Club!
Poetry Club!
There hasn't been one of these in a while, so I'm bringing it back! Calling all writers, all dreamers, all wordy weirdos with a penchant for poetry!
Here, we can post our writing, read poems by others, discuss rhyming versus free verse, be poetically melodramtic, and anything else you really want.
To kick things off, I'm going to post one I wrote a while ago, based off a lyric in Owl City's Take To The Sky— "Purple burst of paper birds, this picture paints a thousand words." It's a very happy song, but the poem took a different turn.
Hope you enjoy, and I'd love feedback. ^^
Purple Burst of Paper Birds
The ink stains are purple.
Not quite lavender, not quite indigo,
a sort of pale violet,
like the color of a summer midnight.
Exactly the color of a summer midnight.
It’s a peaceful shade,
relaxed and careless,
but for some reason she hates it.
She tells herself that she can’t place why,
really, that’s it’s just random.
(everyone has a weird quirk)
(she just doesn’t care for the color, that’s it)
She’s lying, she knows, and
continues to pretend.
Her hands are a little damp, she realizes
when she touches her fingertips
to the towering stack of forms
leaving streaks of purple
on the crisp white pages.
She should wash her hands.
She doesn’t know if they’ll even take them
if they’re all inky like that.
Does this place even have a bathroom?
It’s so silent, so still, so white.
She flags down a lady
with kind eyes
that are overshadowed by her
blindingly white uniform
bright crimson letters
(thick and blocky)
(it looks too foreboding)
on the back
stating the name of the hospital.
White and red.
She has seen too much of that today.
Red blood and white sheets and walls
and colorless cold skin and insipid vermillion diagrams
that are supposed to explain
the jagged line on the heart monitor.
There is so much.
So much white and red and
(she looks at her hands)
purple, which she needs to get rid of.
Yes.
That’s what she was doing.
The woman points her to a restroom
she thanks her, walks down,
pushes open the door with her hip.
She’s standing at the sink, the water running
but strangely she’s reluctant to put her hands under.
She thinks a bit then does,
watching the purple float off of her skin.
It swirls,
down
down
down
the drain, softening
among the tendrils of clear liquid,
spiraling slowly, then quicker and quicker—
and it’s gone.
She turns off the faucet.
Her phone rings.
She fumbles with it as she pulls it out of her pocket
(her hands are still wet, slippery)
She can’t find it in her to be scared,
just sick to her stomach,
as the voice, leaden with condolences,
begins its speech.
We are so very sorry…
She can feel it.
The dread fills her stomach like a stone.
… we did the best we could…
It doesn’t make it any easier to not be surprised.
… she was very brave…
The ink is gone, her hands are clean—
why does that matter?
… but she… she…
(the voice pauses)
… she couldn’t hang on. I hope you understand …
This is a dream.
It has to be.
She’s going to wake up, any minute now,
with her at her side, black locks framing her cheeks
like a halo around her sunshine smile.
No gunshots
no blood
no haze of consciousness
no yelling
no ambulance sirens
no deathly quiet.
No ink that reminds her of that first night,
two years ago
(had it really been two years?)
when the sky was just that shade of purple,
and the stars couldn’t hold a candle
to her eyes.
She’d laughed when she had said that.
They used to say that it felt like so much longer
that they’d known one another
but now it feels like it couldn’t have been that long,
she wants to scream, say, it’s not fair,
you’re not allowed to take her from me!
But she can’t.
The words get stuck
and they wouldn’t do anything, anyway,
words are pretend,
they never fix anything.
… she’s no longer in pain.
She mutters out a thank you and her phone falls
hitting the tile floor.
She hears it crack.
She doesn't care.
She leans against the wall
and sobs.
(March 4, 2017 - 8:52 pm)
Abi, this is beautiful! I love the rhythmn!
(March 5, 2017 - 12:15 am)
Thank you!
(Also - Top!)
(March 5, 2017 - 11:34 am)
Abi, that's so lovely! It's the sort of poem that sucks you in and then spits you out as a more thoughtful person...
(March 9, 2017 - 7:19 pm)
Wow, Abi... I'm in awe. That poem is so beautiful. I love how it takes the reader on a journey with its words, and how the strength of the language really paints a picture in your mind.
(March 5, 2017 - 12:20 pm)
Wowwww.....great job!
Small Things
Small feet
Pad against the rocky ground
Searching
For that one thing that's missed
A treasure, perhaps
Or a forgotten necklace
Small hands
Reach down into the dry soil
Scoop up a handful
And blow it away on the breeze
Small eyes
Sparkle as they catch the glint
Of something half-buried in the dirt
The thing she was looking for
Small feet pound the rocks
Small hands lovingly pick up a small doll
And small eyes smile.
~ ~ ~
(March 5, 2017 - 2:02 pm)
Wow Abi and Leafpool I love your poems!!!
I sometimes write poetry, and I love to illustrate them. So i'm putting it out there, if anyone wants me to illustrate their poetry, I would gladly do so.
I have some poems I'll put up later, I have to get off the computer now.
(March 5, 2017 - 7:44 pm)
Wow, that's so sweet! It made me smile.
(March 6, 2017 - 7:52 pm)
Wow...... that was so beautiful, Abi. It made me tear up a bit, actually. I wish I could write poetry like that. Poetry that speaks, that evokes, that sings. I'd love to hear more from you, Abigail. I love your poetry. Could you give me some tips for writing free verse?
Anyways, here's one I wrote a while ago, 'cause why not? :)
The violin draws its bow across the strings,
Echoed by the haunting softness of the clarinet
Repeated in the brass tones of the french horn
Magnified in the sharp, methodical sounds of the percussion
Beginning something, setting it in motion.
Ending it with a soft goodbye.
(March 5, 2017 - 7:12 pm)
I like that a lot! Your use of adjectives is very clear.
(March 9, 2017 - 7:13 pm)
Here's one I wrote a while ago. I'm considering submitting it to a contest, actually. What do you guys think? (It's supposed to be centered FYI)
Silk and Twine
I still remember the day
I scraped up a dollar’s worth of nickels and went
To have my fortune told.
You know, at that place,
With the sign that says “Discover your future”
And an old cat that meows by the door?
I put my dollar in a box
And walked inside the foggy room, which didn’t scare me
Even though I think it was supposed to.
Perhaps because it reflected
The murky corners of my own mind, in which I was
So used to lurking anyway.
And I looked through waves of smoke
From the cup of bitter black coffee I slowly sipped, although, as you know,
I have never liked coffee.
In hopes of seeing the future
Hidden in its grounds, laid out at the bottom, for, they say
Truth comes at a price.
The lady, her red scarf
Coiled over half her face so as I couldn’t read its depths
Shuffled her cards.
One eye on the deck
The other always cocked on me, watchfully, jealousy, as if I might
Run away without having given up my secret.
She reached towards me
Touching her wooden fingers to my shaking ones as she handed me the deck
“Shuffle,” she said,
“And think.”
Think. The questions swirled in my head like a spoon mixing cream into coffee
Or a wheel of fortune.
But somewhere deep inside
I guess I knew I wanted you. You. Though I had no idea
Who you were then.
I think she did.
Even before I spoke a word, she knew, for it was she, you know
Who gave me to you.
And then she spoke.
I know that her words scared me, yet at the same time felt like
Balm to my sick heart.
She took my hand again
And held it for a minute, then reached down, and took two strings
Out of an ancient book.
“You see these strings?”
She asked, her voice a crackling flame amidst the heavy darkness.
“Are they alike to you?”
I shook my head.
One string was short, the other long, one string was silk,
The other, twine…
“And yet,” she said,
“They are together. I can not pull the strings apart
And nor can you.”
And then she told me
Smiling, not warmly, yet not cruelly, the secret I had come for. ‘Twas then that I knew
One string was me, the other, you.
And then she left me.
She had told me all there was to tell. I had gotten more than my dollar’s worth:
A pair of strings.
Those strings.
I still remember them, the way I remember the lines on my palm, or the way my hand
Feels within yours.
Because that day,
Ever so long ago, was when I first learned that we would be wrapped together like two strings.
Intertwined
Like ancient silk and twine.
(March 5, 2017 - 9:29 pm)
That's beautiful, Booksy Owly. So beautiful.
(March 7, 2017 - 2:03 pm)
Aw, thanks Cockle! *hugs*
(March 8, 2017 - 12:39 am)
Aww. . . so cute Booksy! Great job!
And, yes. If it isn't to late, you should totally put it in a contest! Even if you don't win, at least you had the experience, right?
(March 8, 2017 - 6:36 pm)
Thanks, Joan, I think I will!
(March 9, 2017 - 10:52 pm)
Fleas.
by Ogden nash.
Adam
had'm
(March 5, 2017 - 11:16 pm)