I shed more than one tear when reading these responses to Our Small Beginnings , the last Wednesday Writing Prompt, April 11 . May you be touched and inspired.
Thank you to bogpan (Bozhidar Pangelov), Paul Brookes, Frank McMahan, and Sonja Benskin Mesher for coming out to play. Of special note, Sonja has once again shared her art along with her poetry. Paul has created an ekphrastic poetry challenge for himself in honor of National Poetry Month. Visit his blog to see what he’s been up to. Worth your time.
Do join us tomorrow for the next Wednesday Writing Prompt.
New Soft
nervous she does
what she knows
pushes a pram
cuddles a baby
moves others’
toys that get
in her way
chews her toast,
sups her juice
asks where mummy is.
where her sisters are.
sobs at a boy
in a Spiderman mask,
rough and tumble
older boys.
wants her comfort cloth
climbs, head over heels
explores a soft world
© 2018, Paul Brookes (The Wombwell Rainbow )
Cuddled Sobs Cradled
hawk back shudder
at vacuum absence
of hugwarm.
Gutempty, boneneed
heartgripe ache
for those once close
now ashed in earth.
in my arms she sobs
for her mam’s voice,
and my heartsob
for my late mam’s voice.
Rhythm of her grief
as she nods on my chest
almost lulls me to sleep.
She shudders awake
heaves herself to the floor
as her mam, only on an errand
walks a smile through the door.
© 2018, Paul Brookes (The Wombwell Rainbow )
Fixes It
As a parent you believe
you can fix everything.
when they’re in pain,
regrow bones, restore lost
blood, a pillow for their head,
neck hugged in bright,
playcentre foam
while enquiries are made,
you cry hugfulls,
then, you drive
as fast as you can,
imagine their absence as the worst
now, you make them laugh
warm their cold hands
push their hair away from their eyes
hold it, together
hold it …..together
hold it together
I can’t have
dogshit on surfaces,
settee and chairs,
kids in mucky diapers.
hold it together
but I have.
hold it together
but I have.
© 2018, Paul Brookes (The Wombwell Rainbow )
Identical with a Twig
At some unnamed night,
and it will be bright,
I’ll go away.
The door I will never
close
the flowers will keep
fragrance.
My children will have fallen asleep
the most deeply
covered and caressed
and somebody will cant to them again
a cradle song.
It will be light like in a temple
and clear like a voice
in mountains.
Then I’ll leave
forgotten all the words…
A branch in the white snow.
© 2018, bogpan (bogpan – блог за авторска поезия, блог за авторска поезия)
GROWING PAINS
Silence was your fortress. Sometimes you would
venture to whisper through its narrow slits,
granting entry to very few across
the drawbridge, nursing your tenderness while
watching for wolves prowling from the forest.
Time and the winds brought seeds, sun, soft rain.
Now kingcups fill the moat, campion the keep.
Briony and rose are capturing the walls;
swallows return to their niches every year
and in the valley, blackbirds sing your songs.
© 2018, Frank McMahan
CURIOSITY
You would converse with otters if you could,
count the bubbles as they break the river’s
sheen, your mind a submarine to follow
them wherever they and the waters run;
surface then to roll amongst the meadow
-sweet and thyme, newest of their brood.
You would take a felucca on the Nile,
cresting its yearly flood, turning back time
to etch hieroglyphs on the temples’ walls, grind
corn in a quern, dine at the High Priest’s
table, look up as the Pharoah passes.
© 2018, Frank McMahan
THE ETERNAL CHILD.
We were all ready, our homes and our
imagined worlds, waiting to give you,
day by day and year on year, the best
of our imperfect selves, to watch you
climb the branches of our love
and catch the world’s excitement.
But you were overwhelmed.
Our earth-bound pathways have diverged.
Yet you will voyage with us, there
in every season,in the dappled sunlight
of our days, learning all the steps
of your childhood’s dance.
© 2018, Frank McMahan
some shops
sell fairy dust in small bottles,
various shades of pastel. cork
stoppers, a wee note inside at just £1.99.
i bought you one,
to treasure. to place
on your bedroom shelf,
in case.
of emergencies.
© 2018, poem and illustration, Sonja Benskin Mesher (sonja-benskin-mesher.net ; Sonja Benskin Mesher, RCA paintings ; sonja-benskin-mesher.co.uk )
oh you are a beauty, showing your legs, dress swinging.
in rhythm. in photos , little gifs, to share.
how can we look the same? i think i look different
now. now that i have grown, watched you grow.
now. now.
now that i helped when you were sick. now.now.
now i am older and watched you die. all of you.
i say goodnight to some and remember all of you.
how can i look the same. now. now.
remember all that has been done. how
can i look the same?
you are still a beauty.
dress swinging.
© 2018, poem and illustration, Sonja Benskin Mesher (sonja-benskin-mesher.net ; Sonja Benskin Mesher, RCA paintings ; sonja-benskin-mesher.co.uk )
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