Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
April Musings - 13. NaPoWriMo 2017 Week Three
Day 14
The Prompt is to write some absurdist prose poems.
Travelling one day, I encountered a three-headed duck with one leg hopping ahead of me. Intrigued, I followed it to see where it might lead. Its feathers were plain in comparison to the multi-colored stones littering the road before us, a perfect accompaniment to the flowing hues of the water, as it ebbed and flowed like refracted light through a prism.
It stopped abruptly, one head turning toward me in annoyance, while the middle head stared steadfastly forward, and the third preened. “What the quack is your problem?” it asked. I stared, wondering how birds manipulated their tongues and vocal cords to speak. “No problem,” I replied. “I was just curious about you.” It rolled its eyes as the middle head ducked in silent laughter and the third continued to dig through layers of brown tinged with white and blue. “Odd ducks have the right to exist too, ya know.” “Indeed,” I replied. “I’ve always been fascinated by that which is different.” “Well, find your own path. This one is taken.” All three heads now faced forward as it resumed its quest. I bid it farewell as I returned the way I came. “What the quack just happened?”
Days 15 and 16
Renga poem. A collaborative poem written by Valkyrie, MacGreg, Lyssa, Aditus, and Parker Owens, in that order. So the first and sixth stanzas were written by me on two separate days.
Frozen heart and river
unleashed by spring
obliterating winter.
Through strength of eternal sun,
A fresh journey has begun.
A trickling, a swelling
growing determined,
breaking your resistance.
Blue and green surmount cold stone
silver fish swims all alone.
Swept away by April's
ardent, boisterous dance,
a still pool welcomes you.
Circles concentric appear
signaling you, love, are near.
Ancient trees bend boughs
in yearning, scraping mud and moss
to ease Hope's path.
Encased by thousand sun rays
It flies down all hidden ways.
Its light a beacon
to overcome the maze
of denial and fear.
Dappled, dancing, swimming free,
supple spirit, come to me.
Day 17
The prompt is to write about angels — directly, obliquely, humorously, mockingly or however. Just let an angel somehow into your poem.
Easter Angel
Our traditions died with you.
No more Good Friday fish fries
With scallops for you and sugar cookies for dessert.
No more Easter morning brunch
Or plastic eggs containing hidden treasures,
One always left to be found and
Laughed about in summer.
Our celebration ended early yesterday,
Halted by headaches and
Pining for the past.
A rainbow appeared through a sunshower
As I entered my car and I felt compelled
To take a different way home,
Past the graveyard containing you,
Making you part of our celebration after all.
Day 18
The Prompt is to write a Ghost Letter, a poem-letter, addressing directly someone who is no longer among the living.
Every body tells a story,
And yours is a novel, or more like an epic poem—
Full of beauty and tragedy.
You took pride in your appearance,
With manicured nails despite the
Calloused hands that tell me
The perfect ratio of body fat to muscle
Wasn’t earned in the gym.
What’s left of your dark hair
Was cut in the latest trend,
And the tattoo of an eagle clutching a ribbon
With a name etched on it—a red heart on either side—
Tells of your wild side.
It took me a while to piece together the letters.
H-e-n-r-y
Was he your son?
Father?
Lover?
The other tattoo—a rainbow over an equal sign—
Leads me to believe the latter.
Your clean liver tells me that any alcohol consumption
Was occasional,
And your heart was average size and weight
With no arterial disease,
As would be expected for a man your age.
Your brain was otherwise healthy,
Despite the pool of blood in the meninges
Which indicates death was not instantaneous.
Your bronze skin and creases around your
Brilliant blue eyes tell of a life lived outdoors.
Your body tells me so much about how you lived,
But nothing about who you were.
Did you love with abandon?
Did your pride in your appearance translate
To an overinflated ego?
Was your heart as pure on the outside
As it was on the inside?
I feel like I know your killer
Better than I know you.
Shallow cuts make way for deeper intrusions.
Fifty of them to be exact.
So hesitation gives way to uncontrollable rage.
What happened to provoke such anger and hatred?
I can only imagine the fear, helplessness, and pain
You had to endure during this monstrous attack.
I had a hard time finding all the wounds
Underneath your bruised flesh.
I’ve been doing this job for a long time
And am rarely affected by the atrocities I see,
Yet you break my heart.
I can only hope that the evidence I collect
Helps bring your killer to justice
Before he strikes again.
I vow to speak for you in whatever way I can
To make that happen.
Day 19
Write a poem made up of suggestions (real or absurd) for appropriate manners or behavior in specific situations. You might talk about being taught manners. Or you might simply entitle your poem “Manners” and go somewhere unexpected.
But in some countries,
Not burping after a meal
Is considered rude.
Day 20
A rhyming couplet in honor of Aditus’ promotion.
Maroon, not purple, is your due,
Congratulations, all for you!
- 6
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.