Rage

In upper New York, from Bullet Hole Road to the dirt road to the train, I walk by the red-painted barn faded to pink. I am startled to see in plaid flannel shirts and high laced leather boots, two hunters, one with a shotgun broke open carried across his left arm, the other hunter armed with a new-fangled crossbow and long arrows, or bolts ending in razor-sharp tips. I hear the snap of the bolt action releasing the arrow through the dust of the autumn air, and plunging into the velvety hide of the unsuspecting buck bending head to drink in the burbling rill.

Abruptly, chest tight

The urge for retribution

In private hunt preserve

Stripes – Hour 13

I’m stuck between
looking fat
and
feeling thin

These horizontal stripes are in favour
but my floor is too contrasting
I’m in a haze

I’m caught in a crossroads
like a zebra in headlights
just trying to get to
the other side

It’s not always
black
and
white.

Prompt Twelve – The Stuff of her Life

Prompt for Hour TwelveText Prompt

Closets are a big deal inside a house, but also metaphorically. One can be in the closet, or come out of it, for example, But they are also places of safety and joy for small children, or where a monster is lurking, depending on the small child, and/or time of day.

There are very few poems about closets, but this is your chance to write one about the closet, metaphorical or physical or both.

 

The Stuff of her Life

 

After a year passed by, of your passing on.

(both of you passing on)

I steeled myself to open her steel almirah.

Expecting dusty sarees and musty smells,

expecting my heart to squeeze

the grief out of my eyes.

Oh, but I had to smile.

She was a hoarder, that one, your wife.

The things she had clung to, the stuff of her life.

 

There were letters you had written her,

all through the almost-sixty years of marriage.

I put them away, for your grand daughter

to find in my closet, after I am gone.

(Poor thing, what will she do with them?)

I found one you had written to the 18-year-old me.

(How did Ma have it?)

A dashing dude, dad, you could’ve done better,

It was incredibly dull, that letter.

I remembered well that strange last line.

“Don’t forget to drink Horlicks, hope all is fine?”

 

Well, what do you know father?

I have decided to obey you, almost forty years later.

I now drink Horlicks daily; it helps me sleep.

Thanks for the advice, I will not weep.

 

24 Hour Poetry Hour 13: A Tribute to William Blake “Stepping Stones”

My dear Penelope, you make me sing
how I admire you
dodging all the pitfalls
that our pitiful life does bring

There is no evil in your place
barricades from fools like me
how can I stay near you
with my ugly sneering face

You look lovely in the moonlight
and stunning in the glow
as the sun kisses your fair cheek
that rests and pales at night

When we walked that stormy lane
I could feel a sudden change in you
not just beauty but strength
and a total absence of pain

Your footsteps were profound
following the stepping stones
reaching heights of the immaculate
and I heard a trumpet sound

The summit of our love
giving me a chance at rugged handsomeness
and unyielding courage
as I raise my gauntlet glove

Prompt 11

A touch of sun

draws me near

discarded entry ways

creating a underpass

that never takes light

for granted

Hour 1 Really Late

I ended up going to the renaissance festival with some family today so I’ve got a lot to catch up on. Here’s hoping I can get some poems started. Some of these might be really short for a bit.

 

Hour 1

 

Stick figure masterpieces

That’s how my writing feels

Simple and yet complete

A whole world can be on the paper

And yet it is there to be seen

Sailing Race

Out on Lake Ontario

setting the sail ready for the race.

Pulling up the sail each getting in our position for the speed race.

The wind is good coming from the west.

The two of them look at each other and smile.

The horn goes around the bend

Tom was almost knocked out of the boat by the mast but ducked just in time

Jenny pulling in the sail and made a sharp turn

off to the finish line.

They win.

She

I saw her pain,
she was not the same,
I have seen
her anger for days,
she was not able
to smile.

A thousand words
broke her reputation
apart and her family
and friends were no
longer the safe zone
for the homeless individual.

Suddenly, I saw a
overwhelming change.
She was wearing
fancy clothes and driving
expensive cars.

The rumors said she
was the wife of
a strange man
who only showed up
at night and worked hard.
He was tall and thick,
wearing a hat and black suit,
he kissed her intensely
and feed her well.
Some say she was no
longer human,
others said she was
married to death,
those seen with her
ended up dead.