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    Wednesday Poetry Prompts: 212

    Categories: Poetry Prompts, Robert Lee Brewer's Poetic Asides Blog, What's New.

    For this week’s prompt, write a descending poem. You know the old saying, “Everything that ascends must descend.” Okay, maybe it goes a little different than that. Anyway, there’s a lot of stuff that descends. Find something and write it!

    Here’s my attempt:

    “Silly”

    In the kitchen, Will declares, “I’m silly,
    Hannah’s silly, and Daddy is silly.”

    He descends from a long line of silly-
    makers, because it started–the silly–

    well before me. My father was silly,
    and his father–ready with jokes–silly

    too. That Will is aware of the silly
    already makes me hopeful the silly

    will live on in grandchildren, who silly
    themselves, happy to be really silly.

    *****

    Follow me on Twitter @robertleebrewer

    *****

    Workshop your poetry!

     

    In the Advanced Poetry Writing workshop, poets will write and receive feedback on 6 poems during the 6-week course. Instructor Cherri Randall will share revision techniques that will help leading into National Poetry Month.

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    About Robert Lee Brewer

    Senior Content Editor, Writer's Digest Community.

    41 Responses to Wednesday Poetry Prompts: 212

    1. FAIRYTALE ENDINGS

      In her 9-to-5 cubicle at work
      her dreams rose as high
      as a Cinderella castle overlooking
      the Rhine.
      But in thirty years,
      her prince never came, only
      a succession of office managers
      who kept the thermostat
      too hot or too cold.
      After thirty years her dreams
      ran slowly downstream
      to a tranquil retreat where,
      near the end of winter,
      someone waved an old dead wand
      and pussy willows appeared
      like magic.

    2. Descending

      D own the stairs I go,
      E xiting the building.
      S teps covered with snow
      C old never yielding.
      E scaping breath I see.
      N otice how I shivered.
      D own to the mailbox,
      I s the mail delivered?
      N o mail for me.
      G oing up for tea.

    3. deringer1 says:

      PIKE’S PEAK
      Riding a train to the top of the world,
      my heart beat faster
      as the air became thin.

      Not caring if I was breathless,
      I gazed in wonder at the world below,
      so stunning in its beauty.

      To drink in the splendor of nature
      is better than any tonic to me–
      soothing, inspiring wonder and awe.

      But then came the time to descend,
      to board the train that brought me to the top
      and leave it all behind.

      How like all mountaintops!
      We cannot remain on a forever high
      but must return to the mundane of everyday.

      Beauty, inspiration, joy—
      all fleeting and ephemeral,
      descending always into life.

    4. JRSimmang says:

      That Saturday was a bright one.
      The sun seemed to shine on
      despite the oppressive silence
      that currently threatened to
      overwhelm the house.

      He stood on the landing,
      elbows on the rail,
      while his eyes travelled to the front door.

      This house was just another house;
      it had walls and doors and windows.
      It looked like the Summer’s house,
      Buffy and Dawn walking through the
      kitchen while Angel peered in through the
      blinds.
      That’s one of the reasons he loved it so.

      His room was located on the second floor,
      just to the right at the landing
      and into the dappled sunlight
      of prebubescence.
      His room, only accessible through the stairs
      (or the window via the oak tree,
      and trust him, he tried)
      smelled like him (he liked Givenchy,
      lavender, and vanilla.
      Sometimes, his girlfriends would wear
      Moonlight Path, a fragrance that
      was discontinued,
      but some idolatrous girls still clung to their
      bottles of lotion and bodywash),
      looked like him (the shutters pulled down but open,
      the walls a color of soul),
      sounded like him (Alexi Murdoch, Damien Rice,
      Donovan Frankenreiter, M83,
      and sometimes, if he’s feeling cheeky,
      Kingdom of Sorrow, but mainly to drive his mother and
      father crazy).
      And now, on this wooden precipice,
      it pined for him, reaching out with the
      door that rarely closed but always locked.

      There was another room down the hall
      that he thought would be a great room for a baby brother.
      His parents didn’t bother with that, though.
      They couldn’t be bothered with that.

      The top step seemed so far away,
      as far away as his mother’s voice telling him to snap
      out of his dallianced daydream
      and meet the movers.

      Movers and movies,
      they always pass by, revealing more of a person’s
      life than makes them comfortable.

      The top step squeaked, like it always did,
      when he put his weight on it.
      Sometimes, he would sneak out and purposefully
      step down to the second step.
      But, over the years, that too has developed
      a voice from being used too often as a footfall.
      He thinks about how funny it is that the order of
      the steps change by the direction you approach them.
      Down, it’s one two three.
      Up, it’s one two three.
      Perhaps, today, he would start at 17.

      There were 17 steps.
      17. Odd number.

      The railing had been worn smooth,
      little reminders that the fingers here
      raised the house as well.
      They all aged together.

      And as he took the last step to the floor,
      he had lived every one of those years again.

    5. PressOn says:

      FREE FALL

      Passion,
      when it descends
      from journeys to heaven,
      returns to Earth as unleavened
      snowfall.

    6. PressOn says:

      ADVICE

      The greatest lesson I learned in life
      came from working in sewer pipes.
      One day, the foreman told me,
      “Be nice to those you meet
      when on your way up;
      you will see them
      again on
      your way
      down.”

    7. Juanita Lewison-Snyder says:

      5 Egrets, descending
      (musings on infamous japanese print by Ohara Koson)

      by Juanita Lewison-Snyder

      The Egrets are back
      from wintering in South America –
      buff, with fine plumes so coveted
      they were once hunted to the brink of extinction.
      Five tall, leggy birds with impressive wingspans
      circle above cattails surrounding this lake,
      searching for fish, frogs, grasshoppers, crayfish
      in which to jab with yellow bills of stiletto precision.

      In flight, they are graceful and buoyant with
      long S-curved necks that tuck back against
      hunched shoulders, and dark stilt-like legs
      that trail behind shorter tail-feathers
      as if streamers on a plane.

      Egrets are the 747’s of the bird world,
      requiring large runways in order to land,
      (Spruce Goose to my father’s Cessna, if you will).
      But watching them now, silhouettes to a darkening sky
      they are anything but clumsy, wings outstretched
      their souls at the tips, reflecting back like landing lights
      atop a mirrored surface upon descension.

      © 2013 by Juanita Lewison-Snyder

    8. GIFT

      She reaches out her hand for his.
      These days, it’s her hand that shifts gears
      and guides the steering, driving him
      to doctors. His hands ache in every joint
      and tendon. The doctor will tell
      them, medicine can’t take back time.
      This gift of getting up each morning.
      She keeps track of clicking clock-
      hands on the wall behind him. Her index
      finger twinges, lately, on computer keys,
      ticking out words. Something
      in the bone’s marrow, or the nerve.
      Now she takes his hand, helps
      him stand up. It will be time, soon
      enough, to sit back down, to rest.

    9. priyajane says:

      Descent.
      Transformation, E-motion
      Reducing small potions
      Gravity, Polarity, Similarity, Capacity
      Circles, Slopes , Angular disparity
      Powerless strength, Ascending resent
      Distorted intent, Covert consent
      Dissolved memories, Crystallized tears
      People in frames, Sinking gears
      Silhouettes of dreams, conflicting Togethers
      Battered promises, Melancholy weather
      Renewed, Renditions, Sparkling admissions
      Subtraction, Edition,
      Submission
      Liberation

      PriyA Jane

    10. seingraham says:

      DESCENT OF A PHOENIX

      Below our tiny basket
      The Nile serpentines,
      A ribbon of gold
      Beneath another day
      Being birthed as Ra,
      Round as a pregnant
      Woman’s belly, surfaces
      Slowly into a perfect
      Sky, as if into a calm
      Sea –

      Although we are many
      In the basket
      We are hushed
      Made dumb no doubt
      By such sacred sights:
      Luxor’s valley of the kings
      Tombs older
      Than time, than death

      The only sound we hear:
      An occasional incongruous roar
      As the pilot sends a fiery jet
      Of helium into the massive
      Hot-air balloon above us
      A balloon with a ruby phoenix
      Stencilled on both its sides
      Is keeping us aloft as we
      Take this god’s eye trip
      At dawn

      Too soon we are nearing
      the end of our journey
      The pilot reminds us again,
      The landing procedure will
      Likely be a bumpy time
      But we’re not to worry
      He will throw out cables
      A ground crew will race after us
      And grasp the ropes quickly
      Finally bringing us to a stop
      All we need do, is hold on.

      The last thing I remember
      As we begin our descent -
      Is thinking, “This is so perfect
      So beautiful, and I am in awe
      If I were to die right now
      I would be utterly content, happy…”

      This poem is based on an actual event – the crash of a hot-air balloon at Luxor, Egypt, Wed. morning, which tragically ended in 19 deaths, plus 2 or 3 serious injuries. Some of the details of the poem are fictional, such as the description of the balloon, but others – such as the landing procedure – are pretty close to accurate. I have been a hot-air balloonist and while I can appreciate the lure, it’s also not my favourite thing to do. My heart goes out to those who lost people in this horrific accident.

    11. PKP says:

      A Descending Poem (writtten when “The Street” was inexplicably closed and empty)

      Crowded street
      Happy jostling
      Chestnut flowers
      Float in the music
      Of a thousand poets
      Sharing on cobblestoned
      Streets their vision of
      The Prompt
      So far from an Aside
      Now cast aside
      Silent empty street
      As poets wait behind
      Cyberspaced barricades
      Ah crowded street
      Now walked by
      RLB
      alone
      footsteps
      echoing

    12. De Jackson says:

      Yay! We’re back in business. Back to read later.

      I’ve got one here:

      http://whimsygizmo.wordpress.com/2013/02/27/down/

    13. Into the Grand Canyon

      Standing on the edge of the canyon,
      we steady our nerves, ready ourselves
      for our descent—canteens, new shoes
      and gear, a skilled but youthful guide.

      The newly risen sun illuminates
      striated walls from copper to green,
      layers built up or worn away,
      shaped by wind, baked by heat,
      etched by waters, dwindled now
      to the distant river rapids below.

      Under our own power we descend,
      unwilling to trust the mules treading
      the outside edges of narrow trails,
      little room for error. We do the math:

      Unlike a mountain climb, our effort
      doubles on return. We make the call,
      how far we go past cacti, junipers,
      packrat middens beneath overhangs.

      Aware we must at some point turn
      and start the climb back up, retrace
      our steps, through switchbacks, flat
      paths, then steep and rocky inclines,
      we stop and rest, lean against a rock
      big as a Buick, mug for the camera,
      then grasp our poles and climb up.

    14. Jane Shlensky says:

      The Descent of Man, #2

      He who
      pursued
      me vigorously
      to win me
      as his bride
      now lies
      in his underwear
      on his side
      like a toppled statue
      Prometheus unchained
      his gift of flame
      still vaguely warm,
      remote in hand
      asleep under
      a blanket
      of potato chips.

    15. Jane Shlensky says:

      The Descent of Man, #1

      What slow incline from mud and brine
      raised humankind to brain and spine?
      What thumbs can plumb the depth and range
      of wielding tools and wars and change?

      Some say dominion’s arrogance
      is born of Eden’s circumstance,
      that humans formed by God’s own hand
      came well equipped to pillage land.

      Such reasoning makes the divine
      aid and abet man’s foul design,
      abuse wrapped in man’s need and greed,
      not heeding long drops, his will freed.

      An oxymoron now we see:
      the higher we climb, the lower we’ll be,
      for what is gained by brawn and brain
      is loss of soul, all right, profaned.

      So towers fall and ice caps melt,
      so hunters hunt for fun and pelt
      right to extinction’s market high,
      and none need give an alibi.

      So hope is bought and pleasure sold,
      so families sleep in the cold,
      so wealth and power and greed ascend,
      and we focus on get and spend.

      The milk of human kindness soured;
      the heart of goodness is devoured,
      and Sisyphus becomes hero,
      pushing a stone up heights we know.

      Eyes on the prize, we push alone
      as down the stone falls on and on
      and we who struggle for the top
      hardly note where our boulders drop.

      King of the beasts we may well be
      claiming as ours all that we see;
      but man’s humanity is lost
      in living life at any cost.

    16. JWLaviguer says:

      Decent for the Descent

      We’re beginning our descent
      the Captain told us
      all I wanted was two more minutes
      in the lavatory
      no more time to love
      all I needed was 10 seconds
      and a quick cuddle
      but we had to return
      to our seats
      and place ourselves
      in the upright position

    17. I Can’t Comprehend

      Descend, blend, lend, extend,
      defend, spend, trend, amend,
      intend, send, friend, append,
      impend, bend, offend, pretend
      all end with end,
      but penned
      with ned.

    18. 12 years ago…
      that’s when I met her, sitting on a bench in a park,
      I instantly knew she was my soul mate with a fluttering of my heart.

      11 minutes of silence…
      lingered between us before a word was finally spoken,
      but since that moment, our connection would never ever be broken.

      10 years of marriage passed…
      And I was to surprise her with a special anniversary night:
      a special diamond bracelet because she was the special jewel that surrounded my life.

      9 candles were burning…
      then I was interrupted before I could light one more,
      with that single flame missing, someone came knocking at my door.

      8 gut-wrenching words…
      spoken by the officer with compassion in his countenance,
      I’ll never forget those words: Sir, your wife has been in an accident.

      7 blocks from home…
      that’s all she had left, she wasn’t very far,
      but it was dark and raining and she never saw the other car.

      6 times she rolled…
      after the other driver slammed into her side,
      when the paramedics arrived, they said she was lucky to still be alive.

      5 hours of surgery…
      my soul mate lying on a table, her life possibly fading,
      I’m outside, alone… pacing, praying, hoping, waiting.

      4 o’clock in the morning…
      anticipating any possible updates or reports,
      then I heard the doctor emerge from the operating room doors.

      3 steps away…
      that’s how far the doctor got before I saw the empty look in his eyes,
      as he mouthed some words, I felt a numbing coldness rise.

      2 inaudible words he muttered so softly,
      but I knew what they were the moment he saw me.

      2 inaudible words that brought me to my knees,
      they echoed over and over in my mind: I’m sorry.

      1 breath was all I could take, before
      1 tear began to break, that
      1 second of tormenting agony, I can never escape.

      1 wish would make it right, removing
      1 thought that haunts me every night, that
      1 regret: why didn’t I just pick her up that night?

      zero minutes go by…
      where I don’t think of her, miss her, or love her.
      She will forever be with me, and I will never ever forget her.

      This is my…
      Undying Love

    19. Sitka Larry says:

      The Log Deck

      The logs.
      They rise up wet and dripping
      wild and ready for death.
      We wrestle with them.
      Grudgingly they succumb
      to the ceaseless flow
      of our hands. Of our minds.

      The logs
      They move like a river.
      Slow, undulating wet-backed whales
      aground and dieing
      in the sun and air.
      Descending into the mouth
      of the hungry chipper.

    20. RobHalpin says:

      Wrote two this week with the same title and idea, but different forms, linked here to my blog:

      The Downward Spiral (a Nonet)

      The Downward Spiral, revisited (a Fibonacci)

      • foodpoet says:

        thanks for the blog link may try on another computer – I got permission from work to open writers digest links but not any others at this time

    21. When She’s Ready

      It wasn’t planned, each forward
      step a downhill, backwards set-
      back, the descent to hell
      a whiskey sip away. She
      failed to see the skid
      marks like birdseed
      led to doom, yet
      were there to
      call her
      home.

    22. Domino says:

      Descent

      the way is slippery
      at times
      and salty
      with tears and other
      less savory fluids
      (snot, blood, shame)
      and even through
      the sound of my own
      h
      o
      w
      l
      of anguish
      i remain determined
      on my
      course
      blindly
      ignore
      all
      warnings

      and when i reach
      r o c k b o t t o m
      and there is no
      further
      to go
      is when
      h e a l i n g
      may
      begin.

      Diana Terrill Clark

    23. JWLaviguer says:

      Descending into Madness

      Up to the basement I climb
      turn off the lights to see

      I wake up to dream
      and live to die

      I’m afraid to be brave
      for I love to hate

      Alone in the crowd
      Unable to move in space

      I am rising
      as I descend

      In this prison
      I am free.

    24. Yolee says:

      You, Complete Me

      (Betrothed, at last)

      Some years the wedding circuit is dry
      like forgotten Thanksgiving carcass
      in the oven. Then in one month,
      to David’s Bridal Shop you go
      hoping to dress two weddings.

      (Variations of white)

      Preference descends like a single
      snowflake for my forty something
      sister who will keep things purely
      white and simple as an A-line dress
      devoid of lace, tulle and a train.

      (Unalike though related)

      But our youngest sibling
      frosted over a creamy gown
      with all the fat trimmings.

      (Bread of angels)

      Like manna descending upon
      the outskirts of campgrounds
      tagging what lies ahead,
      fragments of promises
      come to feed the heart.

      (Come spring and fall)

      groom this poem.

    25. Amy says:

      Yay for comments!

      The Descent

      How eerily you descend
      upon me- your intended prey.
      Underneath the veil of
      silence, you slink down your
      silky cord, unseen.
      Your abundant slender legs
      move with quick agility,
      bending and twisting with ease.
      You lower yourself to an
      assuming level- free to spy
      with all eight eyes.
      But just before you are
      discovered, you withdraw
      as swiftly as you had
      come; defying death
      once again.

    26. PowerUnit says:

      Welcome back webpage.
      ———————————

      Descention

      As I lie in this ditch, bent
      fireweed marks my descent, the path
      I fell from road to bottom,
      from foot to back,
      from white to black.
      They bow in prayer, lonely
      I fade away.

    27. pmwanken says:

      TEARS FROM CLOUD NINE

      On
      my
      way up
      to cloud nine,
      I hit turbulence.
      The skies turned grey and the sun hid.
      Darkness enveloped me, storms battered me, and rain fell.
      Each droplet mixing with my tears
      as they descended
      to the ground,
      helping
      me
      grow.

      2013-02-27
      P. Wanken

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