Archive for the ‘Poetic Notes’ Category

I’m thinking of the thunks I had to think.

The rinky dink thinks that glittered on the brink.

I think the thunk through, and thunk it through and through.

I thunk it, I dunked it (no one else would want it), I think it all happened at the Thunk Zoo.

 

Please chortle at this wisdom as it numbs your lobes.

Play games of mockery while I flip on the strobes.

You seem to be actin’ like a spaceman in a blender.

You were a bit tougher once, but now oh-so-tender.

 

So, as the shrubbery gets more rubbery in my throat.

Before my shadow becomes inevitably cloaked.

Before the witch creaks opens the door.

Before all of that the lung must inhale one more.

 

Bet on the habit being innocent, at best.

And like an elixir from some magical spell,

it casts out the reality demons, and my constitution as well.

 

I noticed the stranded seedling and fastened it to the soil.

The entire phenomenon is ironically loyal.

Again, another excursion around the sun.

The flowery bulb withered to an ashy crumb.

 

I lick the frosting from the side of the spoon.

The moon’s dark secrets come an hour too soon.

You’re in a free falling orbit harmonized with nature’s gravity.

But never fall pray to the false comfort of impunity..

 

 

Loggoff©

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(This is a poem I wrote for my 6 year old daughter.  She was chosen as the “Star Student” this week and my assignment, as Dad, is to write something about her and then the teacher of the 2nd grade class will read it in front of the class.)

 

 

“Once upon a time there was a Zoie.”

 

Zoie was a charming little girl,

with dark-brown hair that didn’t curl.

She had the cutest giggle and smiled so dandy. 

Her eyes looked like chocolate M&M’s candy. 

 

She loved to dance, sing, and tell jokes to people who don’t know ‘em.

and, most importantly, she loved to write poems.

 

However, this was a sad time for the Zoie,

locked away in the castle tower, her eyes so teary.

They sparkled in the moonlight as she sat by the windowsill,

while looking down on the kingdom of Slappyville. 

 

She sniffed a few sniffs, and sighed a deep sigh. 

She wasn’t sure what to do, so all she could do was cry.

 

The mean-faced, “King of Slappyville”, locked her inside

the dark tower for many days and nights.

He wanted her to write a poem just for his Kingdom.

But all she could think of was, “This King sure is dumb.”

 

Zoie had been thinking, and thinking, and thinking some more.

She thought and thought until her thinker was sore.

If she didn’t write a poem, then he’d keep her locked.

Zoie sighed again and stared at the clock.

 

If, though, the poem was super,

the king said he’d flatten his hat and eat it for supper!

 

“HA!  That’ll be the day!” the King laughed. 

No one was there to hear him laugh; well, except for his cat. 

He always laughed to himself like that.

No one would make him flatten his hat… not even his cat!

 

Then, Zoie wiped her M&M eyes dry. 

“Who does that mean King think he is to make me cry?!

Well, I’m done crying.  Yup, that is THAT!

I’m going to write a poem to make him flatten his hat AND his cat!”

 

Zoie grabbed some paper, a purple crayon, and began to write…

She wrote away, into the night.

She wrote the poem you read just now.

She’s free! (And the king’s hat is flat and the cat can’t meow!)

 

 

THE END!