Poetry Season

A word from our sponsor:

Printer-friendly version

Author: 

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

It's that time of year again, when there are quite a few poetry competitions for Anglos like me. I've not entered any for the last couple of years after being placed in one, and getting outed as a poet in work (definitely non-U in an IT department). I have a few to get ready, a fairly painstaking process, so no new fiction for a couple of weeks at least.

This is one I'm working at, it's a bit old fashioned, and perhaps too self-consciously Welsh, but I think it has legs in it...

The Missionary

Melfa Matthews scrubbed her step
with vigour and with Vim
scouring out the mason's marks
then starting on the Maker's.

Where glaciers failed Melfa ground
a panting, pistoned tide
the ebbs and flows of decades
condensed into each morning.

Once a Witness turned up
trailing mud and scripture
his footsteps pious puddles
around his Woolworth brogues.

His briefcase barely open
Melfa sprang like Judgement
scattering the Watchtowers
with a well aimed angry broom.

Poor man, he met a wrath now
he'd thought his prayers prevented
for Melfa knew in her Book
no sin like muddy shoes.

Comments

I like this!

erin's picture

Very nice. :)

- Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

You're a loony, I like it

Very funny and sweet in its way.

Never mess with an obsessive housekeeper. My grandmother on my Mom's side was kinda that way, never met a crumb she didn't pick up or a weed she didn't pull. She had the best cookies on hand for nice grandkids though.

John in Wauwatosa

John in Wauwatosa

Beavering away

This is getting close to complete... I don't really have a problem with religion, it's just so much a part of my background that it tends to inform a lot of what I write... so do the nutters I meet on the bus :)

The Evangelist

My whistle filled the vacant moment
with a draught from my chapel childhood,
'When I survey the wondrous cross'
idle in the low notes, rather flat
as I'd first heard it on a vestry organ
wheezing like Datcu in his dust.

'My word what a wonderful tune that is'
his grape round vowels slurred, and spilled,
but behind his brandy broken cheeks
his eyes shone, with a lay preacher's zeal.
Framed by his most Christian smile he asked
'Tell me brother are you saved?'
my answer 'no I'm just Welsh'