As I suspected, there’s a wide range of poetry that was submitted to this carnival, themed “poetry of dissent,” from the political to the personal; all of them have one thing in common, a refrain that goes back just about as far as poetry itself does: using the vehicle of verse to express an opinion that runs contrary to the status quo. Read on!
From Robert Cameron Hazelton at Average Poet comes “Change”, which “not only describes the jingling pittance my services are underpaid with at work but also what I should do with my career choice.”
my worthless weary backbone sags,
the need to please long done—
those tarnished smirks they flip my way
just barely keep the wolves at bay.
From rdl at New Poems comes “rumpled sheets”:
a vietnam vet
sleeping in my bed
From Martin at Complete and Utter Poetry comes Final Voyage of the North Ship, which he describes as “an updating of Larkin’s The North Ship, inspired by the news item predicting that by 2060 there will be no ice at the North Pole, which places most other concerns in perspective.”
The ships voyaged to and fro
Over the sea, the landless sea
Watching out for a new rainbow
To signify God’s mercy
At Line Upon Line, we read “Duty”:
Duty is a stern mother:
Do your homework first.
Finish the cleaning before you read.
A place for everything and everything in its place.
Michael Rew at Revival of Love gives us a sonnet that “slightly revised from the original, was submitted along with two others to an informal contest judged by A. Barton Hinkle of the Richmond Times-Dispatch to name the “unofficial” poet laureate of Richmond, Virginia. One of my other entries, “An Open Hill,” won the contest. So I am the “unofficial” poet laureate of Richmond, Virginia.”
The City of our Prayers:
O Richmond, corpulent with opulence
and effluent with affluence, confess
that success is not access to excess,
but when our poorest poor have sustenance…
And Ginger Bush of gingerivers gives us two excellent poems:
Liberty(Written in honor of the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense Leauge, at a time when media reported the group felt they could be targeted by the FBI a few years back. Anyone seeking more information on that can go to newspaper archives, or BREDL’s own newsletter.)
Liberty is not blindfolded,
neither is she gagged.
She stands tall and proud
with her light
shining
and “Ode to a Meme”
You splatter truth like blood,
your lies washing against the walls of my life
gaining momentum, this destructive tide overwhelms
any possibility of truth, coloring a world
In addition to these two pieces, Ginger asked to host the next poetry carnival which I am delighted to have her do. Please watch her blog for an upcoming announcement about how and when to send her your entries.