I heard that poetry is going extinct,
government data shows, a Friday
afternoon tweet to end the week.But I wonder if they heard
the darling little bird outside my
window before dawn,
it’s featherweight held bravely
by budding branch, itself
tweeting an arrival that returns
without fail in creamsicle
goodness each day.I wonder if they heard
my first graders who listen to
Dickinson and Guthrie,
Williams and Hughes
as they place their chewed pencils,
erasers gone for the use,
on lined paper almost too
narrow to hold their words.I have made a erath
today. It looks pride qute.
I wote wrds.I know what he means.
I have made an earth
today. It looks pretty quiet.
I wrote words.Or, I wonder if they heard her,
owl owl come
I love you you love
me hoooooo said
owl I am a girl said
the owl I follow the
forest I love the hooooo
I follow the village and
I follow my self I love
the forest forest and
I love my self the
people say I am a
gorgeous white owl
I love when people
say I am a gorgeous
white owl I just follow
my heart people follow my
heart I say to the people
hooooo they say
I love owls they say
I will follow your heartI heard someone tweet today
that poetry is going extinct.I wonder where they heard that.
.
.
.
Author’s Note:
NaPoWriMo Day 24. I did not use the prompt today. A tweet at the end of the school day caught my attention instead.
According to government data, as reported by the Washington Post, poetry is going extinct.
Not in my life. Sorry. Data, whether in standardized assessment in the schools or studies funded by who knows what, only tells a tip of a story.
There is more. There is always so much more.
Love this. And “sorry” about data made me smile.
Thank you, L.L. My go to was the “eye roll.” I am so steeped in “data” collecting that a smile or an eye roll is all I can muster.