National Poetry Writing Month 2023

      1. Cover-art Tryptych

      2. What The

      3. To That Thing

      4. Woke Triolet & Wokesplanations

      5. Risible Haiku & Selvas de Santana

      6. Subjected

      7. Tate’s “Hats”& Smoke Rings

      8. Global Deceptions

      9. Climate Change Sonnet

      10. Passing Sirens

      11. Hateful Brews

      12. Suits and Diplomatic Ties

      13. Three for April

      14. Miltonian Splendors

      15. June in April  ⁄  Canaanites and Kangz

      16. Dysco Tech

      17. Romances

      18. Abecedarian Prose

      19. Blue Lines

      20. Cargo Cult

      21. The Sociopath Convention

      22. A Kinzhal for Emily/As in the Days of Noah

      23. White Hoods

      24. XX Tobacco Review

      25. Goose Chase   

      26. Retratitos / Segunda Cabeza 

      27. Cypresses of Delirium

      28. Bad Data

      29. Multicultural Indigestion

      30. Ecclesia

 

 

 

10th CONSECUTIVE YEAR !

Ecclesia

Church of Dead-Jesus-on-a-Stick;
Church of hierophant headgear;
Church of mincing around in purple vestments;
Church of get the choirboy in the rectory;
Church of Mary-this and Mary-that;
Church of turn your back to the congregation
mumbo-jumbo move vessels around;
Church of suppress the scriptures;
Church of hoarded religious art
where Christ looks like
an effeminate pink duke;
Church of what’s in Vatican vaults;
Church of cut a deal with gangsters;
(cross yourself double-crossed)
Church of burned at the stake
most everyone
who wanted to be Christian;
BEHOLD THE TRUE MOTHER CHURCH

Multicultural Indigestion

    The Hostess

Crowned in Afro-tribal headdress,
On her chest a Slavic tunic;
Appearing as a prophetess
Or a schizophrenic eunuch…

On her wrists ring Irish bangles—
Wrapped round her waist a bright sarong;
On her breast a pendant dangles
Like some Oriental gong.

Multi-kulti represented
As a woman, weirdly dressed.
Every ethnic group is feted
On arrival to the West.


The Dinner

Everybody bring your dish!
The ethnic potluck has begun.
Afterwards your guts will wish
Your culture had remained as one.

Foods collide, repel, and mingle
In the cultural melting pot;
Yet it’s hard to find a single
Way to describe this mixed-up lot.

Curry dances with Kielbasa
Chinese dumplings, Jello, slaw;
Deviled eggs, the odd samosa
Beans and rice, cheap sushi raw.

Soul food, Kimchi, Spanish rice,
Pad-Thai, grits, potato salad;
Gastronomic paradise?
Or a nauseating ballad . . .

Out of many, not quite one—
You bravely burp. It’s quite diverse . . .
But as your stomach comes undone
Digestion goes from bad to worse.

E pluribus to Alka-Seltze®
Groaning in your bed at three:
Let it fizz and hope it helps, sir
Lest you doubt diversity…

I’m Diversity. I am strength!
Sings the undigested food.
Perhaps we all shall know, at length
If global change was for the good.

 


PROMPT: 29

Write your own two-part poem that focuses on a food or type of meal.
In the poem, describe the food or meal as if it were a specific kind of person.
Give the food/meal at least one line of spoken dialogue.