The End for dVerse Poets

Underfoot

Morning breaks. She watches over
the roses with a squint of scorn,
then pulls the clothesline tight.
A grooved branch holds its weight.

And she pegs his shirts
by the side seams on the line.
Upside down – a distress signal.

Socks paired, then pegged.
Jeans, wrinkles flicked away
by the breeze. Clothes billow,
but the air is breathless.

The grass underfoot is hard.
Seashell-crisp. It’s the heat.
Makes everything hard.

Once she was young. A virgin.
And then she married. Twice.
She reads romance novels, but
finds nothing familiar in them.

She keeps house, raises children.
Double-pegs another shirt, and
in so many ways, she knows
she’s reached the end of the line.

9 responses to “The End for dVerse Poets”

  1. Ooh, I like the open end. I hope she packs a bag and goes on a road trip!

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  2. I liked the use of the clothes line to describe her sense of finality also the phrase the “air is breathless”.

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  3. Well done! Love the distress signal, and the last “line” pull it all together.

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  4. great poetry – have to hope she escapes

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  5. Gee whiz! I was enjoying the balmy day hanging out laundry in a warm breeze spirited enough to billow the clothes … and then I abruptly reached the end of the line. What a letdown!! lol Great write!

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  6. What a delicious story you weave here. Great use of line as metaphor.

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  7. Oh this is the story of our lives. I think you have put it together so well. So apt and poignant. After all this is all we have that is meaningful in our lives when we dig beneath the surface, making it run smoothly, making sure the children are fed and that the socks are in pairs. I have stared at death a couple of times and each time all I have wanted to do was to go home and cook dinner and peg the washing out and carry on as normal.

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    1. Exactly. Exactly so. Thanks, Alison.

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  8. I love the laundry billowing to get the creases out. Romance novels, at this point & state of relationship, would only make me sad.

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