The Writer to His Poems
The Writer to His Poems
You homely children of my witless brain,
brought forth into the light with labor and pain,
deserved, since fornication was my sin.
Still, I feel my shame in burning skin.
I stood upon the scaffold holding you,
and let the judging mob give their review.
I tried to dress you all in decent garb
to shield you from the sting of each sharp barb.
I trimmed the toenails of your little feet;
limping and bloody you waddled down the street.
And when I cleaned you up in face and limb,
I threw you in the pond to sink or swim.
Some readers shun you in mute disapproval.
A few express a wish for your removal.
More find a way, by asking thoughtful questions,
to offer useful help and kind suggestions.
Most of you sink into the workshop mire;
deprived of air and light, you soon expire.
You few, bumped to the surface, find your breath,
escape the Slough of Despond and wretched death.
I send you out to little magazines,
as do a million author-Magdalenes,
hopeful that you will find a loving reader
whose day your words will render a bit sweeter.
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Edits:
S1L3: all well-deserved, considering my sin. > deserved, since fornication was my sin.
S1L4: yet, still, I feel your shame in my thin skin. > Still, I feel my shame in burning skin.
S2L1: I’ve > I
S3L2: waddle across > waddled down
S3L3: have cleaned > cleaned
S3L4: throw > threw
S5L4: certain > wretched
Last edited by Glenn Wright; Yesterday at 02:00 PM.
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