We are almost there! After this round there will be just one left, and then we’ll proceed to the semi-finals.
One would think that the quality of the poems would go down occasionally, but so far all the qualifying rounds were pretty strong.
Make sure to cast a vote for you favorite one as usual.
1. Unforgettable by Sarah Mathews
While you were holding my hand,
As we were walking on the sand,
I started
to wonder why,
What made my breath so high,
There were too many times
when I felt this way,
Each time I decided I could not say,
I did not
know that you could read my mind,
And just exactly find,
As you guessed
my fear,
That I was afraid. . . if you were not near,
You gave me
comfort when i was broken,
Which I have still kept as a token. . .
2. I Love Nice Sunsets by Margaret McCartney
I love nice sunsets I don’t know why
But every time I look to the sky
I
see God’s work in every cloud
And wonder if he is thinking aloud
“What
have they done to my best creation?
The earth, the sky, the deep blue
oceans?
I hope they stop before it’s too late
For one day they’ll meet
me at the Pearly Gates
And I will want a good reason why
They are
destroying my earth, sea and sky”
His wrath we will feel, His displeasure
see
For once our earth is gone
So are we
3. Disqualified due to improper language
4. Destroyed and Gone by Rachel Letsche
I didn’t think it would be this way,
I didn’t think it would
happen like this,
My little son, whispered in my ear,
“Mommy,
where is our house?”
While I silently cry.
I don’t have any money,
What am I do without my husband?
He was
here for me,
And to support this family, he was in our house,
All I hope
is that
Little Jimmy doesn’t ask,
About
His Daddy.
The red cross symbol comes to my reach,
Speaking in a foreign tongue.
I
speak back, “Help my husband.”
But instead he takes little Jimmy
from my grasp.
I try to get my baby boy,
But then another stops me from
my son.
My son is gone,
Along with my love,
Why God, have you
Done this to
Me?
5. The Lonely Traveler by Sunitta Raman
The horizon seemed far and out of sight,
The lonely traveler slept in the
desert and gazed into
the starry night,
The air seemed cold and
chill,
‘Life was hard and sad,’ he thought
He lost track of the caravan
he saw a few days back,
His favorite camel carried his merchandise in a big
brown sack,
A dry fruit seller by trade,
He wandered on the mountains
and sand dunes unafraid,
‘Afraid of what?’ he said to himself,
His own
life was an avalanche of tragedies,
But who could unravel life’s
mysteries.
His eyes glistened with tears,
He began to question his own
fears,
He travelled for miles and miles,
His face a contrast of tears
and empty smiles,
He reached an unknown city to seek solace and peace,
A
few days later he saw caravan dwellers,
A band of happy-go-lucky and merry
revelers,
Among the voices and cheerful laughter,
He saw the lovely lady
with blue eyes,
Wasn’t she his long lost daughter?
Tears of joy flowed
down the old trader’s cheeks,
How on this war ravaged nation could he
justice seek?
He approached the caravan dwellers with trepidation,
They
all eyed the man with suspicion,
A civilized stranger was not too welcome in
their band,
The old trader reached out for his daughter’s hand,
‘Beat
him up!’ shouted one of the revelers,
‘He’s a scoundrel he’s come to kidnap
her’ shouted the other.
‘She’s my long lost daughter’ pleaded the old
trader
‘You expect us to believe your tales’ shouted their leader.
‘Take
him to the city jail’ shouted his long lost daughter.
The old trader’s body
lay in jail all fettered,
Nothing in the world now really mattered,
In
his unconsciousness he cherished memories
of his long lost daughter.
As
tears trickled down his weather beaten face,
The old trader left this cruel
world without any trace.
6. Ice and Snow by Walter Smith
Quiet, a bleak winter’s night
A lone figure moving across the frozen
terrain
Moving like the fresh powder
Driven before the snow
His hair
long, flowing, grey
Grey like the clouds
Grey like his eyes
It
begins to snow
The flakes wrap themselves around him
Like children
hugging their father
With a wave of his hand the flurries depart
Destined to chill the village in their path
Binding ice grasping at
everything
Howling winds rattling windows
Chilling you to the bone
Chilling your soul
Stealing your hope
A storm has come
The lone figure slowly walks
The howling winds ripping through the town
Whipping around buildings
Shattering windows
Icicles broken by the
wind
Now scratch at glass, wood, and metal
Like some demon’s claws
Seeking a victim
Snow turns to hail
Now over the roar of the wind
A
percussion akin to a drum roll
Beats against houses, barns, and shops
Windows that had withstood the wind
Now broken like the peaceful sleep
Of the villagers
Shop signs ripped off their hinges
Devastation as far
as the eye can see
Impassively the figure looks back
At the broken and
battered town
As the barber’s pole falls and breaks
He waves his
children onward
At long last
A glimmer of light
Peaking over the horizon
Dawn reveals
a quiet and somber town
Its inhabitants still shaking
From the cold
From the fear
People stand dumbly in the street
Surveying the
nightmarish scene
The signs thrown through doors
Icicles stuck in
walls
Entire rooms filled with hail
With ice
With snow
In all
the shock and awe
Nobody noticed
The single pair of footprints
Nearly covered in snow
Walking a bee line through the city
Or the
whispering sighs of a breeze
Blowing through the few standing trees
7. At Eventime by D&HR Nicholls
Before the lamps are lit.
Beside the window, in owl-light dim I sit.
With
silver glint the speckled rain
Hits against the window pane.
Shelves of
books, a corner seat,
A wooden gate, an empty street.
Lamp posts in the
fading light,
Waiting for approaching night.
A sudden gleam of dying
day,
One pale and fleeting, golden ray,
Breaks from out the leaden
cloud
As if escaping from a shroud,
Flits across the falling rain,
And quickly fades away again.
Then night-time, silent as the tomb,
Invades the stillness of the room,
While sitting in my window seat
I
watch the day and darkness meet.
There is no joy where life meets death.
No beating heart or flowing
breath.
No touch of wind on sweating brow.
No scent of blossom on the
bough.
8. Eye of the Old Man by Ankita Sharma
Youth has its burdens and wonders
Its extremes and torchers
Seen in the
eyes of an old man
The treacherous castles of love
Touch lost clouds above
Waking a dreaming
sky
Seen by wisdom eyes,
The eyes of an old man
Centuries go by
Hearts go where birds fly
And birds fly and lleave
heart-aches behind
This is the story of youth –
And a love unkind
The way the light loves is a slow longing
Castles in the air, lovely –
but sure to bring despair
Empty caresses of light on a vast sky,
Will be
still more empty when youth will die
And wealth has always been in the winds
Then what is it that we fail to
touch
What, when we love so much?
This old man had once been young
He remembers now the song he sung
The
tired old eyes of an old man look back and wonder
When there are blue skies
above – then why do we blunder?
What is it that we have lost even when
the sun rises on its own,
And gives light to all known…?
And
amidst all this love bestows its longings on all mankind –
And young
hearts seem to fall and lose their mind
Does happiness always have to live in the seclusion of anonymity?
And under
the sky and its various joys, it opens its wings and showers pity
A slow
longing – the mystery of feeling stretched out vast in the form of the
sky
The sky and its slow tempers..
And mystery of feelings and dreams
–
Everything way more than it seems
These paintings seem to have
been done by a faithless hand
Beauty will be forever, but will it
understand….?
Hurrying creatures and flying birds
The sky explains the unexplainable
without words
Meanings lost and found
People drift around
The reward
of uneartly bliss,
Youth and its fiery kiss
Blessings that came and
went;
No one knows just what they meant
Cold remembrance of a beautiful night,
Keep this man’s heart alight
All this was just flowering pain;
He’ll never be young again
And
what stays on when youth dies
Is the wisdom in the sky – and this old
man’s eyes
9. A Flower Blooms in Winter by Cathy Irvin
One day underneath my Camilla tree, a flower looked out as to what to see, “Oh what is this that lies beneath me?
A blanket of snow, Oh No, I’ve come to bloom way to soon. I hope this is the end of winter and it melts by noon.
There’s no other flower in sight I’ll be alone day and night!”
This frightful discovery left the flower so sad when just then a child noticed the Camilla peeking out, she smiled at it and it made the flower glad.
“Now if only no one picks me I’ll hide under here and soon the sun will shine and spring will be near.”
I am sorry to see the disgusting #3 taint our wonderful competition. I request that from now on such filth would not be allowed.
Let’s draw the line.
I really like the word choices in #7 At Eventime.
Creative writing, D&HR ~
@AmaT, my fault. I was in a hurry while uploading the poems today, and that one slipped through. Obviously we’ll not allow such foul language to be used.
Thanks for catching that.
Thank you, Daniel.
wow….i am interested…is it too late for me to join?…though i am just a novice writer…only a teenager….
Thank you AmaT. It received only three votes though, but worth it if only one person found it worthwhile. It was created by thoughts of an English street scene in winter and the warmth of a cosy, firelit room.
I didn’t vote. Don.
Hi Daniel…
Let me tell you that the title of my poem is Eyes Of An Old Man,
not Eye of an old man
Don,
That is a good way to look at your work. It IS worthwhile. And, hey, it is perfectly OK to vote for yourself!
Well, I suppose that’s right. You always know which way politicians vote at an election, but what if you think somebody else’s work is better than your own? Wouldn’t that bug you for the rest of your life if you didn’t vote for them? I also wonder, when I see that obviously inferior efforts acquire the most votes, if some get family and friends to vote for them.