Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Sparks jettisoning into the crisp blackness, A vivid orange against the backdrop of ebony silence, Fairies of fire, winging their way home On an unexpected breeze. The bonfire a crackle, at once dangerous and comforting, A furnace ablaze with light, livid and burning with raw energy, Luring its annual admirers ever closer, As moths to a flame. The people, hatted and be-scarved, huddle, cluster, Sparklers whirling before them, glitzy with extravagance, Their wispy signatures hanging in the air, short-lived And fading, fading into nothing. And only now the fantasia of fireworks commences, The artist experimenting with line, with colour, his audience captive, And then at once, a dazzling fountain of jewelled light: ruby, jade, opal, sapphire, A painting of shimmering castles in the sky. And a middle-aged man with his son, glove to mitten; in his arms, a daughter, Her bright gaze betraying the hands over her ears, A snapshot of dizzy delight, breathless and enchanting, A simple picture of rare beauty. Later, with the remnants and debris of the evening lying discarded, Dying, the brave bonfire, now petered out, sizzles and smoulders, A scarlet and amber glow lingering on, Still warm with the memories of youth. Copyright Vicki Watson 2012
0
Oct 19, 2013
Oct 19, 2013 at 6:03 PM UTC
Bonfire Night
Sparks jettisoning into the crisp blackness, A vivid orange against the backdrop of ebony silence, Fairies of fire, winging their way home On an unexpected breeze. The bonfire a crackle, at once dangerous and comforting, A furnace ablaze with light, livid and burning with raw energy, Luring its annual admirers ever closer, As moths to a flame. The people, hatted and be-scarved, huddle, cluster, Sparklers whirling before them, glitzy with extravagance, Their wispy signatures hanging in the air, short-lived And fading, fading into nothing. And only now the fantasia of fireworks commences, The artist experimenting with line, with colour, his audience captive, And then at once, a dazzling fountain of jewelled light: ruby, jade, opal, sapphire, A painting of shimmering castles in the sky. And a middle-aged man with his son, glove to mitten; in his arms, a daughter, Her bright gaze betraying the hands over her ears, A snapshot of dizzy delight, breathless and enchanting, A simple picture of rare beauty. Later, with the remnants and debris of the evening lying discarded, Dying, the brave bonfire, now petered out, sizzles and smoulders, A scarlet and amber glow lingering on, Still warm with the memories of youth. Copyright Vicki Watson 2012
vicki-watson
Written by
Oct 19, 2013
Oct 19, 2013 at 6:03 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem