Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Be-be-be-because, he starts, stutters breaking words apart, intoning what he’d overheard; it’s painful listening, like darts prying loose repeated words. Naught’s amiss, we say, the birds they laugh at us, ignored lampoons and bullies’ taunts, how absurd. He sits and watches his cartoon- two mice who call a cat buffoon I hate mieces to pieces! shouts Jinx the cat; it ends too soon. Our son despises school, flat out. We believe him, there’s no doubt, But he’s a well-adjusted sprout But he’s a well-adjusted sprout.
0
Mar 27, 2015
Mar 27, 2015 at 3:45 PM UTC
Sitting by TV on a Snowy Evening
Be-be-be-because, he starts, stutters breaking words apart, intoning what he’d overheard; it’s painful listening, like darts prying loose repeated words. Naught’s amiss, we say, the birds they laugh at us, ignored lampoons and bullies’ taunts, how absurd. He sits and watches his cartoon- two mice who call a cat buffoon I hate mieces to pieces! shouts Jinx the cat; it ends too soon. Our son despises school, flat out. We believe him, there’s no doubt, But he’s a well-adjusted sprout But he’s a well-adjusted sprout.
Utilizing the form in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening. Rhyme scheme: AABA BBCB CCDC DDDD, written in iambic tetrameter.
mike-jewett
Written by
Mar 27, 2015
Mar 27, 2015 at 3:45 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem