“Please, use your words to set me free!” A Pink Fluffy Unicorn Contest Entry |
The Puffy Ink'd Unicorn It was another rainy day filled with gloom and dark dismay. In a stupor, my mind wandered unaware of time, now squandered. Before me lay a pure white page upon which I planned to engage in flights of poetic discourse; a scintillating tour de force. I sat there, staring. It stared back unblemished, not a sign of black or any mark to indicate what inspiration lay in wait. I could not stand it anymore. “You will not mock me!” thus I swore. Pen in hand, I scrawled some doodles which looked like a nest of noodles. I shrank before such blasphemy as I stared at my pen’s debris … but then, I saw one inscribed line. Was this a message wrought divine? Such a familiar shape it bore, perhaps a horse … or something more? Upon its head … was that a horn? It was a big, fat unicorn! Puffy in shape, like a balloon, a character from a cartoon, and yet I felt it spoke to me: “Please, use your words to set me free!” It was polite, I have to say so how could I turn it away? I grabbed my pen, prepared to write, and send this unicorn in flight! I closed my eyes. An image came and, though I thought that it was lame, the unicorn, in my mind’s eye, leapt from the page, began to fly! Like Dorothy in the Land of Oz I had to stop, to take a pause, as color bled into the scene just like I’d seen upon the screen. I saw pink clouds piled like whipped cream; a lemonade-filled sparkling stream; striped candy-canes grew from the ground as unicorns played all around. The houses, made of gingerbread, lined winding gum-drop roads which led under a rainbow, arching bright, in this strange land that had no night. My unicorn began to change, its shape and color rearrange, until it looked just like the rest. Of course, I thought it looked the best. And then I heard laughter begin as my creation joined right in as though it found its family. I shook my head. “Too much for me!” I opened up my bleary eyes; gone were the clouds that filled the skies with sugar coated imagery. I was back in reality. The page, I saw, was nothing more than random lines and, as before, there was no message there for me, no unicorn making its plea. I wadded up the paper mess feeling some sadness, I confess, and threw it in the rubbish bin. “I think it's time to try again." Somewhere in another plane, or in another writer’s brain, a puffy ink drawn unicorn is laughing as it is reborn. An entry for the Inaugural Round of "The Pink Fluffy Unicorn Contest" Prompt: Write the best poem possible about Pink Fluffy Unicorns Line limit: 100 Line Count: 72 Form: Structured (Quatrains} Written for my guy, Christopher Roy Denton |