This was a poem of actual events written in response to a prompt about unpacking. |
UNPACKING I entered the house with my nostrils flaring, Acrid, billowing black smoke tearing my eyes. Bass music rattled my ears, thumping, blaring; A shrieking smoke detector pierced with its cries. "Hello?", I croaked as I stumbled to a wall, And fumbled along it, coughing and gasping. "Is anyone home?", but no reply at all Just the loud beat and the shrill siren rasping. At the new electric stove in the kitchen On an element,('burner'),glowing red hot Was a burnt, now mute kettle apparition Both metals as one welded tight to the spot. I turned off the stove, pushed open a window, And flapped at the 'screamer' to silence its wail. As I chased away smoke my eyes came to know A waiting teapot and cup, a clue tell-tale. It was a favourite mug,(of a daughter), Thought to be away at university. Hadn't she heard or smelled? This was odd for her. How had she missed this too close catastrophe? I followed the drum beat straight to her bedroom; Sure enough there was Danielle oblivious. Singing, dancing, unpacking; no sense of doom. Only feet from the alarm, the stove, the fuss. Unpacking was so important she forgot That a kettle can't boil indefinitely. Danielle was the first to burn water, but not Thank God, able to maim herself making tea. Line count:28 NOTE: Danielle is pronounced "Dan-yell", so it has 2 syllables. |