
My prose poem ‘Amber Puppy’ was first published in Quadrant magazine in September 2019.
I do enjoy writing prose poetry. Prose poetry is a cross between a poem and a prose piece, although, according to Wikipedia, prose poetry is poetry written in prose form instead of verse form, while preserving poetic qualities such as heightened imagery, parataxis, and emotional effects.
Have a read of my poem and tell me what you think:
Amber Puppy:
What can an amber puppy mean in a world of Siris and driverless cars?
I was older, one of the Baby Boomers. Life was a series of warnings: Don’t fall over rugs or loose cords, don’t overeat, don’t go to bed before nine, drink coffee after midday, watch too much Netflix. When the new puppy arrived one birthday, rich brown as a raisin, I heard it shadowing me: Don’t trip on the dog’s lead.
There was much to be anxious about. One day, walking through the park – the rain had eased, spring waterfalls spilled into the creek, soon we would cool off under the trees – I lost my grip on the lead. Into the bushes he fled, disappearing into green. Since when did parks swallow small dogs? I drove home in a frantic car. My best friend. I’d loved him and he’d loved me.
The days staggered past like drunks. I prayed silently, absorbed sunshine, climbed steps, wrote Letters to the Editor. Don’t panic, don’t shallow breathe, don’t think the worst – you could hear it all around. A reclining Buddha could show you how to deepen the breath. A bird call at first light could tell you when to get up. A storm could remember to fill the dams and the water tanks – I was meandering between the trees when I saw him scampering through the creek. Splashing around then shaking himself dry. A muddy escapee. A barking survivor.
Where had he been these three long days? I could wash him, wrap him in a towel, take him home. Unexpected good news could still happen. Dogs off-the-leash need to stay close to their mistresses. Trees shed their leaves in winter and dogs run away, but find their way back. Seventy-two hours later, what can an amber puppy tell you in a world of Botox and identity theft?
See the difference between holding on and losing your grip.
Copyright © 2019 Libby Sommer
Libby, I greatly enjoy your ‘ Prose/ poetic ‘ post – Amber Puppy. The title itself is poetic.
Your imagery is great and strengthens the story, a wonderful story at that.
I can see the puppy, I can feel all the confusing warnings.
A wonderful post, Libby.
miriam
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oh, thank you so much, Miriam. much appreciated. so glad you enjoyed the prose poem 🙂 take care. Libby
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Oh, my heart sank when the puppy disappeared. I worried and was empty along with the narrator. Good prose poem story!
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so glad you like the poem, Priscilla. many thanks for your kind words 🙂
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I have always avoided writing prose poetry as I have an inbuilt aversion to writing poetry that does not rhyme, apart from haiku that is! I have no logical reasoning but my head refuses, at present, to budge from that mindset. A work in progress!
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No need to budge, Peter. Keep up your good work. Haiku especially.
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Thank you!
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