Tweetspeak Poetry

  • Home
  • FREE prompts
  • Earth Song
  • Every Day Poems—Subscribe! ✨
  • Teaching Tools
  • Books, Etc.
  • Patron Love

Image-ine: Child Poet

By Maureen Doallas 9 Comments

child_poet by Shelley Kommers Luna

She Grew Up to Be a Poet

More angel than Medusa,
      no temple serpents licking

clean her ears of dark words’
      fates, no ill- or fork-tongued

Cassandra she, the child hears
      her future sure: swirls of stuttered

combinations of letters unstrung,
      her own sweet-voiced Calliope

cajoling the spells of imagination’s
      epic rides through landscapes hued

in green, metered in dotted staccato riffs.
      Her paper tablet harnessed loose,

she plucks her language branch
      till bare, verses stacked on back

of butterflies, their wings ink-dipped,
      rendering impressions silent.



Illustration by Shelley Kommers Luna. Used with permission. Poem by Maureen Doallas, author of Neruda’s Memoirs: Poems.

___________

Buy a year of Every Day Poems, just $5.99— Read a poem a day, become a better poet. In May we’re exploring the theme Roses.

Every Day Poems Driftwood

  • Author
  • Recent Posts
Maureen Doallas
Maureen Doallas
Maureen is an editor at Artist Watch and Escape Into Life, as well as the author of Neruda's Memoirs: Poems.
Maureen Doallas
Latest posts by Maureen Doallas (see all)
  • Persecuted Poets: Hearing the Voices Beyond Our Borders - November 30, 2016
  • Writing with Matisse in Mind - October 26, 2016
  • Healing with Poetry: Interview with Fred Foote (Part 3) - September 10, 2015

Filed Under: Image-ine, poetry, visual poetry

Try Every Day Poems...

About Maureen Doallas

Maureen is an editor at Artist Watch and Escape Into Life, as well as the author of Neruda's Memoirs: Poems.

Comments

  1. suzanne schrader says

    May 11, 2012 at 11:37 am

    BEAUTIFUL DAY

    its a beautiful day today
    rain is pouring down
    sky is dark and gray

    joy and love abound
    rain cannot wash away
    happiness that is found

    whatever comes along
    if trouble lies ahead
    have a happy song
    to take the place of dread

    we have a life to live
    to do the best we can
    to love, to help, to give
    all part of an unseen plan written by suzanne schrader

    Reply
  2. Monica Sharman says

    May 11, 2012 at 12:04 pm

    Maureen’s work always amazes me. I especially like when she writes in pairs of lines.

    Reply
  3. davis nancy rosback says

    May 11, 2012 at 12:29 pm

    letters fly
    they flutter by
    glide like a bird on the wing
    catch and string them
    into words
    fill the mind
    with delicate things

    Reply
  4. Maureen Doallas says

    May 11, 2012 at 1:00 pm

    Monica, thank you. That one took me a looong time to write.

    Suzanne, thank you for contributing “Beautiful Day”; you make rhyming look easy.

    Nance, glad you were able to catch a few of those letters that “fly” and “flutter” and share the words here.

    Reply
  5. Tania Runyan says

    May 12, 2012 at 12:31 am

    Maureen. . .luscious. That is all I can say!

    Reply
  6. Bruce says

    May 12, 2012 at 1:36 pm

    Forgetting you is impossible but that’s what I must do
    It’s better that I wait to say “I’ve fallen in love with you”.

    I have one basic firm belief, to myself I must be true
    But I forgot that you must also, when I fell in love with you.

    I know that you’re in love with Jess, on that I’ll place no strain
    I only want your happiness so my feelings, in check, remain.

    I am moved when I am close to you, how could I not be?
    You’re a true friend and you’re beautiful, the perfect woman for me.

    I don’t know if I’ll say this, if we should ever part
    But if I do, just know that you, forever have my heart.

    Reply
  7. Anne Overstreet says

    May 14, 2012 at 8:47 pm

    Her paper tablet harnessed loose, / she plucks her language branch / till bare … Oh, I wish I’d written that!

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Verity | To Create… says:
    May 11, 2012 at 11:00 pm

    […] Author’s Note: Today’s poem was inspired from a prompt on Every Day Poems and Tweetspeak Poetry. The picture is by Shelley Kommer. Share this:TwitterFacebookLike this:LikeBe the first to like […]

    Reply
  2. Top Ten Poetic Picks | Tweat Speak Poetry says:
    May 28, 2012 at 5:12 am

    […] get your creative juices flowing check out Tweetspeak‘s photo-based poem prompt for this week. Add your own poem in the comments. Or on your Facebook page. Or on our Facebook […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Take How to Read a Poem

Get the Introduction, the Billy Collins poem, and Chapter 1

get the sample now

Welcome to Tweetspeak

New to Tweetspeak Poetry? Start here, in The Mischief Café. You're a regular? Check out our May Menu

Patron Love

❤️

Welcome a little patron love, when you help keep the world poetic.

The Graphic Novel

"Stunning, heartbreaking, and relevant illustrations"

Callie Feyen, teacher

read a summary of The Yellow Wallpaper

meet The Yellow Wallpaper characters

How to Write Poetry

Your Comments

  • lynn__ on Poet Laura: Gardens and Grandpa
  • Sandra Fox Murphy on Poet Laura: Gardens and Grandpa
  • Sandra Fox Murphy on Poet Laura: Gardens and Grandpa
  • Bethany R. on Poet Laura: Gardens and Grandpa

Featured In

We're happy to have been featured in...

The Huffington Post

The Paris Review

The New York Observer

Tumblr Book News

Stay in Touch With Us

Categories

Learn to Write Form Poems

How to Write an Acrostic

How to Write a Ballad

How to Write a Catalog Poem

How to Write a Ghazal

How to Write a Haiku

How to Write an Ode

How to Write a Pantoum

How to Write a Rondeau

How to Write a Sestina

How to Write a Sonnet

How to Write a Villanelle

5 FREE POETRY PROMPTS

Get 5 FREE inbox poetry prompts from the popular book How to Write a Poem

Shakespeare Resources

Poetry Classroom: Sonnet 18

Common Core Picture Poems: Sonnet 73

Sonnet 104 Annotated

Sonnet 116 Annotated

Character Analysis: Romeo and Juliet

Character Analysis: Was Hamlet Sane or Insane?

Why Does Hamlet Wait to Kill the King?

10 Fun Shakespeare Resources

About Shakespeare: Poet and Playwright

Top 10 Shakespeare Sonnets

See all 154 Shakespeare sonnets in our Shakespeare Library!

Explore Work From Black Poets

About Us

  • • A Blessing for Writers
  • • Our Story
  • • Meet Our Team
  • • Literary Citizenship
  • • Poet Laura
  • • Poetry for Life: The 5 Vital Approaches
  • • T. S. Poetry Press – All Books
  • • Contact Us

Write With Us

  • • 5 FREE Poetry Prompts-Inbox Delivery
  • • 30 Days to Richer Writing Workshop
  • • Poetry Prompts
  • • Submissions
  • • The Write to Poetry

Read With Us

  • • All Our Books
  • • Book Club
  • • Every Day Poems—Subscribe! ✨
  • • Literacy Extras
  • • Poems to Listen By: Audio Series
  • • Poet-a-Day
  • • Poets and Poems
  • • 50 States Projects
  • • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Poems Library
  • • Edgar Allan Poe Poems Arts & Experience Library
  • • William Blake Poems Arts & Experience Library
  • • William Shakespeare Sonnet Library

Celebrate With Us

  • • Poem on Your Pillow Day
  • • Poetic Earth Month
  • • Poet in a Cupcake Day
  • • Poetry at Work Day
  • • Random Acts of Poetry Day
  • • Take Your Poet to School Week
  • • Take Your Poet to Work Day

Gift Ideas

  • • Every Day Poems
  • • Our Shop
  • • Everybody Loves a Book!

Connect

  • • Donate
  • • Blog Buttons
  • • By Heart
  • • Shop for Tweetspeak Fun Stuff

Copyright © 2025 Tweetspeak Poetry · FAQ, Disclosure & Privacy Policy