Bindweed

Bindweed

A Poem by Chris Shaw
"

( Can anyone remember Listen With Mother)

"
some might name them
convolvulus
which is a tad too posh
for my London liking

though i call them
morning glory because
of those pure white trumpets
heralding each new day 
raising their necks to face
the sun

delicate skirts tell a story
of how i as a child of six
was told bindweed was
not a real flower it was
no more than a common
weed

but little weed was a friend
was she not? who sat between
BIll and Ben who were 
protective garden pots

i was very fond of her
on children's half hour
she was the only flower
in my garden

backyard out of bounds
nothing grew there
in the shadow of arches
blackened by smog

whenever i see her climbing
i can not fail to smile
across the years and
country miles

she in all her innocence
reminds me of a much
younger me

© 2020 Chris Shaw


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Featured Review

I always called them Morning Glory as well, but this is more than that...this is watching a grandchild grow with each new day...each new morning...she gets a little older and reminds the speaker just a little bit more of what she was like in her youth.
j.

Posted 3 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Chris Shaw

3 Years Ago

Dear Jacob, I really like where you went with this poem. Thank you so much.

Chris



Reviews

Flobadob Chris, flobadob.
Some weeds be pretty and that child never forgets that. They find beauty in things beginning with just... Just a weed, just waste of money etc. Nothing can change that beauty to a child. It's just another grown up label we don't need or want and didn't flippin' ask for.
Trust me, I'm Scottish. We have a weed as our national flower 😀

Posted 3 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Chris Shaw

3 Years Ago

Of course, you have the thistle as your national flower:) You called it a weed, I didn't.And you rem.. read more
Very thought-provoking. Makes me wonder about the (indiscriminate) use of the word "weed" as designating which are wanted & which are not. This, tied together with the implication that kids grow like weeds & also are often irrepressible like weeds, this is an amazingly fresh & unexpected comparison! With no offspring myself & looking in dispassionately as an "outsider" . . . I notice that many times bloodline appeal is wrapped up in one's own reluctance to let go of one's own youthful weedlike ways. I believe that, whether one has g-kids to watch grow or not, at some point we have to recapture those weeds within us & celebrate life as youthfully and as long as we can! (((HUGS))) Fondly, Margie

Posted 3 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Chris Shaw

3 Years Ago

Dear Margie, thank you for sharing your thoughts. I really enjoyed where you went with this poem. I .. read more
I always called them Morning Glory as well, but this is more than that...this is watching a grandchild grow with each new day...each new morning...she gets a little older and reminds the speaker just a little bit more of what she was like in her youth.
j.

Posted 3 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Chris Shaw

3 Years Ago

Dear Jacob, I really like where you went with this poem. Thank you so much.

Chris

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14 Reviews
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Added on July 5, 2020
Last Updated on July 5, 2020

Author

Chris Shaw
Chris Shaw

Berkshire, United Kingdom



About
Albert, my paternal grandfather introduced me to Tennyson when I was nine. I have loved poetry ever since but did not attempt writing a single piece until I was 40. It's never too late to try somethin.. more..

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