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Untitled

A Poem by Wilyem Clark

With expectant expressions they twirl in place
And look up at us, the senior race;
Despite minders' coo-calls and reprimands,
They bang on the glass with their tiny hands.
"When will it open?" they plead and plead,
All ants in pants and juvenile greed;
They hopscotch and shuffle and jump like toads,
Undiverted by chaperones' sing-along odes.
No toy nor scolding adult can tame them--
They carry on blithely, and who can blame them?
Until the man with the keys appears . . .
Then they scoot inside, for storytime nears.

© 2017 Wilyem Clark


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I agree that each progressively younger generation is harder to teach manners and restraint. The image of children itching to get into a store is relatable.

At the same time, I think this intense focus is good. It's so easy for people to lose sight of something that they really, truly want as they get older.

We should have this same desire to obtain something as the children in your poem...albeit without the jumping about like toads.

Posted 7 Years Ago



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Added on August 19, 2017
Last Updated on August 19, 2017

Author

Wilyem Clark
Wilyem Clark

Washington, DC



About
I've been writing poems since my teens (now in my 60s) and prose since the 1990s. It's been hard finding decent forums online--the free websites too often suffer sudden deaths. My "published" works ar.. more..

Writing