![]() UntitledA 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 ClarkReviews
|
Stats
50 Views
1 Review Added on August 19, 2017 Last Updated on August 19, 2017 Author![]() Wilyem ClarkWashington, DCAboutI'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
|