Contemplations on Carnivals |
Theme: Carnival/Circus Words to use: kaleidoscope, wildflower, cotton candy, turban, hawk, elephant Words NOT to use:, rides, animals, peanuts, trapeze, watch or show. You must work in the name of your all-time favorite book into the poem. Minimum: 24 lines. Any style of poetry. 'Wildflower Surprize' Thieves, they stole in during midnight hours to take the fallow field across the street from home where, the day before, Iād captured photos of wildflowers dancing in spritely breezes and turned it into a maze of cotton candy delights. Camera in hand, I meander, shutter-viewing their world: kaleidoscope of images out of context, still. Sound deleted: No jangle of venders' voices hawking their wares, screams of joy (or terror) emanating from rides put up in dark of night. Frozen freeze-frame of spinning lights flashing in time to carnival cacophony, blinding both eye and shutter. Silenced carousel music clashing with insidious invitation to come in, come in. Come in ā¦ and see the turbaned man from Nowhereitztan swallow flaming swords longer than he is tall or the hideous, malformed man who laughs all the time. Camera clarity catches scars; no make-up created the over-sized grin mimicked by a child wrapped in six feet of fluorescent pink boa constrictor. Days later, mind adds nuance to viewed glimpses, shades and shadows focus and you, with empty pockets, win the prize. In the moment, however, unrelenting sun beats down unmercifully, on field grass beaten into dust by flip-flopped feet. Lemonade, elephant ears, hot-dogged confectionery sugar high bottoms out as dusk settles heavily, condensing exhilaration into exhaustion. Ride noises echo; disjointed, contorted mirror images have escaped the fun-house giving the crowd a freak show facade. A headache blossoms, expands; popped balloon scatters thoughts. I wake to a carnival of rose-colored clouds over a deserted field. Camera in hand, I capture the one pink wildflower that survives. Book: Man Who Laughs by Victor Hugo |