2016 Found Object Poem Project: Day 25

It’s Day 25 of our month-long daily writing project.


This year’s theme is FOUND OBJECTS. For those of you who are new to the project, please read my introductory post. You’ll find more information and all of the Week 4 FOUND OBJECTS at this post.


How is everyone feeling now that there are only five days of found object prompts left (counting today)? I’m still trying to catch up on a few days I missed last week. This may be the first year that I don’t complete my own challenge!


Hawaii 088FOUND: KEYS


As usual, I haven’t revealed any details or background information about the Day 25 found object until now.


This photograph was taken on our 2009 trip to Hawaii. I “found” the keys while we toured a submarine museum at the Pearl Harbor Memorial site. If I had shared that fact, would your responses to the keys have changed?


I was interested in the fact that the keys are numbered up to 144. In addition to being the square of 12, 144 happens to be the 12th number in the Fibonacci sequence. That inspired me to write a Fib poem today. The title can be read as part of the poem.


144

By Laura Shovan


Keys

hang

on board,

each one tagged,

STATE ROOM, CREWS QUARTERS,

each numbered, labeled: PANTRY, TOOLS.

How many hands lost at sea long ago used these keys?


***


The keys reminded Donna Smith of a favorite literary character, Lewis Carroll’s Alice.


Donna says, “This poem is way longer than I’d had visions of… it just kept going and growing… a little like Alice…”


Key to Happiness


Alice to herself:

“Which do you pick, Alice

Which key will you choose?

If you pick the wrong one

You could stand to lose…”


“There’s really no wrong choice,”

She heard Cheshire Cat say,

“So pick any one;

Don’t think, don’t delay.”


Alice to herself:

“Be cautious, my dear,

Use careful detection;

One key could be lucky,

So take care in selection.”


“Please, go on,” said Cheshire,

“And make one your choice;

One key’s for a clock,

One’s for a Rolls Royce.”


Alice to herself:

“If you pick the wrong key

Don’t pout at your lot;

Perhaps it will still be

A pretty good spot.”


“Which one?” asked the Cat,

The big or the little?

The left or the right?

Or one in the middle?”


Alice to herself:

“One key may unlock

The best kind of thing,

Or maybe the worst

Is what it will bring.”


“There’s really no wrong choice,”

Cheshire Cat said once more,

“So pick any one, dear;

Just not 74.”


Alice to herself:

“Well, here goes nothing,

I’ll just take the dive

And say I want key number

One hundred five.”


“Oh, very good choice

You’ve done very well,

For this is the key

For something so swell!”


Alice to herself:

“Something that’s swell

Sounds pretty great!”

And with that CC handed her

Keys to some skates.


Then Alice went swiftly

Off down the street

Rejoicing that she’d

Picked a key that was sweet.


It wasn’t a Rolls Royce

Or other grand treasure

But a smallish-foot-sized

Bringer-of-pleasure!


©2016, Donna JT Smith, all rights reserved


***


A short poem from Jessica Bigi today. This one pairs nicely with Donna’s Alice theme.


Poem

By Jessica Bigi


Keys inside of keys

Unlocking doors

WISDOM


***


I see the repeating keys showing up in the repetition Heidi Mordhorst uses in her poem today.


The action of attraction


There are screws that hold us tight

there are hooks on which we hang

there are locks that shut us in

there are keys that shoot our bolts


whichever way the waves rise

whichever way the wind blows

whichever way the ship rolls

whichever way the floor jolts

we’re shot, we’re shut, we’re hooked, we’re screwed

our brassy hearts hang hard and cold

waiting for a touch, a hand

waiting for the warmth of skin


and when it comes we leap to it!

we buzz with loosing, waking need

to staterooms, quarters, lockers, deck —

and now the crossing can begin.


©Heidi Mordhorst 2016


***


Charles Waters is using the key not as a physical object, but as a metaphorical idea.


The Key

By Charles Waters


The key to unlocking

my heart is easy.

Be nice to others,

be nice to me.


***


I remember thinking that Carol Varsalona’s nest poem yesterday might have been written about today’s keys. Today, I’m thinking that Mary Lee Hahn’s keys poem has elements from  yesterday’s Phoebe nest.


The Key to Today’s Room


Listen for the first wren

who sings in the dark

at the end

of an endless

February.


©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016


Blogging alongside at: http://www.maryleehahn.com/2016/02/found-object-poem-project_25.html


***


Speaking of Carol Varsalona, she created a great key-shaped Wordle to go with today’s found object. Check it out here: http://beyondliteracylink.blogspot.com/2016/02/keys-to-learning.html.


Keys unlock doors to learning.

Teachers hold the key.

Students respond

in cultures

of trust and engagement

where passion

mixes with purpose

for

wonderment

to evolve.


©CVarsalona, 2016


***


It’s great to see Molly Hogan joining us again. Glad you’re back, Molly!


A Constellation of Keys

By Molly Hogan


Common key cards

have no romance,

slipping into a pocket

without a wrinkle,

unnoticeable,

silent and disposable.


Carved metal keys

have character

and reassuring heft.

They clink happily

in a pocket,

socializing with spare change,

or if you please,

they sit in hand,

guaranteeing imminent access

or denying the same.


Patiently waiting on hooks,

a constellation of keys

has purpose,

power and potential,

silently offering up

an array of possibilities.


***


I like the way that a different setting in Diane Mayr’s poem changes my ideas about the keys.


Key Rack at My-Big-Heart Hotel


You asked for the key

but, typically, you

neglected to provide

your room number.


You take for granted

I know where you’ve

decided to settle in.

Not so.


This is no tiny inn.

I have singles,

the standard rooms,

and a Royal Suite.


Where would I put you?

I’d say utility closet

between the elevator

and the ice machine.


© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved


***


The more responses I read today, the more I realize that keys have deep connotations for many of us. A key is a symbolic object. Here is Linda Baie’s poem.


More Than Door Openers


Success shortcuts

Heart pathways

Kingdom streets

Happiness highways

Castle trails

Failure dead ends

Victory alleys

Linda Baie ©All Rights Reserved


***


IMG_3911

DAY 26 FOUND OBJECT PROMPT (February 26 at Michael Ratcliffe’s Poetry)


Reminder: Tomorrow, Poetry Friday, we will be at Michael Ratcliffe’s new blog for Day 26.


Interested in what we’ve written so far? Here are links to this week’s poems:


Sunday, February 21

FOUND OBJECT: Antique Sewing Machine

Poems by: Diane Mayr, Linda Baie, Jone Rush MacCulloch, Jessica Bigi, Matt Forrest Esenwine, Donna Smith, Carol Varsalona, Charles Waters.


Note: You will find links to all of  the Week 1, 2, and 3 poems at this post.


Monday, February 22

FOUND OBJECT: Stick Insect

Poems by: Mary Lee Hahn, Donna Smith, Carol Varsalona, Jessica Bigi, Charles Watesr, Jone Rush MacCulloch, Linda Baie, Diane Mayr.


Tuesday, February 23 at BOOKSEED STUDIO

FOUND OBJECT: Library of Congress Cart

Poems by: Jan Godown Annino, Jessica Bigi, Donna Smith, Linda Baie, Laura Shovan, Carol Varsalona, Diane Mayr, Mary Lee Hahn, Charles Waters, Jone Rush MacCulloch, Heidi Mordhorst.


Wednesday, February 24

FOUND OBJECT: Phoebe Nest

Poems by: Jessica Bigi, Diane Mayr, Heidi Mordhorst, Mary Lee Hahn, Matt Forrest Esenwine, Linda Baie, Laura Shovan, Charles Waters, Donna Smith.



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Published on February 25, 2016 16:00
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