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	Posts: 751Threads: 409
 Joined: May 2014
 
	
	
		Let's Pretend it's April - Nov. 21
 Rules: Write a poem for LPiA on the topic or form described. Each poem should appear as a New Reply to this thread. The goal is to, at the end of the month, have written 30 poems for the month of November. (or one, or six, or fifteen) Prompts may be revisited at any time. All members are welcome.
 
 Topic : Write a poem inspired by a collectible.
 Form : Any
 Line requirements: 8 or more
 
 Feel free to reply with comments or kudos as you wish.
 
 Questions?
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 894Threads: 176
 Joined: Jan 2021
 
	
	
		To gather together
a museum of one's own
is to define oneself
for a little eternity
but also to bind oneself
to time and its theft
of all that’s left
of the too soon sacred,
the finally profane.
The Chevalier Quixote Jackson
a laryngologist for 75 years
collected from patients
items inhaled or swallowed:
nails, screws, buttons, 
dentures, toys, padlocks, 
rosaries, crucifixes, poker chips, 
squirrel vertebrae 
and a miniature trumpet.
2,374 objects in all.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 22Threads: 0
 Joined: Nov 2023
 
	
	
		Batman
 
 In the pages of time's forgotten tale,
 Rests an old Batman comic, weathered and frail.
 A relic of my youth, a treasure to behold,
 A gift from my father, a story yet untold.
 
 On a journey to Nova Scotia's distant shore,
 He found this comic and left it by my door.
 With each turn of the page, a memory unfurled,
 A reminder that heroes can exist in this world.
 
 For within the inked lines and vibrant hues,
 Lies a narrative of courage, of justice pursued.
 But as I gaze upon this relic of my past,
 I realize it's my father who was the hero, steadfast.
 
 He was just a man, with no cape and no cowl,
 Yet he possessed a strength that I’d like to have now.
 His love, his guidance, his unwavering support,
 He was the superhero, I never knew that I sought.
 
 So as I hold this comic, with reverence and pride,
 I'll remember the hero who stood by my side.
 In this dusty old book from a dusty old draw,
 I'll never forget what I loved him for.
 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,187Threads: 250
 Joined: Nov 2015
 
	
	
		Sparkies (Name-dropping)
 
 Don’t want to set
 the world on fire–
 merely own a Masonlite
 or barring that
 a Thorens double-claw
 (single-claw might do
 but never mind Vedette)
 and so on down-list:
 Dome-style Kaschie
 and a Negebauer
 (not the knight or cannon!)
 Working further down
 an Evans lift-arm
 and a Rama-spin
 in better condition...
 and a Regeliter with
 all its jewels in place.
 
 Old cigarette igniters,
 “petrol” lighters
 intersecting engineering
 and production metal-art
 with sparks struck on
 ferrocerium, cleaned, lubricated,
 fueled and working.
 That’s to collect!
 
 Smoke?  Never!
 
 Non-practicing atheist 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 952Threads: 225
 Joined: Aug 2016
 
	
	
		It started with the 64.Sturdy. Reliable,  a handful of solid games.
 Then I saw a trisystem
 Regular Nintendo, Sega, and super nes in 1
 Remember those games?
 my wife found I'd never played guitar hero
 So we got a Playstation 2
 Then I discovered Lego games with batman
 And had to have them all.
 Which meant getting a wii, a few new marios
 I was given an xbox 360
 By a skyrim enthusiast with several in a box
 And when they went on sale
 Got a switch for the Mario's and family time
 Of course steam on pc
 But it's not a console, I don't like the keyboard
 I forgot Gameboy and DS
 Cause I did have to catch all the pokemon
 Is that it? Phone games
 Probably take up 90% of all my game time
 That's it.  That's it...
 
Peanut butter honey banana sandwiches
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 751Threads: 409
 Joined: May 2014
 
	
	
		Numismatics 
 Looking back, it seems
 a strange hobby
 for twelve-year-old boys.
 
 It started with Mountie quarters,
 Indian head pennies
 and Buffalo nickels.
 
 In the 70's, there was still treasure
 in pocket change, still silver
 in naive exchanges with grocers.
 
 We'd present a dollar bill
 for a ten cent pack of gum
 just to see what loot we got back.
 
 Even when we came up empty
 we still broke even
 and the jackpots were many.
 
 Forty years later
 we still check our change,
 still chew gum
 and still pan for gold.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 489Threads: 182
 Joined: Jan 2013
 
	
	
		The old Nintendo games are gathering dust in my parents basement tv stand.
 
 Every few years around Christmas,
 my sisters and I blow on the cartridges
 and save princess Peach,
 throwing fire and flapping tail
 to lift the sand inside an hourglass.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 1,139Threads: 466
 Joined: Nov 2013
 
	
		
		
		11-25-2023, 12:14 AM 
(This post was last modified: 11-25-2023, 12:15 AM by RiverNotch.)
	
	 
		The English language is a gateway drugto learning other tongues, it borrows words
 as liberally as London "borrows" funds
 from the grim North, power from Wales, and food
 from starving Irish farmers. The "only" problem:
 Dante could make his Tuscan epic sing
 for more than a thousand lines of Terza rima,
 identical endings in French may be sustained
 for much more than four lines, but greedy English
 rhymes cheap when easy, overdone when hard.
 
		
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