--Larissa Gula, Grade 12
I once picked up a violinWith a flimsy, cracking bow,And I softly coaxed a tune, untilI recognized the whistle being thrown out.
It sounded like my old machine companionsWith creaking pistons, and gears,And proud smokestacks marking the trail takenUntil the message was lost in the clouds.
It sounded like the nightWhen I rode along to the next stationWatching fields of barleyAnd snail-ridden marshesFlash by.
And the midnight train, with no destination,Carried me on, on, onAnd away from the demandsAnd requirements.My only companion was peace.
And we bumped along, the motionsSoothing cracked fingers, and beyond themInto a weary nack, nudging,Opening constricted capillaries--
Until the whistle suddenly screamedAnd pierced the quartet circleAnd my eyes snapped openWith the dream echoing,
Echoing...
Leaving me Nowhere appreciated.
This is the fifth runner-up in READ magazine's 2008 Ann Arlys Bowler Poetry Contest. Check back every day through May 1 to see 14 fabulous student poems. Did you enter? One of them could be yours!
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