Poet
Laureate of the Laundromat
by Rie
Sheridan Rose
Poetry
full of iridescent imagery
awes my
mind.
Words that
sing an unknowable cadence
but speak
volumes.
Intricate
tapestries woven of words
creating
miraculous visions...
But they
are not my poems.
My poems
speak fairy tales,
or slyly
offer sarcasm to
prick a
pompous bubble.
My poems
offer philosophy,
but
cracker barrel, not heavenly.
My poems
weep remembered tears,
or share
forgotten songs.
My poems
tell of laundromats,
not
Luxembourg.
The
pictures they paint
aren't by
the numbers,
but they
aren't Degas either.
More
Norman Rockwell than
Andy
Warhol...
I leave
surrealism to
those that
speak in riddles.
I am a
meat and potatoes girl,
uneasy in
the banquet hall.
But my
poetry is my own,
and to me,
it shines like diamonds.
I am poet
laureate of the laundromat.
* * * * *
"Poet Laureate of the Laundromat" first appeared in
Writer's Café and is part of Rie
Sheridan Rose's chapbook Take Out.
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