1
An old man struggles along a mass of melting
tarmac, eerie shapes curling through the wall of heat.
The town is otherwise deserted, everyone
cowers behind shuttered windows, out of the heat.
Under an umbrella the old man mumbles “Rain”.
Behind their shutters, the whole town’s praying for rain.
2
By the roadside, every blade of grass has turned brown,
trees moult crispy leaves as if autumn’s come early,
but this is just the beginning of spring. The sun
is already high in the sky, midday’s early.
The old man’s clothes are drenched with sweat, despite the shade
of his umbrella. Where can anyone find shade?
3
The black umbrella bobs towards a dried-up lake,
where vegetation isn’t frazzled yet; a hint
of green lingers like the old man’s optimism.
Above the lake a cloud has formed – is it a hint?
A drop of rain bounces off the man’s umbrella.
He smiles with relief and folds up his umbrella.
Kim M. Russell, 13th April 2025
It’s Sunday, the thirteenth day of writing poems for NaPoWriMo, for which today’s daily resource is the online collection of the Museu de Arte de São Paulo and the optional prompt is inspired by Donald Justice’s poem, ‘There is a gold light in certain old paintings’, which plays with both art and music.
The poem uses an interesting form, probably invented by Justice, made up of six-line stanzas with lines of twelve syllables, which repeat end words instead of using rhyme: the second and fourth lines of each stanza repeat an end-word or syllable; the fifth and sixth lines also repeat their end-word or syllable.
Our challenge is to write a poem that uses Justice’s invented form.
I was inspired by a photograph from the online collection, which you can see here.
I think you embody the poem ever so excellently, Kim. You showed me! Wonderful. Thanks.
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I’, so pleased you saw it too, Selma!
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This is so beautiful Kim. I love how you wrote it.
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Thank you, Mich!
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I love how a whole world came into shape beyond the boundaries of the chosen photo. Very atmospheric poem with a sense of unease hanging over the first two stanzas, then gradually being lifted in the last one. Well done!
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Thank you for close reading, Romana!
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Bravo! You made these words seem so right and natural.
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Thanks Rosemary.
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I just love your poem, Kim!
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Merci beaucoup, Nolcha!
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“eerie shapes curling through the wall of heat”
This reminds me of extremely hot days in the middle of a city….cement sidewalks and neighborhood streets with no shade and there’s like a shimmer? a shape the heat waves take above the cement….looking across an alley behind the brick apartment buildings and public housing units, you see the heat rising….you’ve captured this well, Kim. And the prayer for rain…it’s ,like the relief the neighborhood kids have in the middle of a scorching hot summer day when a strong teenager muscle arms the fire hydrant and twists it open so water comes pouring and shooting out and the kids run and dance through it it joy. This is a town and a dried up lake…yet the same feeling. Just excellent description here and yes, a very intersting form!
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Wow, Lill, what a response to my poem! I’m so glad you like it.
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Gorgeous work on the form, Kim! 😍 The repetition of the end words adds more depth to the poem ❤️❤️
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Thanks so much, Sanaa! ❤️
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You’re most welcome 😘
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I have to say this made me think of global warming… the old man maybe remembering the days when spring could be spring…. yet even then there will be those days when we are blessed with the right amount of rain
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Good thought, Björn!
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I feel the dryness in my body. Gonna go get a drink of water!
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Sorry Colleen! Still or sparkling?
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Yumbrellagood.
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Cheers Ron!
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I really like this, Kim. The form works without being noticeable. The words just seem repeated, almost like someone would do in conversation. The man seems mysterious, like a character in a Ray Bradbury or Stephen King book–a little off kilter, something else is going to happen.
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Thank you, Merril. I think it could also be the beginnings of a short story.
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You’re welcome, Kim. Oh–I would read it!
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Kim, I’m glad he found the hints and they panned out. Love the way you flipped the script on the umbrella. He had it open when it wasn’t raining, and shut it when he felt raindrops. Sooo neat 🙂
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Thank you, Lisa. I’m delighted you spotted that. 😘
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You’re welcome, Kim.
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The photography you posted fits beautifully well with the poem itself. That photo is interesting and super cool.
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Thank you, Charlie.
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that umbrella folding was like a sigh
Nice one
much♡love
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Thank you, Gillena, and much love to you!
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This made me thirsty Kim! I’ve been in those climates and you capture the atmosphere perfectly!
JIM
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Cheers Jim!
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Perfect evocation of too hot days, Kim, I love the closing of the umbrella to greet the rain…
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Thank you, Andrew!
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Very Surreal, Kim. Well written!
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Thank you, Dwight!
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You are welcome! Hope your feel better soon!
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A very interesting format Kim. You painted the picture for us perfectly ☺️
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Thanks Christine!
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Kim,
Thanks for sharing this. This is a new form for me.
Your poem expresses active hope. In that oppressive heat, it can feel like a change in the weather will never come.
I always enjoy reading your poems.
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Thank you very much, Ali.
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I like to think that I have an ‘old man’s optimism’ these days.
I mentioned this on another recent prompt but I have only had an umbrella since moving to hotter climates, as protection against the sun. When I first moved to Australia from the UK I used to laugh at all the Asians and their umbrellas guarding against that beautiful tanning soon. Now I know better!
Great write, Kim 👏
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Thank you, Shaun. I didn’t like umbrellas when I was younger, I loved the feeling of rain on me, but now I have two!
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This ekphrastic poem does what all meaningful art does, it takes it further, helps us inhabit it, and holds space for us to be transformed by it. Thank you for this wonderful window into the picture, that could spawn its own stories at your deft hand.
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Thank you for your kind comments, Anna.
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Absolutely enjoyed hearing your reading of this marvelously engaging poem today at dVerse OLN, Kim! Optimism. We need more of it in this world.
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Thank you so much, Dora!
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I can relate to this poem. We pray for rain every year.
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Thank you, Robbie.
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You set up the mood well here. The first stanzas kept me in suspense. I was relieved and happy with with the resolution of this poem-story. 🙂
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Thank you, Imelda.
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Love it all but love the ending.
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Thank you!
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Kim, I am glad I heard you before I read this! A beautiful write and form and the closing is superb. This is exactly what we go through in humid summers waiting for monsoon rains.
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Thank you, Punam.
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