She is of water, a female element, a liminal creature,
cold-blooded, not quite fish, not quite human,
a little wave swimming free.
She was curious about the man who bathed in the waterfall,
where she loved to sing, a descant tinkling
above the splash and gush.
She fell in love with his earthiness, the way his feet were planted
firmly in soil, his alluring scent of bark and leaf,
so she sang her heart to him.
Their life is sweet, their children strong, but she misses the freedom
of eddy and current, the splash and gush—
and she was warned against their marriage.
Fearing she would not live to see her children grow,
she leaves an umbrella of hair on each pillow,
kisses them all and whispers adieu.
Kim M. Russell, 2nd December 2025

On this first Tuesday in December, Lisa is our host for Poetics at the dVerse Poets Pub, with a creature feature that begins with revisiting some Poetics prompts from 2023 and 2024.
Lisa visited Wikipedia, found a list of Legendary Creatures by Type, was impressed by how many there are, and has given us a comprehensive list of them.
She has also shared excerpts from poems about a few of the creatures by Alfred Lord Tennyson (‘The Kraken’) and Nicole Cooley (‘Undine’), as well as , ‘The Suparṇākhyāna’, a poem about the Divine Bird, Garuda, believed to be from the late Vedic Period.
Our challenge is to choose to: 1) write to any of the previous prompts; 2) go to the Wikipedia link and choose one of Legendary Creatures to write about; 3) create our own creatures using one (or more) of the Wiki categories; or 4) take a line from one of the excerpts and build a poem around it.
I chose a line from Nicole Cooley’s Poem, ‘Undine’ to build my poem around.
This is gorgeously rendered, Kim! I love the idea of a little wave swimming free. Especially this part; “She fell in love with his earthiness, the way his feet were planted firmly in soil.” Sigh 😍
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Thanks so much, Sanaa!
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You’re most welcome ❤️
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Kim, your narrative is enchanting! I love how she watched him and fell in love with his earthiness. She as a little wave is so precious ❤
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Thank you very much, Lisa!
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You are very welcome.
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I love this creature, like a sweetwater mermaid or selkie, she cannot stay and it’s so hard to leave.
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Thank you, Björn.
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This is truly a half water creature and a real ebb and flow with your words. There was a wonderful film made off the west coast of Ireland, I think called ‘Ondine’ as a fisherman trawls in a young woman from the sea, alive, not drowned.
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Thank you. I’ve heard about that film.
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A fun fantasy creature, Kim. Reminds me of the song… Torn between two lovers…!
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Thanks Dwight!
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Nice work my friend! Don’t get around much, but glad I stopped by.
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Thank you, Rob!
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i love the little wave swimming free. So poignant, the umbrellas of hair on the children’s pillows. Wonderful.
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Thank you, Sherry.
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So lovely, I can imagine the scene you paint it so well with your words. I very much enjoyed reading Little Wave.
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Thank you so much, Dianne!
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Lovely!
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Thank you, Kim!
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An interesting and intriguing little poem. 👏
I need to go back and check Undine.
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Thanks Shaun.
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This captures my heart Kim, a very moving story, and love the imagery.
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Thank you, Paul.
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So welcome Kim.
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