i use words like beads to tell
the stories that haunt me
they are strung on shadows of what
i know is
poetry and the gist of it
while you
sit and plan
each word and line to
an accurate death that’s what you do
killing your words with
the sharpness of your
newspaper prose while I am the one
who lets words run wild
like birds or butterflies and
lets them be as precious
as life
Kim M. Russell, 9th June 2026

It’s Tuesday and Melissa is our Poetics host at the dVerse Poets Pub, where we are writing unpunctuated poems.
Melissa asks: ‘How often do we stop to think about the system of symbols we use in written language to denote where sentences end, separate clauses, change inflection, and so on?. I am speaking of: punctuation.’
She reminds us that poets ‘have long been creating form, meaning, and rhythm without using any punctuation at all’ and gives us examples by W. S. Merwin, Gertrude Stein and, of course, e. e. cummings.
For today’s prompt, we are having fun sans punctuation. We may capitalize lines, write in all lowercase, rhyme (or not), use enjambment or unique spacing, whatever other tools we use are completely up to us – only our poems must not be punctuated.
I have taken the final lines from the Mary Oliver poem ‘The Summer Day’ to create a golden shovel:
“Tell me, what is it you plan to do
With your one wild and precious life?”
the freedom of the poem’s structure exemplifies the message in such wonderful wordsmithing:
“killing your words with
the sharpness of your
newspaper prose ”
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Thank you, Laura.
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“words as precious as life”, luv that
much love
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