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'Drop Everything' Poem Alan j Wright

 It is Friday and I am feeling frivolous. Word play on steroids for me.

 I am dropping in to drop this playful poem. 

I am writing as the mood of the morning suggests. Yesterday was a day of serious contemplation, but today is about having a little light amusement with words.

 Poetry allows us that freedom, that latitude- so I'm taking it, right here. right now. Drop what you're doing and read this...

 








Drop Everything

It drops down

Drops in

Drops by

I am in the drop zone

A water droplet

Followed by a slight drop of rain

Merely a drop in the ocean

A drop in the bucket

But then the penny drops

My jaw drops

Everything drops into place

I can hear a pin drop

Today is drop dead gorgeous

So, drop the dead donkey!

Don't drop off a cliff

Drop off a gift

Goody-goody gum drops.

Alan  j Wright


It is Poetry Friday and out host on this occasion is Karen Edmisten who is focusing on the poetry of Arthur Sze. She has welded words from a couple of Sze's poems with her own to create a poem that suggests a way to live a better life. 

Comments

  1. Alan, this is a mic drop! Bravo!

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  2. Ha! What Mona said! Yay for Friday frivolity. Thank you!

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  3. Parent reminder: Meet me at the drop off! Love the word play, Alan! Thanks for the big smiles!

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    1. Ah yes, Linda, the drop off. Still doing that with grand-daughter. Word play is always welcome, Thanks for your comments.

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  4. Great word play, Alan! Glad I dropped by!

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  5. So glad I dropped by and that I followed Ramona Quimby's and your advice to Drop Everything and Read! :D

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  6. How perfectly playful. This poem pairs well with Heidi's poem using the word becoming. I love it.

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    1. Shall check out Heidi's post, Linda. Thanks for your comments.

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  7. Fun word play! I didn't realize how many varied ways we use that word.

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    1. Thanks, Cathy. There are so many 'drop' idioms. It's amazing.

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  8. Friday frivollity achieved. Thank you for this.

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  9. Love this drop of light! Thank you, Alan.

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    1. Just seemed the right time to drop it in, Patricia.

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  10. It's always a good exercise, playing with idiom, with the possibilities built into a single word--and can lead some interesting places! Have you ever done one like this that was (speaking as the author of that be/come frivolity) a real poem, in the end? I don't think I have. I am charmed to know that Australians also say "Goody goody gumdrops," a phrase which I used often in my childhood!

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    1. Wordplay provides a wonderful dose of mental gymnastics, Heidi. Interesting, that you ponder the use of 'real' poetry. I take that to mean 'conventional' as we both, no doubt, see these poems we have written as extremely real. Like you, I have never ended up taking such a poem into that other realm. They have their own unique identity and don't need approval from the conventionals! -and for that I say, once more, goody goody gumdrops!

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  11. You didn't drop it with this poem, Alan! So fun. "Drop dead gorgeous" always sounds very New York to me. Maybe because it was a favorite expression of my mother-in-law, a Brooklynite to the core.

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    1. Thanks Susan. I also recall the term, drop dead gorgeous during my time in NYC. It was also used as the name of a woman's fashion outlet back here in Melbourne at one time. It has certainly entrenched itself into the vernacular.

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  12. Fun fun! Goody goody gumdrops for your word play...although I never loved gumdrops very much, so I'll say "goody goody salt water taffy" instead!

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    1. We need a variety of sweet offeriings to suit various tastes. Mary Lee. Glad you enjoyed the fun.

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  13. All those drops add up to a bucketful of fun!

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    1. Like your thinking, Jone. Thanks for this.

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  14. How delightful your “drop” poem is, especially on this dreary, cold day, thanks Alan!☺️

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    1. It's quite wet and dreary on my side of the world too, Michelle. Today, the temperature has taken a dramatic -drop! Thanks for your response to my wordplay manoeuvres.

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