Day 7: National Poetry Month
It was that kind of day, yesterday. Donโt get me wrong โ my actual experience of the day was terrific! Went to lunch with my husband, did a little shopping (mostly for treats), planned vacations โ wonderful and ordinary. All set against the backdrop of collective global stress and anxiety-inducing political strife. Most of it absolutely unnecessary and ridiculous.
Stressful and uninspiring on so many levels, and yesterdayโs poetry prompts were no exception, really. Jumped the gun on โGโ, screwed up the order of the alphabet, and on the brink of apocalyptic nonsense, the phrases โWeโre all in Hell,โ and โHell, Hell, Hellโ were the best I could do for the โclapping gamesโ prompt. I wrote nothing, knowing that you, Dear Reader, deserve better โ slighty better, anyway โ than anything I could muster, yesterday.
Todayโs post combines โclapping games,โ in flash fiction and bad poetry, and the Featured image is an illustration based on this post plus the prompts โdawn and/or duskโ and โcrumpled.โ Thankfully, WWIII hasnโt started yet, so moving on, nowโฆ to Day 8.
Weโre All in Hell
The children sat on the riverbank, playing clapping games while Miss Dread laid out their lunch.
"We're all in Hell, Hell, Hell - ย ย ย ย ย waiting on the bell, bell, bell. We were bored to death, death, death - ย ย ย ย ย killed by Fred's bad breath, breath, breath! It smells just like egg tarts - ย ย ย ย ย but that's just Fred's old farts!"
โI did not fart!โ yelled Fred, red-faced with indignation.
โEnough, children! Come eat,โ called Miss Dread, raising one eyebrow at the little miscreants.
Styx was burning like the Cuyahoga in 1969, but no one seemed to mind. Dispirited souls, unmoored from flesh yet unaware that they were free of its constraints,ย wandered up and down the riverbank. Jenny shivered as one passed right through her without pause.
Jenny didnโt like it here. It really did smell like Fredโs farts. She wanted to go back to the classroom. โMiss Dread?โ
โYes, Jenny?โ
โWhy donโt they see us here?โ Jenny wasnโt used to being ignored so thoroughly.
Kevin picked up a cooling ember and threw it at one of the lost souls. He got no reaction, either. This was the weirdest field trip ever.
โThey are lost, Jenny,โ said Miss Dread, reaching out lightning-fast to grasp Kevin by the wrist and instill real dread with a small shake of her head. โThey cannot return to the life they remember, but they donโt know yet whether to cross the river or remain here, on this side.โ
โBut canโt they see us?โ She was used to grown-ups staring right through her, but none had ever walked through her without knocking her down. An old lady had done that, once, during a big sale at the mall. But she had noticed Jenny, then, and turned to say, โImpertinent child!โ as if Jenny had bowled her over. For some reason, her mother had insisted Jenny apologize to the old bat.
โWe are only visiting. Ask Mr. Mott to explain plane geometry to you, later. They are on a different plane.โ Jenny wasnโt so sure. She had felt the chill as one of the lost souls passed through her. She didnโt know much about plane geometry, but she was fairly certain it didnโt work that way.
Kevinโs brow furrowed as he tried to work it out. He had been on planes before. Most recently, on a family trip to visit his grandparents in Idaho. โWeirdest plane ever,โ he muttered.
Jenny picked up a chunk of fruit from her plate and examined it in the light of the burning river. โWhat is this, Miss Dread?โ
โPomegranate. Give it a try, Jenny.โ
Jenny popped one of the seeds into her mouth and chewed, making a face. โEww,โ she said, spitting it out. โThatโs nastโโ The darkness that had surrounded the children closed around them like an oily mist, cutting off the rest of Jennyโs sentence, along with her breath.
Swimming out of the thick, inky blackness, Jenny gasped and opened her eyes to a blinding light. She shivered until someone wrapped her in a warm blanket. โGot her back,โ said a woman, smiling and shining a tiny flashlight in each of her eyes. โHi, Jenny. You had us worried for a bit.โ
Other National Poetry Month Posts
- National Poetry Month, Texas Style!
- Apricots: a Tanka Encompassing Three Prompts
- Bee Sting: Day 2 of National Poetry Month
- Cacophony and CBD: Day 3 in Nonsense Verse and Found Poetry
- Technically, a Writer: Day 3 of National Poetry Month
- Dive: Day 4 of National Poetry Month
- Storm Front: Day 4 of National Poetry Month
- Energized: Day 5 of National Poetry Month
- Grump: Day 5 ยฝ of National Poetry Month
- Future Frittered Away: Day 6 of National Poetry Month
- Hell, Hell, Hell: Day 7 (More or Less) of National Poetry Month
- Insomnia: Day 8 of National Poetry Month
- Juxtaposition: Day 9 of National Poetry Month
- Knife Edge: Day 10 of National Poetry Month
- Lost a Day: Day 11 of National Poetry Month
- Many Definitions: Day 12 of National Poetry Month
- New Form โ Quadrille Quaiku: Day 13 of National Poetry Month
- Ode to Imagination: Day 14 of National Poetry Month
- Pixellated People: Day 15 of National Poetry Month

Wow, way to combine poetry, a flash, and a visual prompt. Very well done.
Thank you! That is definitely part of the fun.