I hung my tea towel
on the washing line
blue and white check
(with a small label)
and one peg.
A knock at the door
a man; flushed, panting
said he'd seen my towel
flapping from afar
and wanted to give me
twenty five million
pounds!
He said it was;
"The best example of a
contemporary, abstract, conceptual
post modern, minimalist, piece of work"
He'd seen in a long time
He said that;
"It typified woman's struggle
through the ages"
and it made him cry.
I was stunned, of course
and said;
"Don't you realise if you
take it out of it's environment
it ceases to have any meaning!?"
shaking my head
I closed the door.
© Justine Tennant 2004
Zeitgeist
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- Posts: 19
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 6:22 pm
I too liked the poem very much. I disagree on the double spacing though. I think it helps the poem because it takes a while for the relevance of the title and the political theme to come into play and the double spacing seems to help in that buid-up.
What of a compromise? There's no saying some stanzas can't be double-spaced while others not. Just another thought. This is really trivial stuff the poem's content and choice of words is pretty solid.