Fourths Poems | Examples

Premium Member While You Wait

It's just a row of laundromat chairs—
those molded plastic ones, 
screwed into a fake strip of tile.

The whole setup’s bolted to the lunar crust
under a plexiglass dome.

Every seat holds something left behind:
a single sock, a keychain flashlight,
a takeout menu folded into fourths.

One chair’s cracked down the center,
duct tape holding it together.

There’s no sign, but it’s called
Memento on the Moon.

Sometimes, Earthlight flickers
in the dome like a busted overhead bulb.

Premium Member Weekend Memory

Late 1940s England

the square
   was packed
& the high street full
meat&veg seemed plentiful

market barkers
  drew the queues
with jokes
         impromptu

shoppers filed
     neat& formal
in sainsburys greggs
  & home colonial

the bacon slicer
  shuttled back& forth
rashers scaled
 in halves&fourths

bread mealed smooth&strong
   butter patted shaped oblong
cheese cut with twangy wire
 toasted later on an open fire

ham sliced from the bone
 spuds bagged    weighed in stones
tea from open square tins
 packet-served with a welcome grin

'woollies' snackbar smells
  'elevenses'  hunger time to quell
one mug of ovaltine must'nt dally
so shortcut thru' market alley

where auctioneers tones rise&fall
 above the sheep&cattle stalls
  then off homewards at a trot
 last pennies spent in feaseys   sweetshop

on the train bridge 'spotted' numbers new
waited    whilst the 'cutler' raced thru'
 along pebble brook   time to climb a tree
    on this day  shopping was made coupon-free


Premium Member Composing Songs

Which key should I put this song in?
I sing in G Ionian/major comfortably,
Likewise the relative E Aeolian/minor scale.
Plus those guitar chords are easy as sin.

I could choose a scale that’s more exotic -
D Mixolydian has the same notes and chords.
Hungarian or Roumanian minor, Spanish Gypsy.
Or another scale derived from minor harmonic.

Keep it simple – let’s start with the G Major scale.
Should I do a basic 1-4-5 with major G/C/D chords?
Or a jazzy 2-5-1 with A minor/D/G ending on the tonic?
Let’s do a bluesy 1-4-5 with a turn-around at the tail!

Just major and minor triad chords are boring.
Major, minor, and dominant sevenths can be cool;
But I’m rather partial to suspended seconds and fourths.
My sliding E diminished flat 7th will keep the fans from snoring!

What can I do to add even more pizzazz and glitz?
Slowly build the dynamic and rhythmic complexity.
Give the crowd a tribal chorus they can sing to.
Add a spanking hot hook throughout that never quits!

Premium Member Is a Cut Up Apple a Pie-

An apple is sliced and divided and diced,
into fourths, eighths and halves laid side by side and baked is it a pie

5/23/21
Written words by James Edward Lee Sr © 2021

Premium Member Market Day

the square
   was packed
& the high street full
meat&veg seemed plentiful

market barkers
  drew the queues
with jokes
         impromptu

shoppers filed
     neat& formal
in sainsburys greggs
  & home colonial

the bacon slicer
  shuttled back& forth
rashers scaled
 in halves&fourths

bread mealed smooth&strong
   butter patted shaped oblong
cheese cut with twangy wire
 toasted later on an open fire

ham sliced from the bone
 spuds bagged    weighed in stones
tea from open square tins
 packet-served with a welcome grin

'woollies' snackbar smells
  'elevenses'  hunger time to quell
one mug of ovaltine must'nt dally
so shortcut thru' market alley

where auctioneers tones rise&fall
 above the sheep&cattle stalls
  then off homewards at a trot
 last pennies spent in feaseys   sweetshop

on the train bridge 'spotted' numbers new
waited    whilst the 'cutler' raced thru'
 along pebble brook   time to climb a tree
    on this day  shopping was made coupon-free


21 Grams of Soul

This is the weight of a soul imagine what 21 grams can do?
This is not a myth

Wikipedia
The 21 grams experiment refers to a scientific study published in 1907 by Duncan MacDougall, a physician from Haverhill, Massachusetts. MacDougall hypothesized that souls have physical weight, and attempted to measure the mass lost by a human when the soul departed the body. MacDougall attempted to measure the mass change of six patients at the moment of death. One of the six subjects lost three-fourths of an ounce (21.3 grams).

Explain to me how you cannot believe?
Pictures to arrive at a later date.

It's Morning Now

It's morning now . . .
     the sun has brought the day

The night has pushed away
. . .no longer your touches
     drape across my vestige

     flutters of fortitude
     only a memory
     in the shaft of old

My smile lingers . . .
     as the dew glistens
     the songbirds listen
     and I'm still swept away

Your nighttime Melody
      echos in fourths
      whispering
      sweet nothings-
      that mean something

To wander back in deep
      telling secrets we will keep
      curious fingers- 
      finding their way in the dark

Searching high and low
      tempting rivers as they flow

. . . and tomorrows
       we don't know

Nourishment

movement of each echo     
  pummels  ^  til outside     
    the confines of self     
    
slits in sacred hallows     
sustain aromatic nectar     
   holding true to life     
    
    ~ where ~     
    
sunsets drip her touch     
`a serene contentment     
lain on raised breaths     
    
vision's arisen ^ in fourths     
raining down an illuminate     
a speckle surrounding time     
       
gasping for precious air     
suspended   stunning   
emotional radiance 

~rests~

amidst red brushed 
rivers rushed 
eloquently floating  by

Hi You

I come to you hands open wide no fears of past just an invitation inside. Do you see me? Around the trees of space and time i giggle and laugh as i look into your eyes. Waiting for you to see inside. We hesitate in fears back and fourths but something holds a steady course. Waiting for the song of love to be there for you as strong as the tides that hold in me. To prove to your fears this time its true. I will wait dear. I have no doubts its you. I have only tears from a panting heart waiting so many years to join your heart. You can trust me. I know there is forests and fears to overcome but your not fighting alone in this world anymore and ive got the banner waving high. Your more then a north star in my sky. For what its worth I testify I know its you for who ive waited all my life but love is patient and with great care ill stay waiting in spirit by your side. For this fools love sake im open wide. You can turn away but ill be waiting at the end, I won't be giving up on my hearts true best friend.

Premium Member Aging - But Knocking Wood

Three-fourths of a century old is mom.
While more than half a century am I.
How quickly I have aged gives me a qualm,
but I think glad thoughts. I can't multiply!
Though right behind my mom I'm following
with white hairs now appearing and with dread
of that sad day I might be swallowing
my food with dentures stuck inside my head,
I'm very thankful I've still got good knees!
Mom's gave out; walking fast she does no more.
But luckily, Mom has no grave disease.
By scrubbing floors she made her poor knees sore.

Well, I don't "stoop" to drudgery. Knock wood!
I think my knees might possibly stay good.

Digital

An arrow
nocked by a god
and loosed
beam-straight . . .

Tick.
Tock.
The old clock
would cut it into
fifths,
fourths,
halves,
whole seconds even, and . . .
Tick.
Tock.
The old clock
told us we were part of it.

A clock marks time still,
but . . .
. . .		. . .
in silence now;
time’s become insidious
and sly
and moves on tiptoe:
close your eyes and . . .
. . .		. . .
it’s gone.

The South That Never Was

The South That Never Was
.
By Elton Camp   

A plantation, hundreds of slaves and a mansion so fine
Is the usual image of the Old South that comes to mind

But a situation like that picture was actually quite rare
With no slave holding for three-fourths of whites there

So for most whites, slavery didn’t help nor did it hurt
They were farmers and most of them were poor as dirt

But the horrible concept, most supported just the same
Since those worse off than them they could then name

They could dream of a life like a few planters enjoyed
Riches and privilege where slave labor was employed

A stereotyped version of the South some still believe
But about their actual heritage that does badly deceive

For if in a time machine they could manage to go back
They’d find economic slaves though they weren’t black

World of War Vietnam

My long time friend Bill enlisted in 1962
Back then he said, "It's the right thing to do!"
He served his country with vigor and pride 
Fought in the jungle and watched his friend die
 

A machine gun severed three fourths of Bill's leg
He cut off the remainder though never begged
as the enemy stood over him, machetes in hand
Bill's company blew Vietcong all over that land.
 

He was then sent home, wheelchair bound 
but Bill O Hara you just couldn't keep down
He opened a law office, put his "smarts" to the test    
And that damn machine gun stayed screwed to his desk 

 
His favorite passion was to set sail to sea
Forgetting his problems for there he was free    
40 years  passed since he  left Vietnam
and no matter the day, he still hears that bomb!

                                  ***

Contest: World of War : Vietnam
Sponsor: Miranda Lambert
Submitted by: Judy Konos

Premium Member Invocation, Part 1

There whirls a world about a star
Gathering motes of dust from Far-A-Far
Upon the shining silvered seas' bright skin
That cloaks the place three-fourths within.

Upon the multicolored shards of stone
Reflecting from her fragile face
Some billions of small beings wander,
Ask themselves if they alone
Exist within the boundless dark
The very question seeks to sunder
Restraints of heartless reason stark
That advocate their ending without trace.

She shines against obsidian deep,
Bestirs Infinity within its sleep;
Tried at times the patience of formless Elohim
Stirred wings that whisper in the golden wind.

So She calls attention, having no intent
To do so, down upon her gleaming self
An invocation insincerely sent to a God or Gods unknown
Who may arrive someday to collect the rent
To tally up the Pros and Cons
Gather up such seeds as sown
Through troubled course of her existence, then begone
To distant parts, to pull new worlds down off the shelf.

So she spins in silence 'round her star
As billions wonder where those angels are;
The incense rising everywhere
Their hope a jewel in the Celestial Share.

His Love For Me

A Lily is one of nature’s most special gifts
I’d pick them in ones, twos, thirds, fourths, and fifths
The exotic scent, arousing my nerves
Such a figure with the most desired curves

A Lily is mysterious
The colors drive me delirious
A mark of uncontrolled psychic power
No doubt this girl is the best flower

The Saskatchewan Lily burns my heart
Forever capturing my love, unable to tear it apart
Out in the wild it is strong and alive
Spending time with you, I grow, I thrive

Liberating my life
My love, my wife
In the cool midnight we walk
Your heart, I want to unlock

A forbidden love affair
Most willing to do any dare
It’s a given we’d be a swell pair
Your beauty and quality is so rare

Who wouldn’t want you to be their Lily?
To keep you warm, protect you from the pain that’s so chilly
Keep me coming, wanting more and more
When you’re not with me, it’s a dreadful sore

A Lily is what I love most
I will hold you, hold you close
For when the night comes I will run to you
I’ll be your one, tried and true

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