For many, the gifts are the be-all and end-all:
the big screen, the tablet, the Barbie and Ken doll.
For me, gifts I get are like ice in the sun.
I cannot recall them. No, not even one.
How did I find a true way to remember
the import of each twenty-fifth of December?
The quest to acquire is an urge one can curb.
The lesson I learned was: make Christmas a verb.
Knock on the door of your neighbors who deal
with aging and loneliness. Bring them a meal.
If you have means and you live in fine fettle,
drop off some greens in that little red kettle.
Visit our vets who are hurt and express
your thanks for their service as they convalesce.
Deliver to others a luminous glow.
The gifts you will cherish are those you bestow.
Yippee, yes and verbs are so important, and certainly the backbone of poetry too! Happy Christmas Mark – and hope to see you again in 2020! Love the thoughts in this poem.
Mark – Nigh faultless tetrameter feet in this little verse, and I really liked the slightly facetious feminine rhymes end-all and Ken doll. They worked for me. Very well done!
Peter, I’m glad you liked the poem. Thanks! Mark
James, Merry Christmas to you as well, and I also hope to see you in 2020! Mark
So true.
Indeed!
“Ken doll” and “end-all” are a brilliant rhyme pair.
Merry Christmas!
Thank you, Professor Salemi. And a Merry Christmas to you! Mark
I like this. I like that it is a fun (not funny), non-preachy way of saying ’tis more blessed to give than to receive. And I love your rhyming end-all with Ken doll.
Anna, I’m glad you think I struck the right chord here. Thank you for commenting! Mark
Nice touch, Mark.
For me, the fact that it’s a well-written poem is secondary to the pure altruism it conveys; and one feels that it tells us a lot about the type of person you are.
In an ideal world, your poem would find its way onto the page of a national newspaper in the next few days . . to inform or remind as many people as possible.
p.s. I must assume that ‘all’ and ‘doll’ are pronounced similarly on your side of the pond.
Monty — similarly, yes. Not exactly, but close enough, especially as part of a compound (hyphenated) word.
C.B., For me, “all” and “doll” are an exact rhyme, but that may be because I am from the Pacific Northwest. Merry Christmas! Mark
Monty, Thank you for your kind words! Sending the poem to a newspaper is a great idea. I’ll try that next year and we’ll see what happens. Mark