Hope

Hope

A Poem by E. R. Rawding
"

A poem about a boy and how he deals with everything life gives him

"

The kick; your knock on their door, hello.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The view; computers, gel, stomach, gender, joy.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The birth; the first birth; the only birth.

This can never, will never, happen again.

The word; mama, papa, kitty, whatever.

This can never, will never, happen again.

The first steps; steps into a new life; you are infinite, you are Icarus.

This can never, will never, happen again.

The first boo-boo; you are not Icarus, that doesn’t deter you.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

 

Hope is the air to your soul; it fills you, consumes you, and makes you whole.

 

The first day; the best Batman backpack ever, a sweet bus to ride on, and the crabby, child-hating teacher.

This can never, will never, happen again.

The letter; the teacher and your’s disagreement on the merits of food fights, your parents laughing at her hatred of flying cheese.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The valentine; the girl with the stocking cap, who cried, even after your impeccable explanation of why cooties hiding in valentines need to be ablaze.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The last day; no more being followed by stocking cap girl, no more arguments over whether or not cheese should fly; most importantly, no more kindergarten!

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The news; the baby on the way; the new friend.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

 

Hope is the air to your soul; it fills you, consumes you, and makes you whole.

 

Its kick; its hello; its annoying hello.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Its view; her view, “You are going to have a baby sister,” says the computer.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Her birth; just another birth, not the first, certainly not the last, they name her Emma.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Her words; her attempt to impress you, her attempt to connect with her ‘Big Bwo,’ her love of ‘Tohga Twux.”

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Her first steps; the little show-off; you tell her not to run in the road for her ball, it’s not worth it, she doesn’t listen; you yell at her to come back, she doesn’t listen.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Her first boo-boo; her last boo-boo, the only boo-boo; screeches, screaming, sirens, “Is she okay?!” “What happened?!” “Oh my god…”

            This can never, will never, shall never, happen again.

 

Hope is the air to your soul; it fills you, consumes you, and makes you whole.

 

The first day without Emma; crying, sleeping, crying, sleeping, crying, sleeping.

            This can never, will never, shall never, happen again.

The second day without Emma; crying, sleeping, crying, sleeping, crying, sleeping.

            This can never, will never, shall never, happen again.

The funeral; your first time seeing daddy cry, your first time seeing daddy and grandpa not fighting, your last time seeing Emma.

            This can never, will never, shall never, happen again.

The return to first grade; questions, endless questions, you start to cry, they call your parents and let you go home.

            This can never, will never, shall never, happen again.

 

Hope is the air to your soul; it fills you, consumes you, and makes you whole.

 

The girl; the way your heart skips a beat when you first see her, the way everything feels okay when she’s around, the way you feel when she tells you she feels the same.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The diploma; 13 years down, 12 to go. Three cheers for college.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

The wedding; you, your high school sweetheart, your closest friends, and a celebration of the pure bliss you two bring each other.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Its kick; its hello, its beautiful hello.

            This can never, will never, happen again.

Her birth; she’s perfect, the best thing that ever happened to you, you name her Emma, your mom cries from joy when she sees her granddaughter.

 

Hope is the air to your soul; it fills you, consumes you, and makes you whole.

 

© 2010 E. R. Rawding


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Featured Review

I think the message in this poem couldn't be delivered any better or clearer than this. It emphasises the inevitably and ephemeral preciousness of incident, displaying tenderness, tragedy, and happiness in snapshots of existence - all the while indicating their temporary and unretainable nature. A sense of longing in the slogan "this can never, will never, happen again" - but at the same time implying that subsequent events will always be new, and that hope springs eternal and helps to generate this future.
I think the way in which the poem uses this 'hook-line' is the 'sinker' for weighing its message within the reader's psyche. Each time the repeated lines appear they seem to gather strength and significance; emblazoned and interspersed across the story of a life and as a metaphor for life itself.
A very powerfully effective and inventive piece of work.

Posted 14 Years Ago


2 of 2 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

This such a touching piece, with great meaning too. The repetition really makes you feel the emotions and the story is pure heartbreaking, but it is happy too. Touching when the child names the baby after their lost sister....tragic, entertaining, repeating....most importantly beautiful. Well Done.

Posted 13 Years Ago


Both repetition and narration are brilliant. It was made to sound poetic without sacrificing the story inside. This poem has a nice combination of tragedy, hope and love. Your lines fit perfectly with each other.

Keep Writing. ^___^

Posted 13 Years Ago


This one I love and don't worry because this can never, will never, happen again.
Other things will happen but each moment owns its own.

A point made well in this is the determination to learn from each experience and to offer a sort of respect for each of the moments as they were defined.

Nice perspective. Great understandings. Keep em coming because you write well...

Thanx fer sharin',
Funk

Posted 14 Years Ago


Amazing. I especially like the set up, and how I can picture what I'm reading.

Posted 14 Years Ago


I think the message of the poem was wonderful. I really liked this a lot. I agree with the comment made by Devons. It was a really lovely poem. Thanks for sharing. :)

Posted 14 Years Ago


A remidner that the chopices of life are infinite, and every action we make changes somebody for the better of the worse. Another reminder that time is ephemoral. But you can gaze through my work to see where I use that speech. Good job.

Posted 14 Years Ago


I think the message in this poem couldn't be delivered any better or clearer than this. It emphasises the inevitably and ephemeral preciousness of incident, displaying tenderness, tragedy, and happiness in snapshots of existence - all the while indicating their temporary and unretainable nature. A sense of longing in the slogan "this can never, will never, happen again" - but at the same time implying that subsequent events will always be new, and that hope springs eternal and helps to generate this future.
I think the way in which the poem uses this 'hook-line' is the 'sinker' for weighing its message within the reader's psyche. Each time the repeated lines appear they seem to gather strength and significance; emblazoned and interspersed across the story of a life and as a metaphor for life itself.
A very powerfully effective and inventive piece of work.

Posted 14 Years Ago


2 of 2 people found this review constructive.

Wow, I thought this was superb!
I love the up's and down's it brought me through.
Everything about it was great. The formatting, the story, etc.

Wonderful poem. :]

Posted 14 Years Ago


it caught my eye as soon as i started i love the way u write

Posted 14 Years Ago



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Added on March 11, 2010
Last Updated on June 3, 2010

Author

E. R. Rawding
E. R. Rawding

NE



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blech. i hate these little blurbs. if you wanna get to know me, talk to me. or read my work, you'll get some pretty good insight from that :P and please, don't send me a read request unless you can.. more..

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