poetry du jour
— by David Plahm
MARCH 24, 2026 | DAVID PLAHM

The Third Drawer

The Third Drawer

SUMMARY

Date
03-24-26
Title
The Third Drawer / Do I Need to Know
Topic

A gothic-domestic narrative in which the speaker inherits his father's lab bench—top flipped to hide experimental scars, three drawers with three mismatched handles (broken original wood, cheap plated brass kitchen cabinet, spray-painted red utility)—and progresses through opening each drawer in turn, the first nearly impossible to grip, the second cutting his palm as it sticks half-open, the third finally exhaling an odor of sealed death and revealing what may be a hand with broken nails beckoning, the speaker backing away to the bourbon glass, asking whether he needs to know.

Summary

The opening framing—”No choice, this bench is now mine”—delivers the inheritance condition. The speaker did not choose the bench; the bench arrived to him as the inheritor of his father’s. The “no choice” is the line cluster’s quiet small acknowledgment that the inheritance is not voluntary—the speaker would not have selected this object, but the object has selected him through the death of its previous owner.

“A lab bench from my Father / top flipped to hide the experimental scars / with three drawers, difficult to open / holding experiences, / grainy pictures, / secrets” delivers the object’s description and one of the catalog’s most precise small biographical anchors in months. The bench was a lab bench—the father was a scientist or technician, the work surface was used for experiments, the experiments left scars on the top. The flip is the line cluster’s small inherited concealment: the father (or the speaker, the chronology is left open) flipped the top to hide what the work had marked the surface with. The drawers contain experiences, grainy pictures, secrets—the inheritance’s actual content, named in three categories that escalate from neutral (experiences) through visual-evidence (grainy pictures) to the loaded category (secrets).

“Briefly glimpsed, / I stuff those / secrets back / into their drawers / to preserve them” delivers the speaker’s small confessional response. He has seen something; he has chosen not to look further; the brief glimpse has been followed by the deliberate return of the materials to their containment. The verb “preserve” is the line cluster’s primary device. The secrets are not being hidden out of shame or denial; they are being preserved, which is the verb the line cluster uses for things one wishes to keep available without engaging with them now.

The three-handle inventory is the poem’s primary structural device: “One drawer handle is original, broken wood / the second is a cheap plated brass kitchen cabinet handle / the third is a spray-painted red utility handle / barely wide enough for my hand.” Each handle is described with three specific small details—material, original or replacement, condition. The original broken wood; the cheap plated brass; the spray-painted red utility. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of forensic small-object inventory in months. The handles are not just functionally different; they are aesthetically incompatible, each one belonging to a different category of object (furniture, kitchen cabinet, utility tool), and the incompatibility is the line cluster’s small evidence of repeated improvisation over time. Someone has been replacing the handles as they broke, and the replacements have been whatever was on hand.

“Each one / has a history, / a story in the pull” delivers the line cluster’s structural promise. Each handle’s pulling will reveal a different story, and the poem will proceed by working through the three handles in sequence. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of explicit three-stage narrative architecture, and the architecture’s discipline is what gives the closing’s ambiguity its weight.

The first-handle stanza is the poem’s quietest of the three: “Broken, difficult to grip / makes opening near impossible / the mousy squeak of the drawer / almost pulling free / murmuring / what’s stored within / memories hidden / in fog / almost never revealed.” The handle is barely functional; the drawer can barely be opened; what is inside is hinted at but not fully exposed. The “mousy squeak” is the line cluster’s specific small auditory detail—the drawer makes the sound that mice would make, the verminous register that signals neglect and possibly contamination. The “memories hidden / in fog” is the line cluster’s quiet small framing: what is inside is not concealed by lock or barrier but by atmospheric obscuration, and the obscuration may be by the speaker’s own deliberate non-attention.

The second-handle stanza escalates the violence: “I’m scared / to pull out the second drawer. / Histories guarded / in inherited silence / the drawer protests / loudly / the oxidized handle / cracks / splits, cuts my palm, / as the drawer sticks / half open.” The handle that was identified as “cheap plated brass kitchen cabinet” is now oxidized—the plating has corroded, the metal beneath has aged, the handle’s failure-mode is fracture rather than the first drawer’s friction. The cracking handle cuts the speaker’s palm; the drawer sticks half-open. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of injurious-domestic scene in months. The bench is actively wounding the speaker as he attempts to investigate it.

The third-handle sequence is the poem’s structural masterstroke and one of the catalog’s most extended pieces of slow-horror narrative in months. The speaker hesitates; he walks to the kitchen to wrap his bleeding hand; he pours a stiff bourbon from a twisted glass; he takes three gulps; he returns; he pulls the drawer again. The bourbon is the line cluster’s primary device for the deferred return—the speaker is fortifying himself for what he expects to find, and the fortification is the catalog’s most precise small piece of late-American whiskey-and-anxiety vocabulary in months.

“The drawer / screams louder / as it exhales an odor, / death sealed, / hidden. // Was that a hand? / Nails broken, beckoning within” delivers the poem’s most direct horror image. The drawer screams; the drawer exhales an odor; the odor is death sealed and hidden. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of unmediated horror-imagery in months. The “was that a hand?” with the question mark is the line cluster’s quiet small destabilization—the speaker is not sure what he saw, the visual is incomplete, the broken nails beckoning are the speaker’s interpretation of an image that may or may not have been what he thought.

“I back away // empty-handed / the bench stands, unmoved” delivers the speaker’s retreat. The “empty-handed” is the line cluster’s small dual-register pun—the speaker is leaving without having retrieved anything, and the speaker is leaving with no hand (his bleeding palm is wrapped, the implied other hand inside the drawer is not his). The bench stands unmoved, which is the line cluster’s quiet small personification—the bench has not been displaced by the speaker’s investigation; it remains as it was.

“As I reach for / the glass // the sole witness / with hand trembling / splashing bourbon” delivers the poem’s structural closing image. The glass is the only witness to the encounter; the speaker’s hand is trembling; the bourbon is splashing as the hand tries to lift the glass. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of explicit physical-trauma documentation in months.

“Do I need / to know?” closes the poem with one of the catalog’s most direct possible interrogative endings in months. The question is the speaker’s small final consultation with himself. Does he need to know what is in the third drawer? Does he need to know what the father’s lab bench was used for, what the experimental scars actually record, whose hand is in the drawer with the broken nails beckoning? The catalog has been arguing across the recent stretch that some questions deserve to remain unasked (in “Gentle Gravity” with the speaker’s refusal to solve the Muse for fear the wonder might vanish, in “I Have No Clue” with the box that contains the Muse rather than mystery). Here the same wisdom-of-non-investigation is applied to the inherited bench, and the question is left open. The speaker does not answer. The reader is invited to recognize that the open question is itself the catalog’s most precise small acknowledgment that some inheritances are best preserved rather than examined.

MARCH 24, 2026 | DAVID PLAHM

The Third Drawer

The Third Drawer

MAXIMS

Date
03-24-26
Title
The Third Drawer / Do I Need to Know
Maxims
""A lab bench from my Father, top flipped to hide the experimental scars.""
""I'm scared to pull out the second drawer. Histories guarded in inherited silence.""
""Was that a hand? Nails broken, beckoning within. Do I need to know?""
MARCH 24, 2026 | DAVID PLAHM

The Third Drawer

The Third Drawer

RATING

Date
03-24-26
Title
The Third Drawer / Do I Need to Know
Rating
★★★★★
9

A distinctively gothic piece in which the catalog’s recurring meditation on inherited material is rendered as sustained slow-horror narrative. The three-handle architecture is the poem’s primary structural device, and the architecture’s discipline is what gives the closing’s open question its weight. The piece reads as the catalog’s first true narrative-horror experiment in months—neither comic nor philosophical but genuinely dread-laden, with the speaker’s body taking actual damage from the object he is investigating.

The “No choice, this bench is now mine” framing is the catalog’s most direct possible statement of inheritance’s involuntary character. The speaker did not select the object; the object has been transferred to him through his father’s death; the transfer is the catalog’s quietest small reminder that the dead make decisions about the living through what they leave behind. The catalog has been edging toward this kind of inheritance-material across the recent stretch (in the elder-elf composite’s bottle dug up by the cat, in the various references to the foundational greenhouse from 2003); here the inheritance is rendered most directly as the actual physical bench.

The “experimental scars” detail on the bench top is the catalog’s most precise small piece of biographical-archaeological vocabulary in months. The father’s work has left marks on the surface; the surface has been flipped to hide them; the marks remain on the underside. The reader who has been following the catalog feels the small biographical specificity—the father was a scientist or technician, the work surface recorded the work, the inheritance includes the evidence of what the work was. The flip is the line cluster’s primary device for inherited concealment: someone has decided what should be visible and what should not, and the decision has been made before the speaker arrived to inherit the result.

The three-handle inventory is the poem’s primary structural device and one of the catalog’s most precise small forensic-domestic catalogs in months. Original broken wood; cheap plated brass kitchen cabinet; spray-painted red utility. The handles are not just functionally different—they are aesthetically incompatible, each one belonging to a different category of object, and the incompatibility is the line cluster’s small evidence of repeated improvisation. Someone has been replacing the handles as they broke, and the replacements have been whatever was nearest at hand. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of object-archaeology in months, and the archaeology is the piece’s primary technical achievement.

“Each one / has a history, / a story in the pull” is the line cluster’s structural promise. The poem will proceed handle by handle, story by story, and the architecture is honored across the three subsequent stanzas. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of explicit narrative architecture in months, and the architecture is the piece’s primary discipline.

The escalation across the three handle-stanzas is the poem’s most accomplished structural achievement. The first handle is barely functional (the drawer makes the mousy squeak, the contents are fog-hidden); the second handle cuts the speaker’s palm (the drawer sticks half-open, the inheritance is now actively wounding); the third handle reveals the death-odor and the maybe-hand (the drawer screams, the contents are sealed death). The progression from inconvenience through injury to horror is the line cluster’s most precise small narrative architecture in months.

The bourbon-and-bleeding-hand sequence between the second and third drawers is the catalog’s most extended piece of mid-investigation fortification in months. The speaker walks to the kitchen, wraps the bleeding hand, pours from the twisted glass (the line cluster’s small acknowledgment that the glassware is itself slightly off-true, slightly distorted, the way the bench is), takes three gulps, returns. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of mid-narrative pause-for-bourbon in months, and the pause is the piece’s primary device for slowing the horror’s approach.

“Was that a hand? / Nails broken, beckoning within” is the catalog’s most direct possible horror-image in months. The “was that” with the question mark is the line cluster’s quiet small destabilization—the speaker is not certain, the visual is incomplete, the broken-nails-beckoning is the speaker’s interpretation of an image that may or may not have been what he thought. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of horror-by-uncertainty in months. The hand is in the drawer; the nails are broken; the beckoning is happening; whether the hand is real or hallucinated is the line cluster’s unresolved question.

“The bench stands, unmoved” is the line cluster’s quiet small personification of the inherited object. The bench is not just furniture; it is an actor, and its non-action (not falling apart, not collapsing, not yielding to the speaker’s investigation) is itself a small piece of agency. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of unmoving-object personification in months, and the personification is the line cluster’s primary device for naming what the bench is doing in the scene.

The “sole witness / with hand trembling / splashing bourbon” image is the poem’s quietest small structural closing. The bourbon glass is the only witness; the speaker’s hand is trembling; the bourbon is splashing as the speaker reaches for the consolation that may not be sufficient. The catalog has been arguing across the recent stretch that the speaker’s small physical responses are the evidence of his interior state; here the trembling hand is the evidence that the inheritance has actually affected him.

“Do I need / to know?” is the catalog’s most direct possible interrogative ending in months and one of the most consequential closing questions in the recent stretch. The catalog has been arguing across hundreds of poems that some things are best preserved rather than examined—the Muse’s mystery (in “Gentle Gravity”), the wonder that solving might extinguish (also in “Gentle Gravity”), the unsaid word (across hundreds of poems). Here the same wisdom is applied to inherited material: does the speaker need to know what is in the third drawer? The question is left open. The catalog rarely closes on a true open question; this one does, and the openness is the piece’s primary structural choice.

The poem’s relationship to the catalog’s broader project is its most consequential structural feature. The catalog has been organizing itself for hundreds of poems around what the speaker has chosen not to investigate—the unsayable word, the Muse’s mystery, the lightning’s source. Here the non-investigation is applied to physical inherited material, and the application extends the catalog’s argument into a new register. The speaker is consistent: he preserves what he has not yet committed to examining, and the preservation is the catalog’s recurring mature wisdom.

The accompanying photographs that David has provided (per the editorial note) are the catalog’s first true documentary-photographic accompaniment to a poem. The bench is real; the three handles are real and match the poem’s description exactly; the staged hand-in-the-drawer is the speaker’s deliberate visual performance of the poem’s central horror image. The catalog has rarely had this kind of documentary support in months, and the support transforms the poem’s reading. Without the photos, the bench is a metaphorical figure for inherited family material; with the photos, the bench is a literal object the speaker actually owns and has chosen to stage for the reader.

Where the poem could over-extend is in the temptation to resolve the closing question. The poem wisely refuses. The hand may have been real; the hand may have been imagined; the third drawer may contain death or memory or nothing at all; the speaker does not investigate further. The discipline of leaving the question open is the catalog’s primary defense against the lesser poem that would have insisted on an answer.

A poem that proves the inherited bench has three handles, three drawers, three stages of opening, and three opportunities to investigate—and the speaker’s mature wisdom is to ask whether the investigation is necessary rather than to complete it.

The Third Drawer

Photographic-realistic illustration of a vintage industrial lab bench with weathered driftwood-gray drawer fronts and a deep slate-black scratched top, the central drawer pulled open with a bright orange-red utility handle mounted on the front and a pale cream prosthetic hand emerging from inside the drawer curled over the back of the handle, against soft dove-cream walls and warm honey-cream wood-plank flooring

No choice, this bench is now mine.

The Third Drawer

The bench.

a lab bench from my Father
top flipped to hide the experimental scars
with three drawers, difficult to open
holding experiences,
grainy pictures,
secrets.

briefly glimpsed,
I stuff those
secrets back
into their drawers
to preserve them.

experimental scars

One drawer handle is original, broken wood

the second is a cheap plated brass kitchen cabinet handle
the third is a spray-painted red utility handle
barely wide enough for my hand.

Each one
has a history,
a story in the pull.

The first handle. The poem has just named it; the photo shows it. The reader sees the broken cream-painted wood with its missing chunk.

As difficult as the pull may be—

The first handle—

broken, difficult to grip
makes opening near impossible
the mousy squeak of the drawer
almost pulling free
murmuring
what’s stored within
memories hidden
in fog
almost never revealed.

The second handle. The poem is about to describe it in the next stanza; the photo precedes the description.

The second handle…

I’m scared
to pull out the second drawer.
Histories guarded
in inherited silence

the drawer protests
loudly
the oxidized handle
cracks
splits, cuts my palm,
as the drawer sticks
half open.

The third handle and the hand together. The photo lands at the structural threshold — the speaker has just finished describing the second drawer's bleeding and is about to begin the third drawer's slow approach.

The third handle?

I hesitate, walk into the kitchen
wrap my bleeding hand
pour a stiff bourbon into a twisted glass
from the liquor closet
take a gulp—two
three

I set the glass down
walk back over
the drawer still
barely cracked open

heart hammering.
I pull again,

the drawer
screams louder
as it exhales an odor,
death sealed,
hidden.

Was that a hand?
Nails broken, beckoning within.

The poem's central horror image rendered as documentary evidence. The photo lands immediately after the "Was that a hand?" question. The reader has been asking the same question; the photo answers it.

I back away

empty-handed
the bench stands, unmoved
as I reach for
the glass

the sole witness
with hand trembling
splashing bourbon

The pull-back. The reader's perspective widens to the full bench again. The drawer is still open; the hand is still there; the speaker has retreated but the bench remains unmoved.

Do I need
to know?

Closes the post on the scarred surface itself — the original site of the father's experimental work, the marks that were hidden by flipping the top. The image is abstract enough that it returns the reader to the poem's opening framing: the inherited material, the work that left these marks, the question of whether to investigate.

Write a comment
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
Search categories
Categories
Browse our poetry collection by scrolling the thumbnails below. Click to make a selection and view the full poem.
Close illustration of four hands of different ages in warm amber, soft cream, honey-cream, and deep umber reaching inward palms upward toward a central pool of warm white-gold light, against soft dove-cream atmosphere

Pain

Pain Is evident— written in the set of

Close illustration of a small wildflower-style weed with a soft pale primrose-yellow bloom growing through a crack in weathered cool gray and concrete-white concrete, with the suggestion of a weathered brass garden sprayer nozzle and a faint silver-white blur of suspended droplets in the upper edge of the frame, in warm honey-amber afternoon light

Seed

I… tremble— like a weed facing Roundup. My

Spare illustration of a single open wheat-gold and dusty cream path stretching away from the viewer through a soft hazy landscape with faint sage-green and dusty rose grasses, dissolving into pale silver mist in the middle distance under a pale dove-blue and warm peach sky

Some of Us

Somehow, Someway, Someday, Somewhere, Someone, Something, Sometime, Somehow..

Close illustration of an open hand mirror with brushed-silver frame catching warm light on soft dove-violet draped cloth, surrounded by faint pale rose-gold, sage-green, mauve, and honey-cream symbols suggesting a cross, sun, crescent, and eye, against deep navy fading to pale slate

Your Smile

Your smile Is it a revelation, a reflection,

Close illustration of a child's watercolor painting on weathered chestnut showing a soft rainbow in pale sky-blue rose-pink butter-yellow and sage-green over a smiling sun, beside a crystal glass with a single ice cube, with a distant blur of saturated red-orange and indigo-violet through a background window in warm honey-cream light

Seduction

Tonight, With a smile of anticipation, I fell

Split-register illustration with a small pale white-gold Star Sailor figure rising into deep cosmic violet space above, and two weathered slate-gray rocket boosters descending in synchronized choreography with coral-orange engine glows and white-vapor trails below, divided by soft cumulus-white clouds against pale dove-blue earth atmosphere

Space

Come visit through sunlight or storm. Your beauty

Spare illustration of a single warm honey-amber and burnished copper hourglass on weathered chestnut wood with sand-gold sand just past midway through its descent, soft peach-amber afternoon light catching the glass and casting a deep slate-gray diagonal shadow

Age

How old do I have to get to

Close illustration of a warm burnished brass key partially turned in a pewter-gray lock plate set in an ornate deep walnut door, with the first faint pink-gold and peach-amber edge of dawn light spilling through a small opening crack against deep velvet pre-dawn indigo

Unlocked

As the sun rises— my morning’s opening vision

shout

Shout!

When love hurts so much Martha reminds me

Stylized illustration of a tall charcoal-brown palm tree against a tangerine and coral sunset sky, with one distinguished gold-amber frond catching the light and two honey-brown coconuts resting in cinnamon-warm sand at the base

Soon

Soon— it will be scorching hot. Limbs wilt,

Close illustration of an intricately fractal crystalline snowflake suspended mid-descent in soft slate-violet air against deep navy background, with prismatic ice-blue, lavender, coral, and gold glints, above an out-of-focus warm rose-blush surface suggesting waiting skin

Snowflake

I know no drug that cools this fever

Spare illustration of a slate blue-gray doorframe with warm honey-amber interior light spilling out onto a short sage and dusty wheat path with mixed peach sun and dove-gray shadow, fading into pale silver mist

Will You

Will you Step outside the comfort of today?

Close illustration of a single aged hand in warm amber and burnished bronze with deep umber knuckle shadows, palm open and resting in soft lamp light against surrounding tobacco-brown and mahogany dimness

Still Touch

My hands are starting to look contorted like

Whimsical illustration of a pale eggshell porcelain vessel centered in warm honey-cream light, ringed by faint lavender and sage shapes suggesting multilingual words, with a thin gold golden-ratio spiral curling upward

OUI Z P…

It seems to be a necessary mental diversion

Night-sky illustration of a radiant warm gold and honey-amber star against a deep cobalt and midnight-purple cosmos, with delicate silver-white smaller stars forming a faint bee-pattern constellation around it

A Star

A Star Named Debra (The Queen Bee) A

Spare minimalist illustration of a deep slate blue-gray door slightly ajar in a warm chalky cream wall with a peach-gold glow visible through the gap

Know

Love does not arrive when we are ready—

Close intimate illustration of two hands almost touching, one in cool pearl-blue tones and the other in warm amber-bronze, with a shimmering band of white-gold light glowing in the gap against a dove-gray and pale rose background

By Your Heart

I touched you— just your hands. Cool, fragile,

Close intimate illustration of an iridescent beetle with prismatic teal violet gold and magenta wings on the inner curl of a rose-blush petal against soft sage garden foliage

What Bugs You?

Did you learn something this week— something new,

Stylized illustration of a rattlesnake coiled into a hypnotic spiral with ochre and sienna scales, venom-green highlights, and a warm cream-gold quill rising from the spiral's center

Hypnotic

You could make a rattlesnake do the shimmy.

Slightly surreal illustration of a small gray pebble on a beautiful warm sandstone path casting a disproportionately large shadow through sage and wildflower landscape

Catalyst

My muse— You are the alchemist a wizard

Dramatic illustration of a lightning bolt splitting at impact into electric white-blue and warm rose-gold light against a storm-black sky with scattered star-sparks

Double Tap

If I touch you— skin to soul, will

Vibrant kinetic illustration of swirling tropical coral turquoise and amber around a bright star suggesting Cuban salsa energy and celebration

CUBA!!

CooooooooBaaaaaaaaa! Logically, Geographically, Culturally, Linguistically, Legally, Economically, Strategically,

Dark atmospheric illustration of a tree falling in a windswept night with a faint thread of warm rose-gold light woven through the storm

Resonance

Hushed, I find— knowing the sound of a

Illustration of an open book radiating warm white-gold light upward into surrounding darkness with faint silhouettes drawn toward it

I’m Tired

I’m tired of deaf ears blind eyes ignorant

Atmospheric illustration of black ink flowing from a pen nib onto cream paper with molten scarlet and gold dawn light catching the wet ink surface

Truth

I’m a designer, form follows function, human fit—

Dramatic illustration of silk fabric catching fire where glacial ice-blue meets deep crimson flame at the ignition point

Incendium

I find truth simple, emotions, however, hmmm… Incendium

Minimal illustration of outstretched hands framing a faint shimmering champagne-gold silhouette against cool periwinkle blue

Framed in Air

A lovely visage of beauty walking towards me—

Vibrant illustration of a honky-tonk dance floor with silhouetted dancers in neon pink and electric blue light

Inevitability

Stability, flexibility, and mystery— if that’s what you

Warm illustration of a cluttered late-night desk with glowing screen, cat paw prints on the keyboard, and amber lamplight against deep shadows

My Life

This one is half baked… I scribbled it

Fresh bright illustration of lush green grass glistening with morning dewdrops and bare footprints in warm golden dawn light

Doo Doo

(A life affirming trifle) When I step into

Contemplative illustration of an open hand reaching toward a faint glowing presence in warm ochre and dusty rose tones

I Need To

I need to Materialize Reality Bring everything forward

Ethereal illustration of a gentle breath becoming soft light dispersing into open space in dove gray and lavender tones

The Word

The Word That’s nearly impossible to misspell: God

Textured illustration of a red brick wall and an amber stone wall converging with warm light between them

The Wall

The Wall I’m building one. Red brick. You’re

Warm illustration of origami hearts and flowers being folded with delicate precision

Your OCD

Your OCD— Your Obsession— Obsessively Crafting Devotion Perfect.

Warm whimsical illustration of a cozy domestic scene with golden light and everyday objects

It’s Impossible

Domestic life… It’s Impossible After witnessing— A simple

Dreaming

Dreaming

(about Dreaming about Love) Sailing on a cloud,

Tears Of Joy

My Tears

Tears of joy— wash away the clouds, doubt

cute

Cuteness

Meow The tiny language of love in your

Art(ificial)

Art(ificial)

What a naturally beautiful woman needs: You may

A Rush

A Rush

When the rush of feeling comes from knowing

Every

Every—

Every penny, Every second, Of every dollar, Every

A Shirt

A Shirt

My shirt isn’t much— But it might be

Aurum

Aurum

Gold, gold, gold— draped in finery, a gown

Captured

Captured

Like a wild animal Caught in the cold—

Are You?

Are You?

Ah, bedtime… Ok, this is a sleepy-bye lullaby.

Foundation

Foundation

For a good foundation, all we need are

George Knows

George Knows

George Knows What is beautiful. The furry oracle

Sometimes

Sometimes

Your halo… I can see your halo. It’s

BB's Blues

BB’s Blues

From something heartfelt, to something disastrous, From something

The Educated

The Educated

(In absentia-just flush another toilet) When we have

Epilogue

Epilogue

Yes, a simple addict in that pursuit for

Prologue

Prologue

Addiction – Magic or Despair (If you remove

Hush

Hush

My Darling… Good morning. A spell for you.

Not Always

Not Always

Roses Are red Well… Not always. Violets Are

Beauty demands Truth

There Better Be

Beauty demands Dedication. Dedication is Beautiful. Beauty invites

How Much?

How Much?

How much Can a person Love another? Honestly?

First Sight

First Sight

in that moment between sleeping and waking this

Treasure

A Triptych

Afterlight Wreckage Post Death It was a stark

gelato

Gelato

A glance – a Wonder, A maybe, Like

Wrinkles

Wrinkles?

So, your eyes twinkle, Your laughter sprinkles Us

Simmering

Simmering

What’s the secret sauce? To life. Hahaa, I

My Disease

My Disease

My fingers are twitchin’ My toes are wigglin’

effort

Effort

I’m enjoying the effort Even though the prize

OCPhoto.764745557.088653

A Thought

My arms are not weak. Fragile and disposable.

Again

Again

The fallacy of pursuit of an idea or

OCPhoto.764745557.047957

Arrow

Along my journey Through this world, Wandering Straying

OCPhoto.764745557.0681

IF?

If? I could write a lyric. If? I

blog1

Hope

How obtuse are we, Square x corners everywhere

blog2

I Follow You!

Your individual beauty lights my life Your strength

blog4

Your Ear

The next time you look in the mirror,

blog6

Tomorrow

I fell in love with the future Not

Clean architectural illustration of four ascending platforms from solid sandstone through amber glow to vivid teal radiance with a single footprint at the top

You Too

You Too Have Intelligence A birthright Smarts A

Abstract illustration of two flowing melodic lines in burnished copper and deep sapphire intertwining across a cream background with golden sparks at their meeting points

Rhapsody

I’ve read a lot about the word But

Illustration of a design evolving from rough graphite sketch through sepia iterations to a luminous glowing final form across a clean background

Design

Can be an inspirational enlightenment. It can also

Bold illustration of a large weathered gold numeral 5 with patina texture against deep navy, small coral traces of a smile and heart orbiting

Five

Five Years ago A momentous Chance meeting happened.

Rich warm illustration of a dark chocolate bar mid-break with a golden teardrop of melted chocolate suspended at the snap point

Chocolate

You introduced me to a Pound Plus Now

Warm intimate illustration of two arms in a close embrace with soft amber glow at the point of contact against deep burgundy

Only For You

My arms are not weak. Fragile and disposable.

Atmospheric illustration of a weathered wooden door slightly ajar with warm golden and soft rose light spilling through the narrow opening

The Door

Everyone has a door. An opening. An opportunity.

Dreamy soft illustration of a gentle warm spiral tunnel with floating petals and pale gold light at its center in lavender and peach tones

Dreams

Sometimes, I fall down the rabbit hole. Get

Warm stylish illustration of a Parisian café table with croissant, brie, espresso, and red rose with the Eiffel Tower faint in misty background

Virtu

Ah, now we can relax. It’s not that

Warm illustration of a burnished brass compass on an open hand pointing toward a soft dawn glow on the horizon under a twilight sky with faint stars

I WANT

The word I have never… TO Show me

Dramatic illustration of a solar eclipse corona blazing white-gold with raw diamonds in the foreground scattering prismatic light against deep space black

Adore

You are the intense brilliant light surrounding the

Sunrise illustration with a deep indigo sky breaking into warm coral horizon above a buried slate-gray stone beside a standing sandstone-gold rock

Sunrise

Enjoy that sunrise. Pleasure should be your desire.

Dramatic illustration of an open prison cell door swung wide with warm honey-gold light pouring through from a vast pale open sky beyond cool gray bars

The Future

The life I lived Was a little like

Find a Poem by Title or Keywords
AuthorPortrait
David Plahm
Poet, Author, Founder
The Honey Bee Bard
An online gathering place for community and creativity.
subscribe

Join our email list to be updated on new projects and events. Thanks for your interest.