
The Word
The Word That’s nearly impossible to misspell: God
A playful deconstruction of the most famous cliché in love poetry—"Roses are red, Violets are blue"—that pivots from comic subversion to a deeper argument: the beloved is no cliché, the word "love" lives unspoken inside her, and authentic feeling requires the patience to discover intention beneath the surface of language.
Plahm opens with the most recognizable two lines in English love poetry and immediately deflates them: “Well… / Not always.” The move is both comic and philosophical—if the foundational clichés of romance aren’t always true, then nothing in love should be taken at face value, and every expression must be earned through attention rather than inherited through convention. The pivot question—”Is life / Always / About you?”—arrives with the timing of a stand-up comedian before the disarming punchline: “Of course / It is.” This is Plahm at his most conversational, using humor as a Trojan horse for sincerity. The poem’s central declaration—”That’s why / You… / Are not one”—is the thesis delivered with maximum economy: the beloved transcends cliché precisely because she is irreducible to formula. The recurring “????” motif connects this poem to both the “Epilogue” and “Prologue,” establishing a signature Plahm device: the unnamed word that the reader must supply. Here the blank operates as both love confession and writing lesson—the speaker refuses to say the word because saying it would reduce it to another cliché, and the refusal itself becomes the most eloquent expression of the feeling. The late-poem shift to craft advice (“When you patiently take the time / To think about what you’re / Feeling, / Thinking, / Writing”) transforms the love poem into an ars poetica, arguing that intentional expression is itself an act of love. The closing question about “that light / At the end / Of the / Tunnel” circles back to a motif that recurs throughout the HoneyBeeBard canon, and the final assertion—”Nothing happens / Without… / ???”—leaves the reader with the same productive blank, the same invitation to name what matters most.
A deceptively lightweight poem that reveals surprising depth on rereading. The opening gambit—subverting the most overused couplet in English poetry—is a smart structural choice because it immediately establishes the poem’s argument: this will not be a conventional love poem, and the beloved deserves better than convention. The conversational tone is pitch-perfect throughout, with “Well… / Not always” and “HaHaaa / Of course not” capturing the speaker’s voice with almost transcribed authenticity. The “????” device, which by this point in the catalog has become a Plahm signature, works particularly well here because the entire poem has been about the inadequacy of received language—the blank isn’t evasion but logical conclusion. If clichés fail and words reduce, then the truest declaration is the one that refuses to declare. The mid-poem pivot to craft reflection is the poem’s most unexpected and rewarding move: by arguing that patience and intentionality in writing are themselves forms of love, Plahm connects his romantic philosophy to his artistic one, suggesting they were never separate. The closing “tunnel” reference and final “???” create continuity with the broader catalog without requiring knowledge of it—newcomers read a love poem with a mystery, returning readers recognize a mythology being extended. Minor weakness: the poem’s fragmented, short-line structure occasionally feels more like notes toward a poem than a finished piece, and the transition from cliché deconstruction to craft advice to tunnel metaphor covers a lot of thematic ground for a relatively brief poem. Some readers may find the tonal shifts between humor, sincerity, and philosophy slightly vertiginous. But the 18 likes suggest the poem’s accessibility and warmth override its structural looseness, and its argument—that the beloved deserves language as original as she is—is both charming and quietly radical.
Roses
Are red
Well…
Not always.
Violets
Are blue
Well…
Not always.
Is life
Always
About you?
Of course
It is.
Life
Is full of cliches
All of them
True?
HaHaaa
Of course not.
That’s why
You…
Are not one.
That word
I never say
Lives in you.
From the inside…
Out.
What is
That word?
I
“????” (fill in the word)
You?
This is what happens…
When you patiently take the time
To think about what you’re
Feeling,
Thinking,
Writing—
Instead of just going through the motions.
Discover intention and meaning
In that thought you place.
It just, might, reside
In a person’s delicate heart.
Should we review…
That light
At the end
Of the
Tunnel?
First,
Nothing happens
Without…
???. (Fill in the word)
That core
Within you
Is the
Key.



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