poetry du jour
— by David Plahm
OCTOBER 23, 2025 | DAVID PLAHM

The Wall

The Wall

SUMMARY

Date
10-23-25
Title
The Wall
Topic

A compact poem about emotional defenses—two people building separate walls from different materials, who might collide at an ordinary restaurant, and discover that their individual fragility becomes universal strength when the walls stand side by side rather than apart.

Summary

Plahm takes one of poetry’s most worn-out metaphors—the emotional wall—and revitalizes it through materiality, specificity, and comic misdirection. The opening is architecturally precise: “I’m building one. / Red brick. / You’re building one. / Amber stone.” The color and material distinction is crucial—these are not identical defenses but individual ones, built from different life experiences, different temperaments, different fears. Red brick is utilitarian, urban, working-class; amber stone is warmer, more organic, more deliberately chosen. Two people, two walls, two vocabularies for self-protection. Then the poem detonates its own seriousness. The “desert” where the walls might meet turns out to be a restaurant district—sushi place, Chinese joint, refried beans Mexican restaurant, bare-bones patriot Midtown Diner. The catalog is simultaneously funny and sociologically precise: these are the democratic spaces where strangers actually encounter each other, where walls built in private get tested in public. The word “bare-bones patriot” for the diner is a tiny character sketch in three words—you can see the place, the flag on the wall, the coffee refills. The crash is the poem’s structural climax: “As they crash together— / they fall as one, / each in their own direction.” This is counterintuitive and exactly right—the walls don’t merge or blend; they fall as one unit but in separate directions, maintaining individual identity within shared collapse. The philosophical coda—”Walls are infinite / until they meet / another wall”—is the poem’s most quotable line and its deepest insight: our defenses feel permanent only as long as they remain untested by contact with another person’s defenses. The closing three lines convert fragility from weakness into potential: two fragile walls, side by side, become universally strong. The poem is an argument for partnership as structural engineering.

OCTOBER 23, 2025 | DAVID PLAHM

The Wall

The Wall

MAXIMS

Date
10-23-25
Title
The Wall
Maxims
""Walls are infinite until they meet another wall.""
""Maybe they'll meet in the desert—of the sushi place, the Chinese joint, or the refried beans Mexican restaurant.""
""My wall, about as fragile as yours—but united, side by side, universal strength.""
OCTOBER 23, 2025 | DAVID PLAHM

The Wall

The Wall

RATING

Date
10-23-25
Title
The Wall
Rating
★★★★☆
8

A poem that rescues one of the most overused metaphors in the language—the emotional wall—by grounding it in materials, geography, and humor. The material specificity of the opening (red brick versus amber stone) is a small decision that pays enormous dividends: it transforms the wall from abstraction into architecture and gives the two people different aesthetic signatures before they’ve even met. The restaurant catalog is the poem’s secret weapon—comic, democratic, deeply American in its multicultural variety, and structurally essential as the “desert” where private walls encounter public life. The word “bare-bones patriot” is a masterclass in compression: three words that paint a complete diner, complete with clientele and decor. The crash-and-fall image is the poem’s most philosophically interesting moment: the walls don’t destroy each other or fuse into one; they fall together while maintaining separate trajectories, which is a more nuanced and honest model of partnership than the usual “two become one” formula. The aphorism “Walls are infinite / until they meet / another wall” has the quality of something that should already have been said by someone famous—it feels discovered rather than invented, which is the highest compliment for a philosophical line. The closing pivot from fragility to strength is the poem’s emotional payoff, and the word “universal” does important work: this isn’t just these two walls but a principle, a physics of human connection. Where the poem could push further is in developing the middle section—the restaurant encounters could sustain more specific observation (what happens at the sushi bar when the walls get close?) rather than remaining a list. But the compression is also the poem’s style, and at this length, every line earns its place. A poem that builds better by acknowledging what it’s building with.

The Wall

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

The Wall

I’m building one.
Red brick.
You’re building one.
Amber stone.

Maybe—
they’ll meet in the desert—
of the sushi place,
the Chinese joint,
or the refried beans
Mexican restaurant,
or maybe
the bare-bones patriot
Midtown Diner.

As they crash together—
they fall as one,
each in their own direction.

Walls are infinite
until they meet
another wall.

My wall?
About as fragile
as yours.

But united, side by side—
universal strength.

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.
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

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

Search posts
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.