Tags
dVerse summer break, June is a time to try new things, meet poets around the globe, OpenLinkNight, Poetry and such, Sanaa Rizvi, Shel Silversstein

Photo courtesy of Pexels: Cheese, Crackers and Fruit by Lorena Villarreal
Good evening, everyone
Today is the last event before we go on a two-week break, we will be back with a Quadrille on July 8. This is also when we celebrate the anniversary of dVerse Poets Pub.
Sanaa here (aka adashofsunny) delighted to host Open Link Night today and Live edition on Saturday.
This is a live edition, but we will only have one opportunity to join on Saturday at 10 AM New York Time. The session will be on Google Meet!
You can link up one poem of your choice down below or write to the optional mini prompt which we are offering today.
Please click on the link below to join us on Saturday:
https://meet.google.com/eiy-uvwr-vkn
–
Now for the Optional Mini prompt, which is “Sidewalk.” Consider where the sidewalk ends as Silverstein does in his poem below.
If you live near downtown, there might be a sidewalk packed with people in business attire headed to the small bistros, cafes and other eateries.
You may also use the image of a sidewalk and create a contrast between the world of adults with the world of children, where the sidewalk ends.
As inspiration consider, the metaphors “peppermint wind,” “asphalt flowers,” and “chalk-white arrows” in the poem and see where they lead you. The aim here is to write the first thing that comes to mind.
There is a place where the sidewalk ends
and before the street begins,
and there the grass grows soft and white,
and there the sun burns crimson bright,
and there the moon-bird rests from his flight
to cool in the peppermint wind.
Let us leave this place where the smoke blows black
and the dark street winds and bends.
Past the pits where the asphalt flowers grow
we shall walk with a walk that is measured and slow
and watch where the chalk-white arrows go
to the place where the sidewalk ends.
Yes we’ll walk with a walk that is measured and slow,
and we’ll go where the chalk-white arrows go,
for the children, they mark, and the children, they know,
the place where the sidewalk ends.
In this poem, Shel Silverstein describes and conjures a place which is relatively different from anything we know in our own, real world. We might productively analyze ‘Where the Sidewalk Ends’ alongside the lyrics of The Beatles’ ‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’, with its tangerine trees and marmalade skies.
Similarly, ‘peppermint wind’ conjures not only the freshness and coolness of the breeze, but it also evokes a wind that we can almost taste!
Part of the genius of ‘Where the Sidewalk Ends’ is Silverstein’s ability to engage our imaginative senses – all of them, not just sight – so that we feel we, too, are losing ourselves in this magical world found ‘where the sidewalk ends’.

When you have linked up the poem you can read and comment as usual, and you are welcome to join us at the live session at 10 AM New York Time.
Welcome to Mid-Summer OLN everyone,
Hope to see you all on google meet for our LIVE session on Saturday!
On the menu we have peach and raspberry scones with whipped cream and diced fruits, London fog icecream with lemon sandwich cookies and any beverage of your choice.
Let me know if I can get you anything else! See you on the poetry trail 💖💖
Happy Solstice Sanaa – those scones are just right for the occasion so save one for me! Thank you for hosting this prompt – I’m away celebrating my son’s birthday from tomorrow but had time to link up tonight – – it almost fits your mini prompt too.
Happy Solstice, Laura!
Peach and raspberry scones with whipped cream and diced fruits coming right up! Have a wonderful time tomorrow celebrating your son’s birthday 🥰🥰
Pingback: Thoughts – PoetryPix
Pingback: Heron Tableau | rivrvlogr
Hello Sanaa and All. I’ve never heard of London Fog ice cream but I will try a small scoop on a waffle cone please, with a tall icy raspberry lemonade on the side. Will be back later to link up and read. Good prompt that has given me ideas 🙂
London Fog ice cream with a small scoop on a waffle cone and a tall icy raspberry lemonade on the side for the lovely lady! I am glad you liked the prompt, Lisa 🥰🩷
Thanks so much, Sanaa. YUMMY! Cheers!
You’re welcome! Cheers 🥂
Pingback: Asphalt flowers of love | paeansunpluggedblog
Hi Sanaa. Happy Solstice, everyone! Love the poem you have shared and a lovely prompt. 😊
Thanks Punam! 🥰 Heading over to read you 🩷🩷
You are welcome. 🥰
🥰🥰
My sidewalk now meets the sun. Thanks for the great prompt!
My pleasure! 🩷🩷
Good evening all! Thank you for hosting, Sanaa. I’m busy editing a short story at the moment, but I will be back to read in the morning, and at OLN Live on Saturday, to celebrate summer solstice and read a poem. I look forward to seeing you all then.
See you on Saturday, Kim! Happy Summer Solstice! 🥰🩷🩷
And you, Sanaa. See you on Saturday!
Pingback: The Women – Yesterday and today: Merril's historical musings
Hi Sanaa and all! Thank you for hosting and for the prompt. I used a line from the poem for a golden shovel. I had to look up London Fog ice cream. 🙂
I will join you for some ice cream 😉 Loved your poem, Merril! Thank you so much for writing 🩷🩷
Thank you!
Wouldn’t it be fun if we could sit together with our ice creams?
I will try it, though I’m more of coffee fan. 🙂
It would be the best! 🥰🥰
🥰
Pingback: dVerse OLN 364 — Each Side of the Veil – Tao Talk
Pingback: Quickening – Sunra Rainz
Oh how I miss cheese and crackers. 😦
I am sure we can arrange something 😀
a lil bit of humour on this one from me 😸
Loved it! 💝💝
Good evening, poets! Happy Solstice. Thanks for hosting OLN, Sanaa. How about a bottle of my favorite: Burgundy, please! 😉
A bottle of burgundy for the gentleman ☺️ good to see you, Frank! Happy Solstice 🩷🩷
Thanks, Sanaa! You, too! 😀
Pingback: Lament of the Fey – Dreams from a Pilgrimage
Pingback: Sidewalk – Reena Saxena
Thank you for hosting a lovely prompt, Sanaa. 🙂
I am so glad you liked the prompt, Kitty! 🩷🩷
Pingback: Solstice Moon – BenT
Pingback: Street Signs of the Mind – Where Stories Can Spark Their Magic
Pingback: Our Achilles – a poem by Paul Vincent Cannon | parallax
Thank for hosting Sanaa. My those scones sound amazing I’ll have a serve of scones and a whiskey please.
Hi Paul! Peach and raspberry scones with whipped cream and diced fruits 🍇 along with whiskey coming right up! Good to see you 🩷🩷
Wonderful (then I’d best go for a bike ride to work it all off, lol). Glad to be here ❤️😀
Haha sounds good! I ll join you 😁
Thanks for hosting! I wish all the folks that keep the dVerse community operational a wonderful 2 week break.
Thank you! Looking forward to reading and relaxing 🩷🩷
Hi Sanaa! “Where the Sidewalk Ends” by Silverstein was among my first introductions to poetry as a young girl–and so the love affair began.
That’s wonderful! Good to see you, Jennifer 🩷🩷
So sorry to miss dVerse LIVE. Am in the midst of packing, arranging etc for a month-long out-of-the-country trip that begins Monday.
I do will all you dVersers a wonderful dVerse vacation! In all reality, I won’t be back at the pub until August — too hard to log in, comment etc from overseas. HUGS to all!
lillian
You were greatly missed! Have fun on the country trip 🥰 will keep in touch! Big hugs! 🩷🩷
I am so sorry I missed the grand opportunity of visiting with you this morning. My excuse is SO lame. Got into bed way past midnight, slept till 8:20 my time this morning. Fifty lashes with a wet noodle?
Awww no worries, my dear Helen 🥰 hope to see you at our next session in July! Have a nice weekend 🩷🩷