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Original Poetry from O, The Oprah Magazine Readers
![]() Photo: Gentl & Hyers After we solicited original poems from O Magazine readers, we received almost 3,000 submissions in a mere 48 hours! Here's a selection of poems that moved and delighted our editors.
Keepsake It is always raining in the hours before the sun, when leaves boil on blacktop and cats bolt across the road like phantom runners. The way is measured in red, caution yellow, and shadows standing like cedars at a treeless graveside. A discarded umbrella sighs from the gutter. The sky opens up in a sooty wash above an abandoned earthscape of shattered beer bottles, house condemned, and no trespass. Outside, in half shadows I wade through high grass to save a spider's web and press it hard against paper, spun silver on red. —Laura Treacy Bentley, Huntington, WV Published on March 08, 2011
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