There are three pennies—
A jar under the kitchen sink collects coins:
Nickels, dimes, and quarters—
Two more pennies then trade the five for a nickel.
Jar worthy.
Each penny wishes it were worth five-cents.
They want nothing more than to belong, to hear,
to feel the clanking of old-respectable copper
(swapped for cost-efficient zinc)
against receptive glass,
descending into a pool of rich friends.
Oh, the fun that would ensue while mingling at parties,
discussing stocks, wearing the latest fashion,
and inflating egos…
I insist the pennies must never apologize for who they are.
Be confident!
As a result, they not only buff themselves well
against a cotton rag to shine,
but march proudly—Lincoln soldiers!
Still the fact remains,
they cannot buy dinner, diamonds, designer-clothes…
Now and again temptation arrives:
Be a big shot!
Toss a single dollar bill into the jar,
but it would throw-off balance entirely.
Quarters would feel they don’t add-up without three
well-to-do friends. Dimes would become bullies
pushing their way up to ten.
Nickels would simply give-up trying,
and form an alliance with the pennies,
waging war on the rich:
“Who made you all-deserving copper-nickel, green-paper-presidents?
We are enough for your wishes in a well!”
Then comes a revelation:
Release the oppressed coins. They cannot
change worth on their own accord.
A force greater together—
Take the coins—including each penny—to the poor.
They will be grateful for every cent.
Soon there will be a bushel of fruit or a new pair of socks.
Collect grains of sand in finely shaped jars,
and delight in the vast wealth of the seas.
Maria Pisciotta-DellaPorte ©2017 All Rights Reserved
Great work, Maria! A vast wealth indeed. 🙂
Thank you, Je! I always appreciate you reading my work. 🙂
I always appreciate the invitation to do so. ❤
I love this one Maria!! As real as it gets… 🤑
Thank you, Benj!
Another fantastic poem!
Thank you! 🙂 Ps: Flip a coin 😉