Polished Regret, After Catullus
i hate this little book i made
scraped clean, polished thin,
as if shine could hide the hollow.
i hate the hours i fed it,
the quiet lies i told myself
that it was worth the breath.
now it sits in my hands,
small, stubborn, unwanted
a thing that asks to be seen.
o want to throw it away,
yet I don’t. i won’t.
something in me still clings
not love, not pride,
just the sick, stubborn hope
it might outlast my regret.
Na/GloPoWriMo 2026 Day 5 Prompt
Today, your challenge is to take a page from Catullus and Darwin, and write a poem in which you talk about disliking something – particularly something utterly innocuous, like clover. Be over the top! Be a bit silly and overdramatic.
Poem reference from Catullus
The Dedication: to Cornelius by Cattulus
To whom do I send this fresh little book
of wit, just polished off with dry pumice?
To you, Cornelius: since you were accustomed
to consider my trifles worth something
even then, when you alone of Italians
dared to explain all the ages, in three learned
works, by Jupiter, and with the greatest labour.
Then take this little book for your own: whatever
it is, and is worth: virgin Muse, patroness,
let it last, for more lives than one.

