Free Verse, Phrase Prompt, Poetry, Theme Prompt, Writing Prompts

Pyromancer’s Confession

Written for Poetics Tuesday: “Beginnings Are Endings”,
hosted by Punam, who has asked us to write a poem,
taking the opening line of a well-known piece and
using it as the last line of our poem. This is my response.

© Freepik

I have always loved the moment just before ….
the way dry timber holds its breath,
how paper curls its edges inward
like a hand closing around a secret
it was never meant to keep.

There is a mathematics to fire:
given enough heat, enough time,
everything confesses what it is.
The oak becomes its carbon.
The letter becomes its truth.

I fed it slowly. Old receipts.
Photographs that made the winters longer.
A name I’d written on a hundred margins
the way the devout repeat a prayer ….
not from faith, but from the need
to fill the silence with something.

By midnight the smoke had softened
and I stood in the warm orbit, thinking:
this is the most honest I have ever been.
To let the useless beautiful things go.
To stand and watch and say with intent….
It was a pleasure to burn.

NAR©2026

Nancy’s Notes: My final line …. “It was a pleasure to burn” …. is from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.

This is “Paper In Fire” by John Mellencamp

Everything on The Elephant’s Trunk was created by me, unless otherwise indicated. Thank you for your consideration. NAR©2017-present.

34 thoughts on “Pyromancer’s Confession”

  1. I am the fire lighter in our house, so your poem resonates with me, Nancy. I love the opening lines, especially the simile:

    ‘…paper curls its edges inward
    like a hand closing around a secret
    it was never meant to keep’.

    I also identify with the burning of memories, those ‘photographs that made the winters longer’ and a ‘name I’d written on a hundred margins the way the devout repeat a prayer’.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. My father-in-law took full advantage of fire, whether it was in the fireplace, the barbecue, or on the beach making a bonfire. I was always fascinated watching his process, making sure everything was perfect. In the right hands, fire is both majestic and cathartic. Thank you for your lovely comments, Kim; I’m pleased to know my poem resonated with you.

      Liked by 1 person

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