What demands a list more than deciding what to put in your book bag for the firt day of school..and what is more necessary than a list in relating the story of that big day?
First Day of School
In our house, a pencil sharpener fastened to a shelf
with a little handle I could turn myself.
All the curls of wood and lead safely caught within,
as I gave the pencil sharpener one more little spin.
Five newly sharpened pencils, clutched tight in my hand,
then bound into a secure bunch with a rubber band.
Dropped into my school bag with eraser, tablet, ruler.
Everything unused and clean. Nothing could be cooler.
The school warning bell rings out as my saddle shoe––
crisp black and white, unblemished, for it’s stiffly new––
makes its first step out my door to cross across the street
and with other six-year-olds, to find my proper seat.
Lynnie, Henrietta, Sheila, Diane, Sharon.
Clevie, Meridee and I, Rita, Linda, Karen.
Lyle, Keith, Clinton, Jeff, Georgie, Jimmie, Billie––
come from all directions, running willie-nillie
to get to school before the bell sounds its final peal.
All those years of playing school finally here for real.
We stand in lines inside the room as she calls our names.
No more days of playing random childhood games.
Reading and arithmetic, that little cardboard store
where we learned to count out change, make shopping lists and more.
Spelldowns standing up in front, facing towards the class.
Your hand up when you had to ask for the bathroom pass.
Marching all around the room singing “Charming Billy.”
Can he bake a cherry pie? Those lyrics were so silly.
Then we stomped and pointed–our volume without match
as we sent the boys out yonder to the paw paw patch.
Are you too young to remember? Or is it that you’re old,
your remembrances supplanted, your memories grown cold?
Do you not recall the ink wells and chalk erasers?
The recess bell, the sandbox, the swingers and the chasers?
The teeter-totters creaking and the merry-go-round?
Every playground adventure? That cacophonous sound
of shouts and jeers and teasings, the tether ball and slide.
All the joyous sounds before we were called inside
to spend time with Alice and Jerry, and with “Run, Spot, run,”
reading words over and over before the day was done?
They swirled around in all our brains––phonics, words and numbers
stirred our active childhood minds from their former slumbers.
It was so many years ago that we set out that day
upon a road that later would carry us away
from that square white building with its tower and tolling bell
that for the first eight years of school we would mind so well.
Streaming in from all the sides of our little town––
brilliant students, dunces, class bully and class clown.
It was a collaboration that ultimately made
eighteen little boys and girls ready for second grade!
The dVerse Poets prompt was to construct a list poem.

Utterly delightful and as well constructed as ever
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Judy so nostalgic and the rhyming is so in keeping with the subject- fab🙌
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I think many of the things were the same, when I started school there was an organ in every class-room, and every teacher had to play when we sang…. amazing wonder when that dissapeared.
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Most classrooms in my elementary school had a piano and teachers could play!
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Yes, there were pianos in our classrooms, as well. At least in the first grade. We sang lots of songs.
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Well done, Judy.
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Luv the fact that you gavebus list within the main list, and a very interesting lookback
Thanks for dropping by my blog
much love
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Thanks, Gillena. I rarely write a poem any more that isn’t to a prompt. They are a great prod to creativity.
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Well done Jill 👏 ❤️😘
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“Are you too young to remember? Or is it that you’re old, your remembrances supplanted, your memories grown cold?” Well I am definitely old but remember quite well entering the first grade, that first day, those friends (still to this day) .. my father took me to the school about a week prior to first day, walked me thru and as a result first day was a breeze. I cannot thank you enough for sharing your experiences, your thougts, your emotions. This is a keeper for all of time list.
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I love it!
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We began with Kindergarten…thanks for bringing back the memories!
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How wonderfully you have taken us into your photograph – wonderful reflections – Jae
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A wonderful memory list. I went to kindergarten first. I never realized school started at grade 1.
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Great rhythm throughout most of your piece Judy. Are they really the names of all your school friends? You remember them all!? Great write 👏
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Loved this wonderful recollection of your first day at school. I don’t remember a thing about my first day.
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I also wondered if you remembered the names of all your classmates. I don’t remember a single child in my first grade class, but I switched schools for 2-6.
Such a well-crafted poem, Judy!
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I still remember the little satchel I carried. Oh and the smell of those erasers! The first day of school was always so exciting — You capture it so well, Judy!
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made me nostalgic…a lot like my own adventure.
I read that one’s very first memory points toward your direction in life. My first is…sitting on back porch eating crackers mashed and milk poured over them. I could hear the schoolvyard nearest me. Recess! Oh. How i wanted to be at school!! I hurt that I wasn’t yet old enough. How could I possibly wait?
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I was awash with nostalgia as I read your delightful list, Judy! (I would only change the names though)
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I’d gladly volunteer to clap the erasers just to get out of math.
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