Bjorn is the host of this interesting prompt to use negation in poetry. You can join in here: https://dversepoets.com/2025/01/23/meet-the-bar-positively-through-negation/
You can read Bjorn’s poem here: https://brudberg.me/2025/01/23/what-it-is/
I have made an attempt based on how I understood this prompt. If you don’t like spiders STOP here.
I used a quote from Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream which reflects spiders in a negative light. I have then flipped this idea in the second half of the poem.
In case you’ve forgotten, Puck, the mischievous servant to the fairy king in this play, is tasked with anointing Titania’s eyelids with the juice from a flower which will serve as a magic potion.
The Weaver
I scrabble backwards
Scrubbing shreds of sticky web
From my mouth and eyes
My Midsummer Night’s Dream forest walk
In tatters, just like the spider web
“Weaving spiders come not here
Hence, you long legged spiders, hence”
I invoke the charm of protection
From venomous arachnids
Out of the corner of my eye
I see a spectacular creation
A complex structure of threads
Glimmering in the golden light
Diamond-like rain drops clinging
At intervals along each lengthily seam
At the centre, sits the weaver
Slender red legs spread out
Around a distinctly marked abdomen
Like a queen on her throne
She eagerly awaits a banquet
Is her beauty real, or have I been bewitched
By magical floral juice upon my eyelids
“Tell me Puck? Is this vision real?
Or are you making mischief
With your enchanted love potion?”


Wonderful poem. I love the photos.
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Thanks, Timothy. I’m always pleased when I get an ‘unusual’ picture.
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An interesting poem, Robbie, and great photos. Spider webs are amazing!
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HI Merril, I’m glad you also find spiders interested. Everyone in my house is terrified of them.
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I don’t like spiders in the house, and I would be freaked out to find a large one in some places, but outside they are fun to watch.
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Yes, there place is outside, preferably.
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Oh.. Umm…
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I did warn you – haha!
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Nice.
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Thank you, Andrew
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You’re welcome.
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Robbie, your poem and the arresting images are a bit creepy but very compelling. 🙂
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Hi Dave, while I don’t invite them to tea, I do find spiders very interesting creatures.
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I don’t like spiders but your poem is astutely crafted, Robbie. Bravo!
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Thank you, Balroop. I find spider’s fascinating and am always pleased to see one.
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Great photos and your poem is lovely, Robbie.
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Hi Colleen, I am pleased you enjoyed this poem. It’s creation really pleased me.
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I love the poem and also the fotos. Spiders are so creative with their webs. Best wishes, and enjoy a wonderful weekend! xx Michael
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Hi Michael, I also think spiders are great artists in nature. Thank you and have a wonderful Sunday.
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I’m not a fan of spiders, but they are such amazing artists in nature. Love the poem and photos!
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HI Jan, I appreciate the role of spiders in nature and think they are very interesting. The webs are beautiful.
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I love this, Robbie! Spiders are amazing creatures and the webs they weave can be quite beautiful.
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Thank you, Dale. It pleases me greatly that you also appreciate spiders.
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Oh absolutely. Maybe not those huge ones inside of my house but outside? I’m good!
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Same, I don’t invite them to dinner 😁
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Definitely not!
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Robbie no spider in the Uk looks like the orb spider 🙄 ..thank goodness!
Your poem is amazing 👏👏
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Hi Maggie, as far as I can recall, the UK doesn’t have venomous spiders. We have a good selection here. I enjoyed bring Puck into this poem. It gave me a good giggle.
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Hi Robbie
Yes, I think you are correct.
I don’t mind spiders
But your ones 🙄 nope, lol.
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They are fine outside in the bush where they belong.
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Oh what a charming poem, Robbie! We may unexpectedly glimpse an enchantment if we but change our perspective. Love the telling details and allusions in your poem, and the lovely photos.Spider’s webs really are “spectacular creations.”
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Hi Dora, I am delighted you enjoyed this poem. I find spiders very interesting and had a lot of fun working Midsummer Night’s Dream into this poem.
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a very interesting poem choice, Robbie. I love the web and the odd looking spider. We have webs like that here that are made by large garden spiders or what some call writing spideres! Well done.
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HI Dwight, you are right, it is an unusual topic but I don’t try to fight with my muse if she’s kind enough to bring something. This is an orb spider. You get Arrowhead spiders in the USA which are the same species of spider.
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A perfect poem to read on a winter’s day, Robbie! I loved getting lost in your fairy-tale…
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Thank you for your lovely comment.
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My pleasure!
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I handled the poem okay, the photos not so much.
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I put the warning there just for you, Liz.
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I wondered about that! 😉
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Smile
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Spider webs are works of art. They could do without humans turning them into agents of their own agendas. (K)
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Thank you, Kerfe. Humans have vilified other creatures too. The poor hyenas come to mind immediately.
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We have a type of orb-weaver spider where I live. I see (and sometimes get tangled up in) their webs in late summer and autumn. The webs are works of art, as your poem expresses!
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Thank you, Audrey. You do have orb spiders in Canada. I enjoy their pretty webs but I’m not as pleased if I accidentally walk into the webs.
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Fantastic poem, Robbie, and spectacular pictures!
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Thank you, Tim. I appreciate your support.
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😍
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I loved the poem and the photos too. Spiders can look scary but they make such beautiful webs and they serve a good purpose, and most of them harmless to us.
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Hi Thomas, yes, most are harmless, a few are venomous. It is their looks that scare people. They don’t see the beauty in spiders (or any other insect either). I think they are amazing.
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Yes I agree it is their look. We have orb weavers and they are very big, like half a hand, and bright yellow and black. They look scary but they are harmless and creates large impressive webs.
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We have rain spiders that are also huge and hairy looking, but they are also harmless.
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I can’t understand why people are afraid of spiders. They are (at least, those here in the UK) are harmless, and in fact help us get rid of many much nastier creatures. Like flies, that carry disease. I, too find them fascinating, and many are beautifully marked.
Your poem is cleverly done. Thanks for sharing.
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You are correct that in the UK spiders are harmless. In South Africa, we have some that are venomous and it is the same in Australia. I treat spiders like any other wild creature and take care, but I don’t fear them and I don’t kill them.
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Yes, I am aware there are venomous spiders elsewhere in the world. We are lucky in the UK that ours are harmless.
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Absolutely enjoyed thr poem. Woe..you were in the zone with this piece, Robbie.
Spiders..large Spiders freak me out.
Saw a handler with a giant tarantula once..had the creeps for a few days afterward.
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Hi Nigel, I don’t mind spiders but some are venomous so you do have to be sensible and take care. I so pleased you enjoyed this poem.
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Yes, they can be. I have a friend who works in a lab producing antivenom..she tells me enough horror stories to keep me wary of spiders.
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I like how you wove Shakespeare into the lines that also marvel over a spider’s web. I agree that they’re spectacular creations 🙂
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Hi Dave, I decided immediately to write about spiders and I looked for a Shakespeare quote. After I found this one, the poem wrote itself which was fun. I like poems that arrive fully formed and don’t require effort – smile.
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This is fantastic! You are a truly talented word weaver!!
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Thank you so much, Annette, for this lovely comment.
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Love this, Robbie – all of this!
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Thank you, Chris. I’m so glad.
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Great poem Robbie. Love the spider photos.
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Thank you, Brenda. I am so pleased to know that.
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Those are great photos, Robbie and such a wonderful poem!
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Thank you, Punam, I’m pleased you enjoyed it.
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Beautiful!
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Thank you, Jennie.
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You’re welcome, Robbie.
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The orb photos are fascinating, beautiful in their own unique way. I love looking at webs in the early morning after a frost …. oh, by the way .. your poem is equally fascinating.
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Thank you, Helen. I am pleased you appreciated the poem. I had a bit of fun writing it. We rarely get frost but I have seen pictures of spider webs after frost and they are very spectacular.
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“Tell me Puck? Is this vision real? Or are you making mischief?” Absolutely brilliant!
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Hi Donna, I am so pleased you enjoyed that. I have a bit of fun with the Midsummer Night’s Dream links.
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goodness, what a fascinating spider! I’d never seen one. great writing
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A beautiful spider I love spiders webs after a frost which we don’t get here… A perfect poem to go with the images “_ x
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Thank you, CArol. We rarely get frost where I live too.
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Amazing creatures those spiders, but I am happy that we don’t have the venemous kinds here where I live.
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It is nice to know any spider you see is harmless. I am always careful.
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don’t know how I missed this, Robbie but wonderfully inventive esp in the precision of detail and sprightly rhymes —
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Hi John, I’m pleased you liked this. I thought you would enjoy my references to Midsummer Night’s Dream.
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I am so glad I read your poem in the morning instead of at night because I would have had nightmares of spiders attacking me all night. I hope that zoomed in picture was taken from afar. I never would get that close to a web. *shivers* All that being released, your poem was beautiful, Robbie, despite its subject.
Yvette M Calleiro 🙂
http://yvettemcalleiro.blogspot.com
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Hi Yvette, I’m sorry, I did put a warning up front. I do like spiders and the photographs weren’t zoomed.
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I saw the warning, but as it was morning, I tried to be brave. Lol! You are much braver than I. 🙂
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Only with regards to spiders.
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Fabulous!
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Thank you, Dawn.
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A fabulous write, Robbie! Adoetry!
As I’m reading posts backwards, you may be reading my comments backwards.
SO
Adoetry. (word I made up, described in another comment)
A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream is one of my fave Shakespearean plays. Puck is a stand out character in literature.
Terrific post, thank you!
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I am reading your comments backwards – smile. Thanks for that. I also like this play and Puck is fantastic. I’m delighted you liked this poem.
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Love it. You are one of my fave writers!
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Thank you, Resa. That is a great compliment, and I am very honoured.
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…. hugs …
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