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  • #46
    Originally posted by Limehouse View Post
    Hi Celesta

    Yes - I do have other poems and could PM you a few examples if you like them. I started writing when I was very young - fiction and non-fiction - and always wanted to be a writer but never had the time to spend on it properly. I do write some satire - mostly for friends at work for our end-of-year Christmas dinners or for retirements. The serious stuff like the example above only seems to flow when I am very stressed so I suppose it is a good thing I only write a few each year!


    Thanks for your kind comments.

    Julie


    Thank you! I just read them, and I'm really impressed. Please do try to get them published. I'm no poetry expert, but I do believe you have a gift for this, Julie.
    "What our ancestors would really be thinking, if they were alive today, is: "Why is it so dark in here?"" From Pyramids by Sir Terry Pratchett, a British National Treasure.

    __________________________________

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    • #47
      Balloons
      Since Christmas they have lived with us,
      Guileless and clear,
      Oval soul-animals,
      Taking up half the space,
      Moving and rubbing on the silk

      Invisible air drifts,
      Giving a shriek and pop
      When attacked, then scooting to rest, barely trembling.
      Yellow cathead, blue fish---
      Such queer moons we live with

      Instead of dead furniture!
      Straw mats, white walls
      And these traveling
      Globes of thin air, red, green,
      Delighting

      The heart like wishes or free
      Peacocks blessing
      Old ground with a feather
      Beaten in starry metals.
      Your small

      Brother is making
      His balloon squeak like a cat.
      Seeming to see
      A funny pink world he might eat on the other side of it,
      He bites,

      Then sits
      Back, fat jug
      Contemplating a world clear as water.
      A red
      Shred in his little fist.


      Sylvia Plath

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      • #48
        Something Seasonal and LVP!

        It was Christmas Day in the workhouse
        The merriest day of the year
        The paupers and the prisoners
        Were all assembled there

        In came the Christmas pudding
        When a voice that shattered glass
        Said, "We don't want your Christmas pudding
        So stick it
        there with the rest of the unwanted presents"

        The workhouse master then arose
        And prepared to carve the duck
        He said "Who wants the parson's nose
        And the prisoners shouted
        "you have it yourself sir"

        The vicar brought his bible
        And read out little bits
        Said one old crone at the back of the hall
        "This man gets on
        very well with everybody"

        The workhouse mistress then began
        To hand out Christmas parcels
        The paupers tore the wrappers off
        And began to wipe their
        eyes, which were full of tears

        The master rose to make a speech
        But just before he started
        The mistress, who was fifteen stone
        Gave three loud cheers and
        nearly choked herself

        And all the paupers then began
        To pull their Christmas crackers
        One pauper held his too low down
        And blew off both his
        paper hat and the man's next to him

        A steaming bowl of white bread sauce
        Was handed round to some
        An aged gourmet called aloud
        "This bread sauce tastes like
        it was made by a continental chef"

        Mince pie with custard sauce was next
        And each received a bit
        One pauper said "The mince pie's nice
        But the custard tastes like
        the bread sauce we had in the last verse !"

        The mistress dishing out the food
        Dropped custard down her front
        She cried "Aren't I a silly girl"
        And they answered "You're a
        perfect picture as always ma'am !"

        "This pudding ", said the master
        "It's solid, hard and thick
        how am I going to cut it ?"
        And a man cried "Use your
        penknife sir, the one with the pearl handle"

        The mistress asked the vicar
        To entertain his flock
        He said "What would you like to see ?"
        And they cried "Let's see your
        conjuring tricks, they're always worth watching"

        "Your reverence may I be excused ?"
        Said one benign old chap
        "I don't like conjuring tricks
        I'd sooner have a
        carol or two around the fire"

        So then they all began to sing
        Which shook the workhouse walls
        "Merry Christmas!" cried the master
        And the inmates shouted
        "Best of luck to you as well sir !"

        Anonymous (I think.)

        Regards,
        Autolycus.
        "...a snapper-up of unconsidered trifles."

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        • #49
          Thanks Autolycus---my dear father used to love to recite this at Christmas---he knew every word by heart.No,it is"nt anonymous and what is so fascinating here is that it was written by Sir Melville Macnaghten"s journalist friend George Sims,who enjoyed the East End,particularly Whitechapel High Street which even in 1888 was a wide thoroughfare with market stalls all along it.Sims loved its colourful atmosphere especially at the weekend when,according to articles he wrote, lovely young Jewesses would parade in their best outfits!
          Regards,
          Norma
          Last edited by Natalie Severn; 12-01-2010, 10:47 AM.

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          • #50
            Thanks for the information, Limehouse.

            It sounds as if your Dad and my Grandad might have had the same sense of humour. Did he do "There's a Little Yellow Idol..." too?

            Regards,
            Autolycus.
            "...a snapper-up of unconsidered trifles."

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by Ally View Post
              Did you know that there is an entire society in the States that has built up around that poem? Older ladies get together wear red hats and purple and hang out. It's called the Red Hat Society. I've always thought that was amusing. Younger members are allowed to join but they can' t wear red hats, they have to wear pink.
              I got cornered in a sushi bar by a gang of Red Hats one time--a terrifying yet invigorating experience

              Oy Vey, but they were raucous!
              “Sans arme, sans violence et sans haine”

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              • #52
                Something appropriate for both post-Thanksgiving and pre-Xmas:

                Wishbone

                “Come pull the wishbone dear,” she said,
                While wishing that her spouse were dead
                Her hubby smiled and said, “I’m game”
                While wishing pretty much the same

                The pair could not believe their eyes
                Each wishbone piece was equal size
                They went to bed without a peep
                And both died quietly in their sleep
                “Sans arme, sans violence et sans haine”

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                • #53
                  Not Waving But Drowning


                  Not Waving But Drowning
                  Nobody heard him, the dead man,
                  But still he lay moaning:
                  I was much further out than you thought
                  And not waving but drowning.

                  Poor chap, he always loved larking
                  And now he's dead
                  It must have been too cold for him his heart gave way,
                  They said.

                  Oh, no no no, it was too cold always
                  (Still the dead one lay moaning)
                  I was much too far out all my life
                  And not waving but drowning.


                  Stevie Smith

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                  • #54
                    A song, really, but a poem as well. For what it is, it's absolutely genius.

                    Song by Norm Sherman of the one and only Drabblecast.


                    Mike
                    huh?

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