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-   -   The Oldie and the Recession (https://www.ablemuse.com/erato/showthread.php?t=5310)

Jim Hayes 11-22-2008 10:18 AM

My favorite is 15-8 on.
Although that's maybe when the race begins.

R. S. Gwynn 11-22-2008 11:32 AM

Recession Confession (1958)

When I was young I stuck my tongue out sometimes at my Dad
Because he'd say, "Back in my day we really had it bad.
I'd work full-time to earn a dime, and put it in the bank.
Kids now just spend and so they'll end up one day in the tank."

And then I'd wake at dawn's first break to hear the rattling cash
He tried to shake from my own stake, my private little stash,
The bank that he had given me, a sailor-man of brass.
His voice was strange: "I just need change for coffee and some gas."

So when I'd go to check my dough I'd take my hollow man
And shake him ‘round to hear a sound like dry leaves in a can.
I had to see and used the key I'd hidden with my shoes,
And out would fall the scraps of all my Daddy's I. O. U.'s.

I'm not dismayed; he always paid me back, eventually,
Redeem his notes and watch stock-quotes. I never asked a fee
For what he took, but now I look to feather my own nest.
I should have said, "Just take it, Dad, but I CHARGE INTEREST!"

Jim Hayes 11-22-2008 11:50 AM

It's topping but I just wonder how it would be if it ended on a more rueful note- building up to How much I'd have if I'd charged interest?
Just a thought.

Janet Kenny 11-22-2008 11:41 PM

Recession Confession


The worst of times the best of times!
Despite the credit crunch,
Largesse will camouflage our crimes
And take us out to lunch.

Our monetarist Friedman creed
Will bend to Keynesian gales.
With modesty we drink to Greed
And tip the bathroom scales.

We smug fat cats sit on the mat
As assets stripped reveal
We still retain our habitat.
It is our pain you feel.

Calloo calay we take our pay
And spend your money too.
They bail us out so we can say
We did it all for you.



[This message has been edited by Janet Kenny (edited November 23, 2008).]

Julie Steiner 11-24-2008 09:37 AM

This one is probably too dated for such a late deadline, and over 16 lines--maybe I should ax the first stanza. Anyway, here's my effort:

[Relineated into 12 lines, per John's suggestion below. Plus a few other tweaks. Thanks, John!]

The flowers are dead. The leaves have fled. All colors have forgotten us
But red and green. The Yuletide scene each year grows more monotonous.
But wait! What's that? A bold éclat of neon Astrobrite!
A GOING OUT OF BUSINESS banner! What a welcome sight!

The shops' displays for holidays have bothered me each year.
Their mercenary making-merry seemed so insincere.
But this year, see how honestly they're drooling for my dough?
They're GOING OUT OF BUSINESS now, and EVERYTHING MUST GO!

Now churchy types can cease their gripes at neutral SEASON'S GREETINGS;
The pew-averse won't have to curse those MERRY CHRISTMAS sheetings.
Now no one whines at storefront signs' divisive words of peace!
Ah, GOING OUT OF BUSINESS! And the hopeful phrase FOR LEASE!

Julie Stoner



[This message has been edited by Julie Stoner (edited November 24, 2008).]

John Whitworth 11-24-2008 10:57 AM

I think that is jolly good, Julie and you can always relineate in in very long lines. I'd hate to cut any of it. Give it a go.

Martin Elster 11-29-2008 09:55 PM

Recession Confession #2 (Revised Dec. 1)

Dirk’s unemployed. Things he’d enjoyed are distant as the bees.
Yet he would say it doesn’t weigh on him. For groceries
He rides his bike now down the pike. He never drives a car,
And rarely goes to movies, shows, or to the sushi bar.

Yet life’s as fine as warm sunshine. He’s not the only soul
Who’s lost his job. Joe, Janet, Bob are also in a hole.
Last week the bank, like a mean prank, chose to foreclose his home.
Yet he had time to write a rhyme (a splendid little poem),

And mailed it to a contest, hit the jackpot, now he’s rich.
And in a word, the thing had stirred him toward his lifetime niche.
His friends are free to come and see the proverbs he has penned,
Like, “Steep declines can lead to lines that bring a dividend.”

Being out of work is fun for Dirk when art is all he’ll care for.
At dawn he writes, at dusk recites to anyone and, therefore,
It’s no surprise that, in his eyes, there is a hint of glee
When he sings how great is the current state of the economy.

-- Martin Elster



[This message has been edited by Martin Elster (edited December 01, 2008).]

Martin Elster 01-29-2009 12:53 AM

Does anyone know who won the 'RecessionConfession' contest?

John Whitworth 01-29-2009 05:00 AM

There were four winners but none of us made it. Since 'The Oldie' is not on the web you have to buy it to know. But fear not. I will keep you up to date. I thought some of ours were better than any of theirs, but that's the way it goes with competitions. I would print the winner but it's a bit of a sweat. His name is Peter Davies.

Martin Elster 01-29-2009 01:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by John Whitworth (Post 93309)
There were four winners but none of us made it. Since 'The Oldie' is not on the web you have to buy it to know. But fear not. I will keep you up to date. I thought some of ours were better than any of theirs, but that's the way it goes with competitions. I would print the winner but it's a bit of a sweat. His name is Peter Davies.

Thanks, John. I thought some of ours were pretty damn good.


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