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Competition: Housekeeping
Competition No. 2655
Wednesday, 14th July 2010 Lucy Vickery presents the latest competition In Competition No. 2655 you were asked to submit a poem about a mundane household task such as boiling an egg or changing a light bulb in the style of a poet of your choice. Pastiche always pulls in the crowds, and true to form the entries came flooding in. Commendations go to Virginia Price Evans, Paul Griffin, Martin Parker, Gee McIlraith and Tim Raikes, all of whom were unlucky losers. But a pat on the back all round: entries were almost uniformly magnificent and it was extremely tough to choose only a handful. The winners are printed below and earn their authors £25 each. The bonus fiver belongs to George Simmers. Each morn resplendent angels swept the rich Brocaded carpets of the Heavenly halls With whirring Dysons, and let marvel none That such machinery was there, for Heaven’s store Holds all devices that God’s providence Has planned for human weal in future times. Satan was on that rota; with deft skill He could all four attachments utilise To clean fine tapestries and yet harm not The lustrous filigrees of golden thread. Which work gave him great joy, till Raphael With Mister Muscle made the kitchen shine, For which all Heaven garnished him with praise, Ignoring Satan’s efforts, and the thoughts Of that bright angel darkened, breeding vast Resentful Pride, and so began all woe. George Simmers/Milton Into the neutral the blue wire goes. Once it was black; things change I suppose. The live one is brown. It used to be red, Bringing to mind a decade long dead. My wife is impatient. She wants the tv. She likes Antiques Roadshow, doesn’t like me. A trivial task, but it’s making me sweat. I daren’t pop out for a quick cigarette. My neighbour gave up. He put on three stone. Now the women leave him alone. Earth is bi-coloured, yellow and green. I’d rather be reading a men’s magazine. I’m missing a screw, but it’s always the case. First you lose love, then you lose face. When I’ve done this I’ll get out the car And go for a drive, but not very far. Basil Ransome-Davies/W.H. Auden’s Plug-Wiring Blues The Sock Drawer is a little Ark — Whose Dwellers two by two Are first a Mound — of Wantonness The Laundress must undo. Entangled, newly clean and dry, They hide out — from the Hand That vetoes bachelor Debauch — And publishes — the Banns. The Matchmaker’s Intent is firm — She finds and rolls — each Pair, Coordinate Habiliments For ten-toed Twins to — share. Yet mirthful Providence conspires On every washing Day — That when the even Task is done, Still Oddness — claims one Stray. Chris O’Carroll/Emily Dickinson Much have I rubbed ’long grimy skirting boards And many dusty greying cobwebs seen; Round furring carpet-edges have I been Where furtive moths are hatching in their hordes. Behind old furniture for rich rewards Of dirt, dead flies, cat hair and grit I glean And counted all time lost until, to clean, I bought a vacuum cleaner without cords. Then felt I like some warrior on speed When a new sword is fitted to his hand, Or like a weary traveller whose steed Brings him at length to an untrodden land Where all the world is young — and saw no need To creep on ageing knees but took my stand. D.A. Prince/Keats Draw up from Arethusa’s sacred rill One shimm’ring pan, nor any droplet spill; With proper caution, lest the shell should break, From neath Dame Partlet now the ovoid take, And while the kettle on the hob doth sing The speckled embryo to the kitchen bring And gently with a silvern ladle urge The oval feast into the seething surge. Now tip the timer over with your hand, Where lucent glass combines with desert sand: With butter from the Fresian, clover-fed Smoothe o’er the finely slivered wheaten bread, And when the sands have run prepare the cup From which the fair Belinda soon shall sup, And in its clay the light-boil’d feast exalt Attended by a tiny Alp of salt. Gerard Benson/Alexander Pope Shuck off its husk, The scorched-papery cloak, Then peel away The clinging underthing: Stripped stark It lies moon-pale Innocent of trappings, Clenched in its roundness. Under the knife The glistening thing becomes The ball of Polyphemus’ eye: Ichor oozes, films the blade. The cleft halves, cut across And cut again, Reduce to tesserae. W.J. Webster/Ted Hughes |
Yipee!
John - may I thank you for the sterling work you do, making the Comp available on a Thursday? Paper copies of the Spectator don't reach South Northamptonshire till Friday, or sometimes even Saturday, so on the irregular occasions when I've entered, it's good to know the jolly (or more often depressing) news earlier. I'd been lurking around here for a little while (D. A. Prince alerted me to what was going on) and finally thought it only sensible to join in properly. Keep up the good work. George |
So Prince is a sleeper, eh, George? How many others, I wonder. The transatlantic, and indeed Transpacific injection of talent has served to sharpen us all up. Congratulations again. Are you the George Simmers who edits the Poetry zine to which I have in the past contributed but whose name just for the senior moment eludes me?
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George, I have done so. And you must also be the ex-teacher who is fearsomely intelligent according to one of your (rather dyslexic) pupils. Ah well. We on the Sphere are ALL fearsomely intelligent. I once found, through the Readers Digest that, though not as intelligent as Shakeseare, I WAS as intelligent as Cervantes.
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Ah, you've found my rating on that deadly site, www.ratemyteachers.com. Honestly, I didn't write it myself.
The actual assessment goes: "He is so intelegant, he is on the brink of insanity. words cannot express his glory." I may arrange to have that carved on my tombstone. |
George,
A big welcome to you, and congratulations on your much-deserved win! South Northamptonshire? We must be neighbours; I'll PM my address in case you'd care to honour me with a visit. Well done Bazza, Chris and Martin, too. |
Prince a sleeper, eh, John? Ah, but did you know that Prince is in fact a Princess? You could always try a whiskery kiss...
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Yes, John, I've seen Davina A. referred to as 'he', which surprised me. I thought everyone knew she was a poet with 'ess' on the end. (You probably can't use that word any more, like you can't say 'actress', can you? They're all ac-tors now.)
D.A. is perhaps our third most famous female living poet, I reckon, after Wendy Cope and Carole-Ann Duffy - or fourth if you count Pam Ayres, who actually prefers to be called a 'humorist'. |
Sorry about that There is an Alison Prince also. Same lady?
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