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Speccie: Lost
The TV Crit Competition wasn't attempted by many of us. Bill Greenwell still won of course. You can find the whole thing below under 'Competition'.
Here's something we can all try. In fact I've found a second-hand thing of mine to put in. I'll post it up. No. 2633: Lost You are invited to submit a poem lamenting the loss of a small but important object (16 lines maximum). Please email entries, where possible, to lucy@spectator.co.uk by midday on 3 February. |
Anyone else remember this?
The Lost Seebakrascope Throw out my fangs, my stick-on boils, My stink bombs, my potato-gun, My fornicator’s unguent oils, My exploding rat (just see him run!), My itching powder by the ton, My pubic wig, my black face soap, My cornucopias of fun … Just bring my old Seebakrascope. Desires as sweet as chocolate mice, Desires that nothing else can reach, Want just this submarine device; It offers more than books can teach: Young girls undressing on the beach, Breasts that would tempt the very Pope, And bottoms downy as a peach … Yes, bring my old Seebakrascope. |
I looked it up and here is what I found:
Quote:
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Spent, Stolen or Strayed
This is an oldie, too, but may fall across the line with a polish:
Spent, Stolen or Strayed How desperately I miss it. Though the joy it gave was often countered by the pain, what I would give to hold that strange alloy of precious gold and blemished brass again. Though slightly tarnished with the vexing stain that reckless inexperience impressed upon it, how I hunger to regain the prize that I so long ago possessed. So often it's belatedly we vest our assets with a worth beyond their cost; we estimate the gifts with which we're blessed too loosely till they are forever lost. Lambasted with the rod of self-reproof, how wretchedly I miss my vanished youth. oOOo |
Are fish objects, John?
THE THING IN A SHEET
Beware, this drama’s quite unclean. Cast: Undersigned, Defunct Sardine. I opened up their tomb of tin And turned out all the fish therein. And then - oh shame, I hang my head - I ate them, sitting up in bed. Which fact, unsavoury but true, Please blame on solitude and 'flu. Alas, to loud convulsive oaths One lost itself beneath the clothes! After some frantic hide-and-seek There still remained its haunting reek. And so for days my room could boast A faint elusive oily ghost. |
The diapers, wipes, and warmers are
all packed securely in the car, with stroller, car seat, pacifier, a hair-(spit-up-on-clothing-)dryer, the breast pump and the nursing bra, the burp cloths, bottles, formu-la, the rattle, mobile, music box, and lots of teeny, tiny socks, shoes, shirts, pants, blankets--boyish blue-- of course, a change of onesie, too, and hats and mittens, if there's snow. We're ready. Where'd the baby go? Probably too predictable and too full of Americanisms. Maybe: Alas, to this week's competition I cannot contemplate submission. I have, you see, a one-month son (As I've been telling everyone). It took, therefore, no time at all For me to think about a small, Important object I'd lament The loss of. Should this heaven-sent And infinitely precious prize Be lost... The thought just horrifies. All parents are aware my peace, At such a loss, would fully cease. Of this misfortune parent folk Could never even think to joke; The tragedy would be too dire. (I mean, of course, his pacifier.) Is "pacifier" what you folks call it in Britain, too? |
If it's the thing you stick in his mouth to shut him up, that's a dummy. I like the first one best.
And, Jerome, re fish, yes I think a sardine from a tin is an object. |
THE PIN
I've lost my tiny little pin. Disaster, I'm afraid. Too bad I didn't also lose the whole damn hand grenade. |
Thanks, John. You Brits have always got better names for everything. I've been calling it his phony nipple, but "dummy" is much more succinct. I guess the ending should be
It's not a joke to Dad or Mummy. (Of course, I'm speaking of his dummy.) Of course, neither of my attempts is a lament, not for the lost object. Bob/Roger, another gem from you! |
Thank you, Max. I liked both your poems but your second poem more than your first, though you had me worried since I didn't see the punchline coming. Congratulations on the baby! There's really nothing better.
One more try: Lament for a Lost Rabbit's Foot I've lost the lucky rabbit's foot I bought when I was ten, and though I must admit my life has not gone well since then (bad health, bad marriage, bad divorce), make no mistake about it: life's bound get a whole lot worse in years to come without it. |
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