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Holly Martins 01-14-2009 03:59 AM

Poems from Howlers
 
Marilyn Taylor’s malapropism poem on TDE shows a howler skewing the world slightly, startling us into a different way of thinking - as poems often do. There’s an inexhaustible supply of boo-boos out there to write poems about - why not have a go? Here’s my starter:



CIRCUS POLKA

Stravinsky wrote the polka
for one of the younger
elephants in Barnum and
Bailey’s circus who had
commissioned the piece

Record sleeve note

O Barnum jumbo,
elephant rare,
commission me!
I’ve musical flair -
Stravinsky’s stuff
is cold and spare,
(he even steals,
March Militaire).

You’ll like my polka,
brass will blare
round circus rings
(round never square)
for I will write
with grateful care,
and you will dance
like Fred Astaire.

Janet Kenny 01-14-2009 06:59 AM

Holly that's just brilliant ;-)

It's too late here for me to drum something up and I will never be able to faintly match yours.
Janet

A. E. Stallings 01-14-2009 09:43 AM

I guess the most famous of this genre would be Elizabeth Bishop's Man-Moth (from a misprint of mammoth)...

Rick Mullin 01-14-2009 10:54 AM

Sorry, We’re Open!
(A sign seen at a kiosk behind the Blue Mosque, Istanbul, 2004)

Beware of God,
Americans!
We do not mean
To bother you
With carpet sales,
Go Trespassing!

John Whitworth 01-14-2009 11:15 AM

Never having been averse to blowing my own trumpet here's a little thing from my EXCELLENT book 'Bing the Bad Guy':

How Many?

The first line is from ‘Bushisms’, a little yellow book everyone should own.

How many hands have I shaked?
How many geese have I cuken?
How many bribes have I taked?
How many lies have I puken?
How many promises breaked?
How many enemies nuken?

How many saves have I baconen?
How many bulls have I shatted?
How many earths have I quakenen?
How many highs have I hatted
How many grasses bin snakenen?
How many scenes bin well quatted?

How many warms have I freezened?
How many nonsenses natteren?
How many palms have I greasened?
How many truths have I ratteren?
How many reasons unreasoned?
How many stinking fish batteren?

How many documents fakenen?
How many treaties forgotted?
How many bad guys outstakenen?
How many terrorists potted?
How many widows upwakenen?
How many kiddikins shotted?

Mary Meriam 01-14-2009 11:52 AM

Fantastically funny, John!!! Thanks.

John Whitworth 01-14-2009 02:02 PM

Thank you, Mary. I ought to say that though Bing was, very possibly, a bad guy - his children didn't like him much, though has they been less talentless layabouts... and he seems to have screwed Hope out of monwey,though is that necessarily so bad... and he certainly was a slaughterer of wild fowl big time ... nevertheless the book I mentioned is ACTUALLY Being the Bad Guy.

Rick Mullin 01-14-2009 02:10 PM

John,

I can't tell you how much I prefer Bing the Bad Guy. I won't even try, but I'll tell you I didn't even go to the Crosby reference.

Rick

Jim Hayes 01-14-2009 04:44 PM

Oh.
I'm so disappointed it isn't Bing the Bad Guy.

Julie Steiner 01-14-2009 05:06 PM

Church Bulletin

Which inspires more penitence:
the thought of "Cannon Law",
or the thought of "Alter Servers"?
Yikes. It's pretty much a draw.

Susan McLean 01-14-2009 06:14 PM

Poem removed so that I can try submitting it. Thanks for the suggestion of Verbatim, Janice. That seems an appropriate venue.

Susan

Maryann Corbett 01-14-2009 06:20 PM

Dreadfully, hopelessly wonderful, all of you--though I have a special sympathy with that church bulletin of Julie's.

Maryann

Jim Hayes 01-16-2009 08:42 AM

This consists of something like 25 sonnets of which, no doubt to everyone's relief, I've only posted nine.

Blame Marilyn.


The History of the World

Guinnesses is the first book of the bible.
In the garden of Eden Adam was under a tree
making out with a serpent, the outcome of this foible
gave mankind a messy cottage as a legacy.
Adam and Eve christened their first son Cain
who asked of them; “Am I my brother’s son?”
When Eve’s fig leaf shrunk, caught in the rain,
that’s when the sin of interest was begun.
Soon after, Noah landed on Mt Arafat
where Jacob, son of Isaac, stole his birthmark.
Jacob raised up twelve sons and said that
each of them would be a Pontiac.
Joseph’s coats were truly way-out sights
and he gave refuse to the Israelites.

The Egyptians were called mummies who crossed
the Nubile and Sarah desserts by Camelot.
They all wrote in hydraulics which got lost
but were found by Rosetta Stone- a polyglot.
The climate of the Sarah is so hostile
the natives have always lived elsewhere.
Stable crops were grown there for a while
watered by irritation against the glare.
The Faroes built the pyramids. In the main
they were copied from a large triangular funnel.
The Pyramids are mountains next to Spain;
beneath them the Andorrants built a tunnel
so they could go to France by underground
where Cleopatra’s needle could be found.

The Faroe gave the Jews unleavened bread-
A kind of bread that doesn’t have any ingredients;
Moses was boss of the Hebrew slaves and led
them to the Red Sea tasting their obedience.
Afterwards he went and climbed Mt Cyanide
where he got the ten commandments wrote in stone.
Lot’s wife turned to salt when she tried
looking back at Saddam on her own.
David was really good playing the liar;
he fought against the Philatelists who said Ruth
seduced them all, so David sacked their empire
saying half the lies they told were not the truth.
Solomon was his son in Biblical times,
and he had forty wives and ninety porcupines.

We wouldn’t have any history without the Geeks,
They invented many things including a column
that was Corinthian, Doris and Ironic- all antiques.
For a sculptured race that was stoic and solemn
the Geeks were know to have a lot of myths.
A myth is a female moth. A myth once said
Achilles mother dipped him in the Styx
until he became intolerable and couldn’t be dead.
Achilles appears in “The Lily Ad” that asks
if Homer wrote “The Oddity” which tells
of Penelope’s hardship when Ulysses’ tasks
made Harps attract him with fatal smells.
Socrates was a Geek who gave advice
and died of wedlock which he swallowed twice.

His career went into decline on his demise;
In Olympic games the Geek athletes ran races
Hurled the biscuits, threw the java, the prize
Was a coral wreath. The modern Olympics traces
its origins back to a barn the cool Bert ran.
In Athens all the men were Democrats
and riled when Plato claimed he was Utopian.
he had mostly loveless friendships after that.
By the Hellespont Hero waited in her Porche
while Meander swam around to her side;
She showered him where he was by flashing. A torch
led him astray where he wondered and died.
In battle the Geeks were outnumbered now and then
but only when their opponents had more men.

Finally the Romanys conkered the Ancient Geeks
Romans didn’t stay anywhere for long-
that’s the reason they’re called Romans. Each one reeks
at banquets wearing wreaths that pong.
Calculus was an emperor. We can tell
he made his horse a senator ruling the masses
a tradition we’ve adopted here quite well;
though we’re inclined to makes senators out of asses.
In battle Caesar extinguished himself in Gaul
but the Ideas of March killed him because they taught
he was going to be crowned king above them all.
Brutus was the only one he caught;
“Tee hee Brutus” he called out with a gasp.
Mark Twain killed Cleopatra with an asp.

In Ireland all the steaks they had were banished;
St Patrick burned the lot in a brassiere.
So the Irish had nothing to eat and totally famished
waiting for spuds and America to appear.
King Alfred conkered the Dames in the Middle Ages.
King Arthur lived in the age of shivery.
King Harold mustered his troops, that was their wages.
At Hastings the bottling Normans fought for free.
St Joan of Ark was burned to a steak.
and was later canonized by Bernard Shaw.
The Black Death left a wholesome terror in its wake,
boobs grew on peoples necks against the law.
So the Magma Carta was enacted hence
no one could be hung twice for the same offence.

In Midevil times the people were alliterate
Though Chaucer was a writer in his prime
and wrote many poems and verses that were great.
He was also writing literature at the time.
A famous story never heard before
told about William tell and said
He shot an arrow through an apple core
while standing on his son’s unflinching head.
Knights went about saving damsons in a dress;
With Richard Dandelion on Crusade tours,
a miracle brought the Spanish great success.
Moses became El Cid to beat the Moores.
Robin hood was a pheasant plucker’s son,
plucking pheasants till the pheasant plucking’s done.

Susan McLean 01-16-2009 11:55 AM

Delightful, Jim. Don't you mean "Mt. Cyanide" in the third sonnet?

Susan

Jim Hayes 01-16-2009 12:45 PM

Of course. Susan many thanks, I'll change it.

If folk don't find it too overpowering I'll post the rest of it. Warning- it's long and includes Madman Curie- my favorite.

Jim

Janice D. Soderling 01-17-2009 04:30 AM

Susan

Notes from the Illiterati

ICheck out:

Verbatim.http://www.verbatimmag.com/writers.html

Your verse is delicious.


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