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The Oldie 'On The Road' results
Hells bells! Our Devil-may-care John has done it again, with yet another fiendishly good entry. No other spherians (I think) join him; one has to be careful saying things like that, with so many pseudonyms around.
Many congratulations, John. (It must be nice to make a habit out of winning :D) Next comp on new thread called 'Missed Appointment'. ON THE ROAD by Tessa Castro IN COMPETITION NO 141 you were invited to write a Song of the Road to the tune of your choice. Oddly, the most popular tune was that of ‘Yesterday’, which doesn’t provide any special advantage that I can see. Other tunes sometimes made the words jauntier than they would otherwise seem. Frank McDonald put his ‘We’re on the Road to Chaos’ to the tune of ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer’. Shirley Wadhams’s line ‘Bollards, bollards, what a lot of bollards’ benefitted from the lilt of Stawberry Fair’. I couldn’t remember how ‘Tumbling Tumbleweeds’, composed in the 1930s by Bob Nolan, went, so I found it on YouTube sung by his own Sons of the Pioneers, as Michael Heber-Percy suggested. That was an unexpected benefit from an altogether cheering bundle of entries. Commiserations to those mentioned, and congratulations to those printed below, each of whom wins £25, with the bonus prize of a welcome road’s-end Taylor’s of Harrogate tea and cake set going to the diabolical John Whitworth. [Tune: ‘My Way’] My primrose path from God, I have to own, looked none too clever. That Sanctimonious Sod Said I was down and out for ever. My prayer was, from the start To walk that final end-is-nigh way, And swear, with all my heart, I did it my way. Father, Son and Holy Ghost And all the Hosts of Holy Terror Supposed that I was toast But, mark my words, they were in error. Mankind (how could they lose?) – His was their live-and-never-die way – Still blindly sought to choose, And did it my way. John Whitworth [Tune: ‘O God, Our Help in Ages Past’] Our Scottish highland roads weren’t tarred Until I reached my teens, And, though to drive was very hard, We shared our bonny scenes With few, if any, Sassenachs Or tourists from the South; Or journalists, mere third-rate hacks, Or any one uncouth To blot our landscape. Now it’s more Than difficult, it’s hell To move on roads, with cars galore, And charabancs as well. For with McAdam’s mixture they Are covered, overlaid; And he a Scot, too – curse the day He gave us tar! ’Nuff said. Edward Garden [Tune: ‘There is a Tavern in the Town’] Kind rural road twist, wind and bump, Across the fields from parish pump, Beside the rook-infested trees, Past Wingfield bell and Syleham leas. Leave now that haven, safe, sedate And join the B-one-one-one-eight Where daffodils bestrew the lanes, Where once St Edmund cursed the Danes. Go loop around the flaxen crop Where owls look on and rabbits hop, Go out round Waveney’s crooked line, By Hoxne Church and Oakley swine. The A-one-forty looms in sight, With crashing gear and planning blight, A world apart, a quantum jump, Across the field from parish pump. Peter Davies [Tune: ‘Onward Christian Soldiers’] Roadworks at the roundabout, Causing long delays, Follow the diversion. Lasting forty days. There’s a squad car at the site, Warning! – Mud on roads, Most essential road improvement. Watch for crossing toads. At the blinking speed trap lights, Slow to almost stop. Watch out for the lady With her lollipop. Parking on the yellow line Means a fine for sure. Turn left at the riding stables – D.I.Y. manure. Peter E Pavey |
John - 'diabolical'? ;)
He's a very nice bloke actually :D |
The concept of Satan crooning to the tune of "My Way" is, indeed, diabolically brilliant. (Sinatra is an anagram of I.R. Satan.) And the execution is heavenly. Enjoy this latest prize, John.
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The funny thing is Lucy didn't like this much. I entered in originally for a Speccie competition, though I can't remember what the task was. But then I won £1000 with a poem that had been refused elsewhere. There's a moral in this.
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it happens
And the poem that won the LR biggie for me last year only got a tenner first time round. Let us count our blessings and not worry about the vagaries of judges. You'll soon have tea mugs up the wazoo.
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