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New Statesman -- picnics, September 6 deadline
Unhappy al fresco dining memories, anyone?
No 4242 Set by Leonora Casement We would like you to send in verses all about the horrors of picnics. An entry many years ago to a similar competition read as follows: Here I am an old man with a dry mouth, Bitten by flies among the cowpats Eating dead winkles with a crooked pin. And the end is the beginning, and tomorrow It will be wasps at Runnymede . . . Max 20 lines by 6 September comp@newstatesman.co.uk |
Well surely someone here can do something better than that old "winner." Yikes!
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We spread the blanket, sorted out the goodies,
Anticipating how we’d be delighted By salmon, lobster, creamy little puddies ... A family arrived, quite uninvited: Two parents, three young girls, a pair of babies That rapidly grew smellier and damper, A snarling dog that made us think of rabies Who, having peed against our picnic hamper, Ran off with half a leg of roasted chicken Then bounded back for more, obscenely drooling. Their youngest daughter managed to be sick in The bucket where our Bollinger was cooling. Grabbing her twins, the mother got them teating; The others started chewing something rancid. ‘Bon appetit!’ they said, but we weren’t eating; We’d lost our appetite for what we’d fancied. At last, the picnic interval was finished. Although we felt unnourished, cross and weary, Our spirits crushed, our joie de vivre diminished, Without a picnic, Glyndebourne would be dreary. |
Had we but beer enough and time,
a lovely picnic were no crime. We would char our burgers,catch some rays, (I'll have to hide that batch of cookies you call ginger snaps!) and pass our stomachs' day with naps and nips of grapes. But you brought the hissing ogress--now, instead of kissing and sipping my Merlot we'll have to kow tow, suck up and behave as if a goddess had stopped by. In an hour you'll run off and cry. I don't know about you, my dear: I know the perfect foggy pier-- where she could take a healthful dip with a concrete block we'd slip around her neck. You think that's mean? I think your so-called mom's obscene. |
I wrote this some years ago, but never did anything about it. Do you thnk it would fall ithin the parameters?
The Picnic (A report of this incident is to be found in The Times, June 2006) In the park of the southern city, students are having a picnic, A picnic on clean white cloths in the late spring sunshine, When many men attack them in the name of Islam, Many dozens of men, all armed with sticks and rifles, Pouring into the park of the fly-blown southern city, With sticks and AK47s for the protection of Islam. They shouted out that we were immoral, That we were meeting, girls and boys together, And playing music, expressly against Islam. They shot into the air and people screamed, Then at a single order they began to beat us With sticks and rifle butts, calling on Islam. And standing over them, as the blows rained down, Black-robed, black turbanned (they recognise him immediately), A representative of Hojatoleslam Moqtada al-Sadr, The chosen one of the Prophet, peace be upon him. |
John – it's within the unusually generous 20-line limit, it features a picnic & there's horror there without feeding in the clichés of ants, rain, sad sandwiches, etc. No laughs, but the rubric doesn't prescribe comedy. So yes.
Though I do think humour is your forte. |
I think so too, Bazza, but (a) I can't think of any jokes about picnics and (b) the Staggers doesn't have much of a sense of humour, does it? So I'll give it a go.
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It'll certainly stand out from the crowd, John. Not sure about the following as possibly already pre-emptively kneed in the Prince Harrys by Bazza.
The lettuces are limp green baize, The tongue a leathery disaster; The pies have seen far better days, The ham resembles sticking-plaster; The chicken's perfect cotton-wool, The cheese is culturing a spore - No thanks, I feel a little full . . . Is there a doctor on the moor? |
Picnic Horrors
I've had two goes at this, from opposite viewpoints:
“Them!” As in old B-movies, We’re now facing ant-attacks; They’re making for the trifle And (worse) creeping up my slacks. I wish we’d brought a rifle, Or some flamethrower backpacks – Oh why did we decide to come and picnic? Wasps? They wouldn’t be so bad; These hornets are far worse! Some armaments would make me glad - Their lack just makes me curse. Is DDT still outlawed? Gad! Try swatting with a purse... Oh why did we decide to come and picnic? ‘Scenic views?’ Oh I suppose There’s your red face and mine, Begrimed with sweat and bugged by woes - If that look suits us fine? These swarms will surely join our toast – They’ve brought their own sweet whine. and (the point of view I feel more sympathy with): The horror! Lids are on too tight; No chance to swiftly wing in For an opportunistic bite Of whatever they bring in. These humans have our end in sight, But not our ends! We suffer The loss of gifts at summer’s height, Now picnickers are tougher. No more their fear of yesteryear At wasp’s buzz or ant-sighting; With sprays and zapping traps, it’s clear They’re undismayed: it’s slighting! We used to rule the countryside, And they were the invaders; Now their defence is multiplied, And see how weak they’ve made us. Hermetic sealing – unappealing - how unfeeling! Pesticides, insecticides; electrocuting, persecuting. We only claim a tiny share; but do these humans care? No: “Bug out of our picnics,” they all say. Ah, how unfair! |
Quote:
Is there a sub-text here: "You lot can do better than this"? ;) Jayne |
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