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Speccie Taking Fright by 26th September
Back to verse this week. I shall celebrate by winning. Just you see.
No. 2766: taking fright You are invited to submit a poem about a phobia (16 lines maximum). Email entries, wherever possible, to lucy@spectator.co.uk by midday on 26 September. |
Aviophobia
We’re booked to go by Squalidair. The bloody plane is just not there For hours and hours and God knows why. Without a plane we cannot fly. I love a ship, a train, a car. I cannot love a winged cigar Plus passport/ticket/visa crap Plus baggage magicked off the map, Nor yet the deserts we have made Where aeroplanes can ply their trade: The tacky bars, the pricey shops, The toilets blocked with horrid slops, The queues that snake from here to here, The smell of sweat, the stink of fear, The fear we do not care to name, Of crashing in a sheet of flame. |
Glossophobia
To speak in public’s not my thing, it fills my heart with dread. From the time I know that I must speak, I’m sensing doom ahead. Perhaps I will forget my lines and completely lose my place. A teleprompter might screw up and fail to keep apace. My voice might crack, my nose might run, Some gas I might emit. My hand might tremble, the pointer shake, and signal I’m unfit. In the rare event, none of these occur and, in the end, there’s applause, I feel as if I’ve survived a war and risked my life for the cause. |
Bathophobia
I'm not going in there, mommy. There's water on the wall. I know I'm dirty. There's mud in my ears. But you just don't know about all my fears. I'm not going in that tub and that's all! I don't care. So there's a small garden between my toes. I love gardens. Gardens are a good thing. Eden was a garden. Gardens are where birds sing. It does look odd, though--where my big toe grows baby carrots and itsy bitsy spuds. OK, let's rethink. The kids at school don't want garden toes mucking about. Will I get water up my nose? OK, no nose water. But first, a trial run in the kitchen sink? |
They say I’m lazy, feckless, workshy, good-for-nothing, idle,
They’ve cut my benefits until I’m nearly suicidal. “Get up and go to work!” they cry, “you need an occupation.” I’ve bought alarm clocks, but they give me tintinnabulation. It’s really not my fault, I’m not a skiving, scrounging berk; I simply have this allergy that means I cannot work. On reading ‘Jobs Available’, my body burns and tingles, And I’m debilitated by another bout of shingles. The very thought of office jobs - those dreadful nine-to-fives - Can bring me out in painful rashes, eczema and hives. I’ve tried explaining my predicament to social workers, But all they do is sneer, and say “We’ve had enough of shirkers.” At last I’ve found a sympathetic doc who knows his onions; He’s signed me off, describing all my pustules, boils and bunions: “This man’s unfit to work, I’ve never seen a case that’s Job-ier; He suffers from a rare disease called Ergasiophobia.” |
This one may puzzle American Spherians.
Toxophobia At seven, from the neighbouring room, News headlines first, then sure as doom, That tune presaging mental pain With jaunty chutzpah spews again Relentlessly from the machine. Vile ‘Barwick Green’. Calm start. Jill plans the village fête, But still I hyperventilate. Salt sweat’s erupting from my brow Though it’s just Grundies burbling now About a cow. But it will come, I know it will, That sound as screeching as it’s shrill, That sound my nightmares know too well. I hear the voice of Linda Snell. I am in Hell. |
Oh yes, 'The Archers', George; stuff of nightmares. ;)
I break out in an awful sweat. I cannot sleep at night. You won’t believe the state I get myself into. The fright envelops me till I can’t think; I hyperventilate. I pour myself another drink. I’m terrified... THE DATE – the date by which I have to send a poem to the judge is looming up. I haven’t penned a word; my brain is sludge. (This phobia – is it named yet?) I also wonder whether I would be cured if I could get my bloody act together! |
Jayme, I found a vast list of phobias here:
http://phobialist.com/ but I couldn't find one relating to competitions or missing the date. I found a couple that I think must be taken with a pinch of salt: Arachibutyrophobia - Fear of peanut butter sticking to the roof of the mouth. Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia - Fear of long words. I also found 'dentophobia', but I hardly need to tell what that is. |
Speccie phobias
My effort, heartfelt if nothing else...
The non-Nordic nymph at IKEA Sensed my flat-pack assembling fear. ‘Now yer knows if it isn’t quite working out right Call Samaritans noombah tonight’ It’s their (no bloody)helpline she meant Which one phones when the allen key’s bent And four holes don’t align through five pieces of pine As shown here on this Escher design. All conspiracy theories aside, I’m convinced for a laugh(!) the Swedes (?) hide At least one mutant screw which might look like it’s true ‘Til it’s turned and you turn the air blue. Group therapy tried, did not fit. Must have caught that from using their kit. “Complete” the doc said ‘You have made your own bed’...” Quoth I “Kip in the cardboard instead” |
One line too many; one fear too far...
Afraid of Days
I am afraid of the days when nothing happens Because of the nights they end in. Here they wait, The meannesses I thought I got away with, The faces of the friends I disappointed, The good impulses never followed-up. I am afraid of the days when nothing happens Because I know the night will answer back And all the things I dread will come about, Playing themselves to a not-quite-conclusion Leaving me at the torn-off edge of grief. I am afraid of the days when nothing happens Because the door at the end of them creaks uneasily, Swings in the wind of a thousand drowsing questions Letting a little light through and then slamming, Leaving the answers freaking in the dark. I am afraid of the days when nothing happens Because of the nights, the nights when it all does. |
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