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Specie Competition Friendly Bombs
Well done Frank Osen. And only slightly less well done Adrian Fry, Chris O'Carroll and George Simmers.
Lucy Vickery 16 February 2013 In Competition No. 2784 you were invited to rewrite John Betjeman’s poem ‘Slough’, substituting the target of your choice. The poet Ian McMillan sprang to Slough’s defence in 2005 with ‘Slough Re-visited’, an antidote to Betjeman’s jaundiced take on the town: ‘Come friendly words and splash on Slough!/ Celebrate it, here and now/ Describe it with a gasp, a “wow!”/ Of Sweet Berkshire breath’. But according to Betjeman’s daughter, Candida Lycett-Green, her father regretted having written the 1937 poem, a fact acknowledged by Frank Osen and several others besides. Mr Osen takes £30; the rest £25. Although he lived to disavow His wish that bombs might fall on Slough, Soon bombs were raining, anyhow, From Hull to Henley. Would Betjeman have wanted moms In Grozny, Vukovar or Homs To read his plea for dropping bombs, Albeit friendly? No, he was more for conservation. See how his statue, in elation, Regards St Pancras’ preservation, Pleased at its sprawling. He wears a sharp, disarming air While goggling at the rooftop, where He seems relieved to see that there Is nothing falling. Frank Osen Come, friendly bombs and fall on Brussels. It stinks of money, chips and mussels And everyone is into hustles And parley voo. Your MEP is sleek and fat As is your venal Eurocrat, Both avaricious as a rat. As cunning, too. Their avatar, Jean-Claude Van Damme, An outsize slice of Belgian ham Expressive as a traffic jam, Does martial arts. Let all such creatures be pell-mell Annihilated, sent to hell, And bomb that pissing boy as well, But spare the tarts. G.M. Davis Come, friendly bombs, fall on The Lords, Those past-their-sale-date ermined hordes That our Exchequer ill affords: It makes no sense. Think donors, earls and party hacks Who for decades just watched their backs, And flipped their houses, saving tax At our expense. Precision bombing should ensure Avoidance of the House next door: Don’t worry, though, if thirty score Should come to grief: For MPs may (look on the Web) Take cash for questions, call you ‘p**b’, And even do I’m a Celeb. Beyond belief! Roger Theobald Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Dave, That televisual open grave Where undead Top Gear shows behave As if still living. Go blast old Clarkson, bygone May And Hammond on umpteenth replay, Relief to those watching today You will be giving. The meathead banter of these ‘boys’ Can, by your efforts, be destroyed — All women will be overjoyed To see this bombing. Let’s no more see that oafish troupe To witless depths ceaselessly stoop Bombs, break Dave’s never-ending loop And sate my longing. Adrian Fry Come, friendly bombs, assail the Tate (The Modern) to obliterate Bizarre art I can’t tolerate Or comprehend. Then smash to smaller shards that Shard By which our skyline has been marred. Upon the wretched avant-garde Let wrath descend. But, dear bombs, what a dreadful shame If you struck with imperfect aim, And venerable structures came To grief instead; Smite only targets I despise. (And should my war cries prove unwise, My children can apologise After I’m dead.) Chris O’Carroll Come friendly bombs, and fall on Albert Square, Where life becomes more cheesy than Gruyère As scripting hacks probe lazily the ‘issues’ That get the simple reaching for their tissues. Fall, bombs, on matriarchs and feckless men, On Beales and Butchers, Mo and Dot and Den, For all speak clichés from the cheapest shelf: ‘Babe, he ain’t worth it,’ and ‘Don’t blame yourself.’ They whinge and weep, and have affairs, and fight, And (arguments being easiest to write) Spend half their lives in crass factitious quarrels, In plotlines patly pointing PC morals. So fall, bombs, fall, till not one single brick Remains of that unlovely hole, the Vic. Then, when the devastation is complete, Head northwards, please, to Coronation Street. George Simmers |
thanks, as ever, for posting, John. You've cheered up an otherwise grey and dismal morning.
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Four Spherians out of six winners is excellent (although - harrumph! - five out of six would have been even better).
Congratulations to all, and a "high five(r)" to Frank. |
Yes, spot on target all round chaps; warm handshakes, and we'll be having tea in Slough before Easter. Six out of six, even?I never think much of my efforts, but it's a tad rummy perhaps that since I started comping I've gone in for the attack on Monaco (where I have lived and worked)/Gstaad twice and nary a sniff, even of a mensh, either time....
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That full stop after 'Pointing' in line 12 of mine...
It's on the Speccie website, too. Is it in the paper copy? Anyone seen one yet? Mine won't arrive till tomorrow. |
Yes, I was worried by the full stop, George. I assumed it was a typo. I'm sure John can fix it (if that hasn't become an unuseable phrase).
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I'm not in the least surprised - but highly delighted - at the winners this week. Congratulations, Frank, Chris and George. All of your entries were magnificent!
(My Speccie won't arrive till tomorrow but I've already taken out that errant full-stop for you, George.) Jayne |
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