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The Oldie ''The Wrong Kind of Apple" results
Congratulations to Jerome and Brian, and an Hon Mensh for Rob and one for me, too.
Next time it's bouts-rimés. (See new thread) Jayne The Oldie Competition by Tessa Castro In Competition no 192 you were invited to write a poem called ‘The Wrong Kind of Apple’. No one mentioned apples for the teacher, but many wrote about Adam and Eve. Quite a few took pleasure in William Tell shooting badly. Jayne Osborn relished the murder of her narrator’s latex (late, ex-) mother-in-law. Rob Stuart imagined Newton frustrated by an apple that flew sideways. Commiserations to these and congratulations to those printed below, each of whom wins £25, with the juicy, ripe bonus prize of a Chambers Biographical Dictionary going to Jerome Betts in the shade of Housman’s boughs. To east and west, to north and south, Are apples, all the kinds that grow, And some are crabs and sear the mouth As countless chaps have cause to know. The oak tree’s maggot-haunted galls, Love-apples, too, in fiery rind, Speak of the friend who fights and falls With crimson coat and cankered mind. Earth-apples ripen well down holes Safe from the bilious light of day. Same token, there are tender souls Do best concealed by turf and clay. So bear – chin up, shake not your fist – Such luck as likelier fellows had, Nor ever curse that cord they twist About your Adam’s apple, lad. Jerome Betts He had an apple for his lunch, a Cox’s Orange Pippin. He ate the core, the pips and all, but then it gave him gyp in His stomach. It went on for days; he thought he’d better nip in To see the doctor. 'Hmm', said he, perplexed, 'I’ll have to slip in A probe to see what’s going on.' He checked the large intestine: An apple tree was growing there that birds had built their nest in. He fixed a chainsaw to the probe and somehow got it pressed in, But nothing could dislodge the tree that pigeons now had messed in. The branches sprouted through the skin, and buds began to grow. The tree grew tall, the patient died. He’s been embalmed, and so His family now waits for spring, and blossom white as snow – They’re hoping that the corpse will win the Chelsea Flower Show. Brian Allgar Is this the usual kind, young Adam said As he took the fruit from Eve and studied it. Smooth and round, with skin of shiny red It looked delicious, but when Adam bit Into its skin, a shiver down his spine Told him that it wasn’t quite the same. Eve too had tried it, said it was divine But didn’t tell how someone called her name And led her from the usual path to be Enticed towards the tree that God forbade, But something in her head was saying she Must be ashamed of choices she had made. Wrong apple – so it was the world began to suffer from the choices made by man. Katie Mallett In the summer of our voyage When our muscles shone with health We searched everywhere for apples That would furnish us with wealth, Golden apples in a garden That would dazzle and astound, But no matter where we travelled They were nowhere to be found. All the fruits that we discovered Disappointed youthful eyes; We found apples in their thousands But we never won our prize. Now we reminisce in winter And it’s clear that we were blind, For the apples we thought worthless Were indeed the golden kind. Frank McDonald |
Add congratulations to the polished winner from our friend, the exiled Frank.
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Nigel, I'm sorry but I must point out the site policy that we don't congratulate non-members, and ''exiles'' fall into this category.
Jayne |
Jayne, in view of your past efforts on behalf of Martin Parker and others over the Chambers B.D., I must say that on this occasion the juicy ripe bonus Tessa mentions arrived about ten days ago from Hachette ,and in hard-back too, not like last autumn's paper-cover copy, so you are clearly a mighty force in Oldieland.
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Congratulations, Jerome - both on winning, and on actually receiving the dictionary.
Jayne, thank you for reminding us of site policy. I shall naturally refrain from congratulating him-who-must-not-be-named. |
I'm astonished to have even an HM-mine was rubbish.
And when I won back in June, I only got the paperback. Nice poem, Jerome. |
Many thanks, Rob. The cheque and copy arrived this morning, so it seems efficiency rules under the Chancellor regime. Hardback for you too next time, I hope.
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