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By request, I'm putting up a new double dactyl challenge. Only this time, no higgledy-piggledy cop-outs. Your nonsense word must have some bearing on the subject of the poem. Here's my example, written when my youngest grandson showed up in the wrong century.
Y2K Nursery Rhyme Calendar-schmalendar! Harrison Taylor, boy; special delivery, ready or not! Downloaded yesterday, neo-millennial. Doctors don't always know diddly squat. Carol |
LOLOLOL. In a prior incarnation, I produced several Y2K conferences for the financial services industry. At one point I probably knew more about the state of bank's Y2K efforts than most people in the country. This brought back those days to me. Technical-schmentical, this cracked me up. And trust me--the banks didn't know much more at first either.
Tom |
Winningly-Sinningly Vladimir Nabokov Felt that H. Humbert would Surely compare Well with the tortoise, a Serio-comical Hero, who finished a- head of the hare. |
At the Dance Club
Hopefully-Dopefully Christopher W. Heads for the corner and Stands there inert Thinking the Beautiful Neoplatonically Ought to approach him and Teach him to flirt. And, since I think the one I did for Alan might have gotten lost on the thread I put it on, I'm going to repeat it here: Editor-Predator Alan __ Sullivan Rarely concedes that a Poem is done, Tolerates verse that is Heterometrical-- Otherwise right of At Tila the Hun. (This was inspired by the Ashcroft thread. Alan didn't supply his middle initial -- I just hope it isn't 'W'.) [This message has been edited by ChrisW (edited December 13, 2001).] |
<u>Allow me to introduce myself</u>
Beatily-feetily, Pua K. Sandabar, drums in a dither and bats in my hair, tryin’ my damnedest to rhythmo-phonetically slip whacky verse past the critics out there. (....not very successfully, I might add! You folks are good!) ---Pua |
Melody-Swellody Johann Sebastian Bach was a harpsichord Master we know; Surely in light of his Philoprogenitive Exploits was also of Organ a pro. |
Euphony-Shmeuphony
Schoenberg, atonalist, Found his recordings of Mozart a tonic Either he tired of his Hypermodernity, Or his new speakers were Dodecaphonic. George Eliot Moralist Schmoralist Author of Middlemarch Marian Evans, though Seemingly tame, Lived with a man who was Never her husband and, Psuedo-eponymous, Took his first name. And one for a former roommate who used to go clubbing with me: Willius-Nellius Sarah and Christopher Frequented Discos of Scandalous mention Dancing as thousands of Masculine Mannequins Neuro-erotically Paid no attention. [This message has been edited by ChrisW (edited December 13, 2001).] |
Carrying Carol's philosophy of the first line a step further, why not make it non-nonsensical, but an integral part of the verse?
Here are a few from a series of satirical portraits I've done: Hollywood cover girl Starlet O'Plasticene turned to a surgeon to boost her appeal; now she's a knockout and oxymoronically begs for a chance to have parts that are real. Oh what a narcissist! Beauregard Vanity's egocentricity's frightfully grim. Could he breed simply by parthenogenesis, soon the whole world would be swarming with him! "Send me your dollars," says Reverend Grubbalot, tacitly hawking sal- vation for sale. What a damn shame that his insensitivity, preying on weakness, won't land him in jail. Jan |
The form for the DD is strict about masculine rhymes on lines 4 and 8. For those times when feminine rhymes would be useful, we can switch to the McWhirtle. I had heard about the McWhirtle from Kenn Nesbit, the 'Rhymesaurus' softwear creator, so I started trying to find out more about it. I even tried John Mella, who said he was familiar with the form, but had none at hand as examples. I finally reached the author himself after much effort. Dear Ann Landers --------------------------- I'm really disgusted With Myrtle McWhirtle, The out-of-work bimbo Residing next door. She knows where to find Herself honest employment But chooses instead to be Neighborhood whore. Named for the example above, the "McWhirtle' is a relatively new verse form, created by Bruce Newling in 1989. It is much like a double dactyl, but each stanza opens with an iambus, followed by seven anapests. The metrical feet are allowed to rove over from one line to the next. The last words of each stanza rhyme; rhymes elsewhere are optional. To me, it seems much superior to the DD, both easier to compose and more enjoyable to read, especially when the author (Bruce again) can mix in other rhymes: A scholar who lives in The village of Cadder Delivered a talk from A rickety ladder. So now he discourses On physical forces That clearly have made him Much wiser if sadder. Note here, with the feminine rhymes, the stanzas can also be said to be amphibrachic dimeter, as well as one iamb and seven (roving) anapests, with a trailing syllable the end. Mr. Newling is a retired professor of geography who occasionally taught basic writing and English as a Second Language during his career. His light verse has appeared in such anthologies as 'How to Be Well-Versed in Poetry' (Viking, 1990), and 'The Random House Treasury of Light Verse' (Random House, 1995). He resides in New Brunswick, NJ (USA). I just had to try one myself, of course: Said Quintus Horatius, "Dear me, and good gracious!" It seems that we rocked him And terribly shocked him: He found us translating His adage on dating, 'Carpe diem', misstating His tip, 'carpe noctem'. First try wrong, as usual. Can anyone spot my slip? |
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Guess it's time to go check out the H and H book again and look. |
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