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12-13-2012, 11:32 AM
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Location: United Kingdom
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Speccie Answering Back by 3rd January
No. 2779: answering back
You are invited to submit Maud’s reply to Tennyson (16 lines maximum). Please email entries, wherever possible, to lucy@spectator.co.uk by midday on 3 January.
This is another one I'd swear is a repeat.
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12-13-2012, 02:48 PM
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Location: Breaux Bridge, LA, USA
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Sounds wonderful. I edited a whole book of "reply poems" once, but nobody thought about Maud.
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12-13-2012, 05:08 PM
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I remember Joyce Grenfell doing this one, though not in the Spectator.
Here is my own rapid first draft --
On the last of our joint horticultural trips
I contracted, I'm sorry to tell,
both black spot and mildew plus rose-mite and thrips
and my stockings got laddered as well.
So its all your own fault that I'll not be your guest
and that Nature's once bounteous charm
I can now only view with reluctance, at best,
and a mounting degree of alarm.
For my mildew smells rank and my rose-mite now stings
and I finally see what is true --
that my garden is full of some unwelcome things,
the least welcome of which being you.
So your now-garden-phobic systemic-sprayed Maud
says that though you may temptingly coo
that the sweet "woodbine's spices are wafted abroad"
she wishes that you were there too.
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12-13-2012, 05:20 PM
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Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Freedom, Maine
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Come into my kitchen, Lord Tennyson;
I’ve seen how you give me the eyeball.
I’m boiling a stew of fine venison.
Relax, and I’ll mix you a highball.
It is midnight, and done is the dance;
A draught from my cup makes you drowsy.
You have urges to get in the pants
Of maidens like me, slightly frowsy.
You think I’m a sexual thriller;
But Alf, I am virginally chaste.
Why, in fact I’m a serial killer
With cannibalistical tastes.
You entered with visions of wooing,
But now that your breathing has ceased;
I will soon have your body a-stewing,
And you’ll make a delectable feast.
(I must admit that I have always been more of a fan of that other British Alfred, Alfred Hitchcock.)
Last edited by Douglas G. Brown; 12-14-2012 at 08:24 AM.
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12-13-2012, 05:40 PM
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So should this be just a generalised refusal to go into a garden?
Tennyson's poem (which I think is brilliant) is a complex psychodrama. Writing a response from his Maud would be difficult, maybe, but not impossible.
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12-13-2012, 07:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by George Simmers
So should this be just a generalised refusal to go into a garden?
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Actually, I imagine the whole poem is available. For instance, the lady might reasonably resent his description of her face as "icily regular, splendidly null".
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