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04-26-2013, 01:07 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 12,945
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Great title, Douglas. 'Emollient ointment' will rhyme with 'Royal appointment'. Just saying.
The Martian poet and publicist, Craig Raine, who masterminded my 'Faber Book of Blue Verse' attempted to win this competition thirty years to soon by penning a ditty called 'Arsehole'. I believe he got the idea from Rimbaud. French scholars among you will know. I don't think it rhymes or anything.
'Snot' anyone? Something polysyllabic that rolls off the tongue, as it were.
John Keats wrote a poem called 'Snot', 'n'
Most think it far better forgotten.
Though certain old fogeys
Assert Shelley's 'Bogeys'
Is quite transcendentally rotten.
If you wish to excel at bad verse,
Eschewing what's witty or terse is
Is most certainly vital,
But sometimes a title
Can make things immeasurably worse.
Good examples are, 'Stroking your Scrotum
While Spinning Round Like a Teetotum',
And 'An Epic on Farts
In Twenty-six Parts'.
Well, I ought to know since I wrote 'em.
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04-26-2013, 01:25 AM
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: NYC
Posts: 2,343
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Michel Chevreul and the Monsters of Margarine
Monotreme oviparous, ovum meroblastic,
avuncularly acetate, carbuncularly plastic
poly'fluoroethylene in D.D.T. and aspic
endemic to the OAPEC, Monsantoan, and CASPIC.
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04-26-2013, 02:06 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Old South Wales (UK)
Posts: 6,780
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I have a (published) poem called Unplasticised Polyvinyl Chloride. I once read it as part of a performance in St David's Cathedral, accompanied by a well-known cellist...
Oh, sometime summer's unreturning track... (sigh...)
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04-26-2013, 03:04 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 5,499
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Slater
It's Smegma
Apologies I must now beg
of my sweet and darling daughter Meg.
I hung up the phone when the voice said, "It's Meg, Ma,"
thinking some pervert was whispering "smegma."
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Roger, that must surely win the prize for Most Revolting Title.
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04-26-2013, 03:07 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 5,499
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Quote:
Originally Posted by George Simmers
'What I Want'? Good poem, but the title is frankly NOT BAD AT ALL.
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George, do you think it would be better (i.e. worse) if I lengthened it to "What I want is what you've got"? Or is it still too good to be bad?
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04-26-2013, 04:56 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 5,499
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This is the worst title for a poem I could think of
It just remains to write the thing itself ...
Oh, blimey! This is harder than I thought.
Now, where’s that rhyming dictionary I bought?
I think I put it on the highest shelf.
I’ll have to go and get a dining-chair
To reach it - careful how you do it,
The chair is rather wobbly. Damn! I knew it
The blasted dictionary’s no longer there.
Perhaps it’s on the shelf containing trash?
(Detective stories, thrillers, hard-core porn,
The latter being quite well-thumbed and worn.)
I stretch - but with a godalmighty crash,
xxThe chair collapses. Now I’m really pissed -
xxNo winning poem, just a broken wrist!
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04-26-2013, 10:06 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 12,945
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Good stuff here. I must admit George's Jimmy Savile will be difficult to beat. Meanwhile here's new, improved 'Snot'.
John Keats wrote 'A Sonnet to Snot', an
Effusion far better forgotten.
Though certain old fogeys
Assert Shelley's 'Bogeys,
A Ballad' is equally rotten.
There's Tennyson's 'Bumfluff', a verse
Neither prettily witty nor terse,
Whose every recital
Shows just how a title
Can make bad immeasurably worse;
Like 'Stanzas on Stroking a Scrotum
While Spinning Round Like a Teetotum',
Or 'Epical Farts
In Twenty-six Parts'.
And I ought to know since I wrote 'em.
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04-26-2013, 11:21 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: London
Posts: 994
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How Your Postcode Affects Your Orgasm
(Title of an article in ‘Glamour’ magazine, April 2007)
Most folk with any common sense
Are celibate in NR9;
The jollies there are so intense
They have been known to snap your spine.
A climax in L24
Is barely worthy of the name;
You might not be entirely sure
Quite when or even if you came.
The toes will curl infrequently
In EH21, but you
Will be in fits of ecstasy
Around the clock in CF2.
The petit mort in OX8
Lasts half a second, then it’s gone,
But in E6 it’s bloody great;
It just goes on and on and on!
Last edited by Rob Stuart; 04-26-2013 at 04:45 PM.
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04-26-2013, 11:36 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 5,499
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John, that's horribly good.
Rob, also very good - but where on earth are all those postcodes? Mind you, as an ex-inhabitant, I tend to think that only London needs postcodes, and that everywhere else, they still make do with homing pigeons.
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04-26-2013, 11:44 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 12,945
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Thanks, Brian. And I agree about Rob's poem.
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