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Unread 12-12-2013, 01:24 AM
John Whitworth's Avatar
John Whitworth John Whitworth is offline
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Default Speccie Competition Dear Santa

Lot's of us here and I feel I would have been too except that Chris O'Carroll chose Edgar Allen Poe too and did a better one, the swine. I always had Rob for a winner with his george Herbert.


In Competition 2827 you were invited to submit a Christmas list, in verse, in the style of the poet of your choice.

This challenge called on you not only to pull off a convincing pastiche of a particular poet but also to come up with a plausible Christmas wish list for them.

There were neat references to Dorothy Parker’s ‘One Perfect Rose’ from Noel Petty and Martin Parker, and I liked Basil Ransome-Davies’s riff on MacNeice’s ‘Bagpipe Music’. Melanie Branton’s Shakespeare almost made the cut: ‘Hoping I get a keg of sack or pouch of snuff,/ A statement earring, in-your-face and blinging,/ Desiring Marlowe’s codpiece, Jonson’s ruff,/ But fearing Anne will buy me something minging’, and honourable mentions, too, to Philip Roe, John Whitworth and John Beaton.

The winners below take £30 each. The bonus fiver belongs to Rob Stuart.

Merry Christmas!

I do not wish for aught because the Lord
Hath always my heart’s stocking fill’d with
cheer.
His love is life’s foundation and reward.
This paragon of gifts He gives all year.

Get thee behind me Santa, do not tempt
Ungratefulnesse in those whom God hath
bless’d —
By the Almighty’s grace am I exempt
From death. In Heav’n shall I ever rest.

He moulded me this Earth to live upon,
And though I share it there is room enow.
O’er beasts He granted me dominion —
The platypus, the ferret and the cow.

The lighthouse of His tendernesse doth keep
My sinneful boat from ploughing into rocks.
All else is by these bounties render’d cheap —
But then again I wouldn’t mind some socks.
Rob Stuart/George Herbert

Bring me Hunting Gothic Corbels,
Please, dear Santa, on your sledge,
Also, Mackintosh’s Gorbals,
And Lost Views of Wenlock Edge.

Poor old Archie keeps on moulting,
Soon he’ll be a furless bear;
People say he looks revolting,
So bring garments he can wear.

Clothes for me spell needs more flagrant —
As an ancient rhyming ham
I want khaki shorts, all fragrant
With the musky scent of Pam.

But, should this appear too shocking,
You’ll assuage my senile lust
If you leave within my stocking
A blow-up Peggy Purey-Cust!
Jerome Betts/John Betjeman

Give me, stout against the season,
Doors that let no bird or breeze in,
Give me drugs that undo reason —
These I want and so much more:

Comfort vis-à-vis my lover
(Cold now, earth and stone above her),
Balm to help my heart recover
From the grief that weighs full sore.

I expect you will reject me,
Nor from chill nor gloom protect me,
Give to others, but neglect me.
Yet more pain I have in store.

All my pleadings you will spurn, for
I don’t merit what I yearn for.
This year, it won’t be my turn for
Joy. It’s never been before.
Chris O’Carroll/Edgar Allan Poe

Dear Santa, this year these things bring to me:
A healthy helping of humility,
A carton of compassion, wrapped in love;
I’m not the same poor wretch I used to be.

Of creature comforts, bring me but a smidgen;
I’m less deserving than a lowly pigeon.
The milk of human kindness I could use;
The moving finger writes: I’ve found religion!.

The hedonistic life that late I led
Is over. That boil’s lanced, and how it bled!
This flow’r that once had bloomed, I’m proud to
say,
Awaits the resurrection of the dead.

So Santa, underneath my tree please place
A simple serving of amazing grace.
Let that sustain me in the days to come,
Until I meet my Saviour face to face!
Mae Scanlan/Omar Khayyám

Dear Santa, though you don’t exist
My Mum and Dad pretend you do,
So here’s the usual Christmas list
Of all the stuff I’d like from you:

A pair of eyes that don’t need specs,
A cheerful, sunny disposition,
A pretty girl who’ll teach me sex
By making ‘missionary’ her mission.

A gift with words, to work upon
Ideas from my poetic vaults,
Some brand-new genes, not handed on —
I don’t want other people’s faults.

A scruffy kitten or a pup
Who’ll love me without bribery,
A decent job when I grow up,
But, Christ! — not in a library!
Nicholas Holbrook/Philip Larkin
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Unread 12-13-2013, 08:14 AM
Jerome Betts Jerome Betts is offline
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John, four out of five winners are Sphereans and five out of seven HMs.
Not bad!
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Unread 12-13-2013, 08:58 AM
Brian Allgar Brian Allgar is online now
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Congratulations all round. Rob's final line is certainly worth a fiver.
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Unread 12-14-2013, 05:37 AM
Melanie Branton Melanie Branton is offline
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Well done, everybody, especially Rob - Herbert's such a non-obvious and difficult poet to pastiche and he did it brilliantly. But all five are gems.
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