Monday, April 26, 2021

Today's Timericks.

 



Some people are willing to use toxic bleach/instead of a simple vaccine/People won't listen to reason at all/their sanity seems mighty lean/We're better off rounding the scammers all up/and putting them in quarantine.


Ticks that carry Lyme disease/are at the beach, on bush and trees/You can't escape the little critters/ubiquitous as apple fritters/As if the Covid weren't enough/the outdoors grows more rough and tough!


Climate change has come to France/their vineyards do not stand a chance/the grapes are frozen or dried out/which makes the vintners scream and shout/Wine is going to perdition/It's almost like old Prohibition!




Sunday, April 25, 2021

Today's Timericks.

 



When they mess with you online/pouring on raw turpentine/pay a charge that's pretty big/to remove each deadly dig/it's a scam, of course; you see/the same who diss collect your fee.


 Thailand wants its tourists back/cuz the country cash does lack/but the covid virus rules/closing bars and beach and schools/Land of Smiles and durian/you won't catch this Missourian.  


Children shouldn't have to fret/they'll lose their home because of debt/When parents cannot make ends meet/the children now will get cold feet/What a sorry country we/have built upon democracy. 



Saturday, April 24, 2021

Today's Timericks.

 




The mushroom is an ugly growth/to eat one raw I am quite loath/Even when organic grown/I let the champignons alone/In a can, and over steak/a bite or two I just might take/But plants that lack all chlorophyll/will never have my whole goodwill. 


Charity begins at home/so do not be a slouch/fill your pockets with spare change/and sit upon my couch.


Putin is a cagey guy/the patience of the world he'll try/but when he gets close to the brink/he has himself another think/and pulls back just enough to brag/he's put no one in body bag.


In Iowa lawmakers say/run down people any day/long as they are demonstrators/(cuz we don't need agitators)/It's getting so a picket sign/puts you on firing line.


Study laughter all you want/It will leave you tart and gaunt/Only madmen have the key/to the world's hilarity/Clowns and comics celebrate/only when they detonate/Academics, please refrain/from picking at the jester's brain!



Friday, April 23, 2021

Today's Timericks.

 




Biden is planning upheaval/of policies now medieval/Electric jalopies/and fields of wild poppies/granting the earth a reprieval.


What do you call some large bowls/of curious deadly black holes?/Such groupings, or worse/in our universe/could maybe be called 'fumaroles.'


Dead soldiers don't care if a stone/carries their name all alone/They've gone to a place/where creed or their race/have long since been all overthrown.


You have the right to record/police action single or horde/When done with your cell/like a bat out of hell/run, though it's all aboveboard.


If you are an outdoors-type Brit/you'll find bathrooms still closed a bit/If you need to go/just bring your own hoe/to compost that nice pile of  . . . 


Bring in the robots to feed/millions who fresh produce need/Old Farmer Brown/can just sit around/and push buttons to plant his seed.



Thursday, April 22, 2021

Today's Timericks.

 



By 2050 backers say/insurance rates much hob will play/as global warming inundates/coastal towns and fries farm states/Underwriters all agree/their fees will pass infinity.


In middle age I rarely slept/as a career I madly kept/and now my hair is white and sparse/while sanity I cannot parse/Oh woe is I, senility/begins to creep right up on me/Is it because I banished sleep/that my brain now is cassareep?/How ironic; now I nap/all day long without a gap.


Are paper towels a poison pill/filling up each new landfill?/Or a handy cleanup tool/absorbing every greasy pool?/Either way, can we survive/if and when supplies take five?/Still . . . if you want to save some jack/you're better off with flour sack.


Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Prose Poem: Eat like a monkey.

 



One morning as a child

at the breakfast table

my dad told me:

"You eat like a monkey."

That's why, telescoping back in

on myself,

I am so immersed in food.

What else does a monkey have to do

 all day up in a tree?




I ate a gobbet of beef today.

Peruvian beef swimming in 

cilantro sauce.

With rice and beans.

In a dull dark dream place.

It was not really a place to eat,

but a place to dream.

I don't know how they stay in business.

In the six years I've lived in this neighborhood

I've never seen that place crowded.

They must spin straw into gold.

Or fix parking tickets. 




In my food dream I was 

sailing a gravy boat, full of

brown gravy of silken texture.

We ran aground and the tanker leaked

gravy all over things like ice cream

and radishes. 

The environmentalists were up in arms,

so I slipped them some fried yucca 

for hush money.

Then drank my Inca Cola,

which tastes like bubble gum.



I wasn't chewing on food;

I was chewing on dreams.

And when I woke up I had

finished my plate, 

all except one piece of fried yucca.

That stuff sticks in my craw

like the Ever Given.

I left the waitress a one dollar tip.

And Amy's H & R Block business card.

Now that she's moving to Omaha.

To live with the monkeys.




Today's Timericks.

 



If you are a dissident/and the rules you've slightly bent/lawmakers and GOP/dump you in the hole quickly/America is like Hong Kong/and that, my friends, is very wrong.


Old King Coal is a merry old soul/as difficult as arms control/We want him gone, but here he comes/beating on those carbon drums/There's too much money still at stake/so Mother Earth keeps this headache/But someday she may rise in wrath/and act more like a psychopath.


Putin likes to boast and brag/how he'll surely shoot and scrag/any country fool enough/to give Russia any guff/He's got guns and big tanks, too/and he'll gladly mess witch you/on the street or in the hood/(though mostly his strength is plywood.)


 

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Prose Poem: Drunken Noodles.

 



I have fed too many people for free.

I'm was tired; burned out; grown weary of 

the perfunctory 'thanks' and lack

of eye contact.

So I'll quit doing public service meals

and start to lunch out.

I went to a Thai place to have drunken noodles.

There's no alcohol in them, but they wobble

on your fork.

Thai restaurants are famous for their slow

service. But the slower the service, the

better the food.

So it didn't bug me too much when it took

a half hour for my noodles to arrive.


But then I couldn't block out the conversations at 

the other tables while I ate.

People much younger than me, in white shirts and

blouses, with tattoos on their arms,

were talking about IPO's and

turnover rates --

not about the beautiful spring

day outside or how good the food 

tasted.

And it came to me again; that I'm not

part of the modern human race anymore.

I am a relic.

 I looked in the mirror

in the Men's Room and saw a pudgy old

geezer in a wide brimmed straw hat with

his pants held up by suspenders --

who yearns to talk about his collection 

of Archie comics when he was a kid

and the awfulness of his mother's 

tuna casserole on Friday nights.

Tomorrow I'll make the old ladies

vegetable turkey soup in my slow cooker.

At least they don't have any tattoos.  




Prose Poem: Bailey's Beads.

 




"The persistence of memory"

said Crazy Henry,

"is both a blessing and a curse,

according to Proust."

"What's that?" I asked, astonished.

Crazy Henry barely made it through

high school -- where did he get off

quoting Proust at me?

"If we try to push the past away,

it simply becomes stronger" he

continued.

"Huh?" I said.

"Forgetting the past is a false construct"

he said, not at all smugly but very simply.

"Our past is as much a part of us

as our arms and legs" he finished.

"You thought all that up?" I asked derisively.

"Voltaire" he replied.

"Oh" I said. Then we went silent.

We were on a beautiful beach near 

Honolulu, sipping raspados.

A seagull flew over us, screaming

in false agony.

The waves smelled of Tide laundry detergent.

I was suddenly very happy

that the Order of the Solar Temple

had sent us to Hawaii to observe the solstice

eclipse. 

After a while I asked

Crazy Henry: 

"How do you know about people like

Proust and Voltaire?"

"Oh" he said, "we studied about 'em at

night school. I've got a degree now in 

belles-lettres."

"I never knew you went to night school" 

I said. "You never told me anything about it."

"Did it for the past five years -- every night after

work."

"But, but, I thought you were always at 

home in the evening watching TV -- like me."

"Oh, I did that for a while, but y'know it got awful

boring after a while -- so I signed up for some

night classes down at the community college. Now

when we get back home I'm gonna start teaching there,

part-time."

"But you could've asked me if I wanted to take classes

with you" I said, starting to choke.

There was a rusty pizza cutter slicing

through my heart right about then.

"Huh" he said, "I guess I could've.

"Wonder why I never thought of it?"

"We'd better hurry" I replied dully.

"Otherwise we'll miss Baily's Beads."

The sand turned to ashes beneath my feet. 





Today's Timericks.

 




A sleeping giant has awoke/and countries don't think it's a joke/Big tech platforms unrestrained/need big taxes to be chained/Supervision and repression/have become a real obsession/Facebook, Twitter, and the lot/are more than just an afterthought. 


Happiness is so intrusive/that it sometimes seems abusive/Showing joy in word and play/just is not the Finnish way/Though their country ranks up high/in happiness, the Finns ask why?/Statistics are for balladeers/cuz Finns say joy will end in tears.


Democracy in Hong Kong is as dead as dead can be/Beijing's pulling all the strings with no timidity/I wonder what the British think about their former ward/now that it is trampled by the local overlord?