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david-strickland
1 A little girl of eight Was leaning on the gate, Pondering the miracle of birth. From her parents’ attitude She thought it might be something rude And was neither cause for sorrow nor for mirth. 2 By chance along the road A little lady strode, Hurrying from the vicar's after tea. The girl thought, There’s Miss Price, She is wise and nice, She will solve my mystery for me. 3 Miss Price approached the gate, The little girl in wait Called out, Hallo, a lovely evening, too. If you can spare the time There's a problem on my mind, A question I would like to ask of you. 4 The lady, coming near, Said, Yes, of course, my dear, I'll surely try to put your mind at rest. Although I'm not a sage, With the wisdom of my age, You can rest assured I'll do my best. 5 I’ve a brother now, you see, He was born at five oh three, He's upstairs in the bedroom now with Mum. And now I’m full of doubt, I've tried but can't find out— Please tell me, miss, from where do babies come? 6 Miss Price, a little shocked, Thought she was being mocked. Good Lord, she thought, what can I tell this child? A spinster all her life— No experience as a wife This subject always made her feel defiled. 7 Miss Price looked all about Seeking a way out; Anything to stop this sinful talk. Then, clutching at a straw, With her dim old eyes she saw The poor bedraggled, drunk and gasping stork. 8 She pointed at the roof And in a tone aloof Said, There is how your brother came to you. I’m surprised you haven't heard That all babies come by bird, And now I must be off, so toodle-oo. The little girl turned and looked up at the stork. And the stork, to his eternal credit, winked.
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Sep 15, 2016
Sep 15, 2016 at 8:12 PM UTC
The Stork. Full story in author's book "Hell's Gunkhole" available on Amazon
1 A little girl of eight Was leaning on the gate, Pondering the miracle of birth. From her parents’ attitude She thought it might be something rude And was neither cause for sorrow nor for mirth. 2 By chance along the road A little lady strode, Hurrying from the vicar's after tea. The girl thought, There’s Miss Price, She is wise and nice, She will solve my mystery for me. 3 Miss Price approached the gate, The little girl in wait Called out, Hallo, a lovely evening, too. If you can spare the time There's a problem on my mind, A question I would like to ask of you. 4 The lady, coming near, Said, Yes, of course, my dear, I'll surely try to put your mind at rest. Although I'm not a sage, With the wisdom of my age, You can rest assured I'll do my best. 5 I’ve a brother now, you see, He was born at five oh three, He's upstairs in the bedroom now with Mum. And now I’m full of doubt, I've tried but can't find out— Please tell me, miss, from where do babies come? 6 Miss Price, a little shocked, Thought she was being mocked. Good Lord, she thought, what can I tell this child? A spinster all her life— No experience as a wife This subject always made her feel defiled. 7 Miss Price looked all about Seeking a way out; Anything to stop this sinful talk. Then, clutching at a straw, With her dim old eyes she saw The poor bedraggled, drunk and gasping stork. 8 She pointed at the roof And in a tone aloof Said, There is how your brother came to you. I’m surprised you haven't heard That all babies come by bird, And now I must be off, so toodle-oo. The little girl turned and looked up at the stork. And the stork, to his eternal credit, winked.
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The wind wafts busily through the stays The occasional gust—a frenzied rattle in the rigging— Coinciding with the darkening water Round the white hull Darkness shrouds the windward hills The sky above though blue Is ,with the quickening breeze Destined not to last The gusts come strongly now Feel their anger The whine and slat grows louder Clouds, where once was blue, are grey And threatening White water breaks the green tranquillity in the placid bay Rain, like heavy haze, obscures The not so distant outline of the shore And seems to hover, As if drawing strength Momentum For its inexorable run to where we sit. A moment’s lull The calm And hear the hiss Of heavy drops a scant few yards away. Louder, closer, gust The torrent hits Initial downpour, pause, And then the deluge. Vicious sound, it pummels, Seeks to inundate All In its elemental fury. Inside, the heat and damp oppressive. Enclosed in grey walls of water. Sweat Mingling with the condensation. Stifling And claustrophobic. Then all at once the noisy dampness Recedes. We breathe again the fresh-washed air And shiver from the drips And search the horizon for the next onslaught.
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Sep 15, 2016
Sep 15, 2016 at 7:59 PM UTC
Squall at Anchor
many a lad has sold his soul for the chance to possess a center console he picks the T-top and the color graphics with an eye to how it will look in traffic for the rocket launchers and numerous reels he trades his children and the rest he steals gotta have the four-stroke to drive him out yonder so he hocks his wife for a brand new Honda to pull the whole lot needs an F-150 so he cons a salesman without looking too shifty and drives away in his cloud of glory but that's not the end of this sordid story he's crossing the bridge on the way to the ramp and fails at the side to see a sleeping ***** hobo wakes up sees Apocalypse descending yells like a banshee and starts defending his right to the road and an open-air bed that's when our lad's boat hits him right in the head blood's all over the go-fast paint and hobo yells I WISH TO LODGE A COMPLAINT! but the rig's long gone uncontrolled weaving driver's a-panic and feels himself leaving the road and the scene his wits start to falter as he crashes through barricades into the water. Now you could say he got what he deserved with a long prison sentence justice was served he sits in the slammer regretting his role but planning his next BIGGER center console.
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Sep 15, 2016
Sep 15, 2016 at 7:56 PM UTC
The Lure of the Centre Console Boat
Nostalgie de l'ecole I well remember Mr. Naughton Whose life I daily yearned to shorten He who drove us to the edge Flailing with his pitching wedge - Or it might have been a flashy Royal & Ancient wooden mashie - Niblick, driver, I don't care As long as I was never where I could be slashed with shaft or hosel On buttocks, ribs or even schnozzle. I longed to see him in the gutter Impaled upon a Ping-type putter - In fact I'd even go so far As deem that outcome "even par."
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 7:25 PM UTC
Nostalgie de l'ecoleRemembering a sadistic schoolmaster
Backing into battle With our buttocks gleaming white We are rogered for Her Majesty And Britannia’s ruling might. The enemy may raise his flag Upon our flaccid pole For the Queen’s most heartfelt wishes Are that we should be the swishes Fed will-nilly to the fishes In our British glory hole. Olé.
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 7:20 PM UTC
Regimental song of the 14th Halberdiers - “The Glorious Perverts.”
Where is the wit That the average Brit Is supposed to rely On when times go awry? Summon that grin Or something akin And gaily resolve Life's conundrum When put upon Remember that: Non Illigit' carborundum. I try to make These lines to scan I try to make them rhyme But when I try As best I can These verses are no better than Base poetic curdled flan In short, iambic crime.
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 7:19 PM UTC
Wit
One is anarchy Two is conspiracy Three is a crowd (But also democracy).
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 6:28 PM UTC
One Is Anarchy
To all boating writers Required to write several boat reviews In a short period of time While at a boat show: And off I set this jolly morn One more bateau to go But which is which? My stale, confuséd mind is torn My stride along the dock is slow Gotta work though Son of a *****
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 6:27 PM UTC
To All Boating Writers
Sunlight filters through the branches As warm air following the cold Hisses at the leaves And mingles with the half-heard voice Of a not-too-distant neighbor. An occasional bird-call Keeps time with a squirrel’s jerky progress; A dog sighs and briefly imitates the trees. And slowly in this tranquillity Comes a sense of recovery Last night’s excesses, felt viscerally These past several hours, turn To a contented glow in the afternoon sun. Inner trembling starts to feel Controlled. And less visible. Breathing deeply, tasting at last The warm freshness of the clean air As it permeates, so softly, the tortured frame, The gutted pores, the brutalised organs Of this body. Time now, too, for the mind, busily Analyzing complaints for all this while, To feel some ease No more pumping Frantic aid to disturbed ampullae; No longer succouring the fevered nerves Or fighting for a woolly lobe’s attention. Now comes that ease and relaxation, Long fought for and hard won. Now the battle is over and with minimal casualties, Now reason takes over and forward progress Can be seen clearly in the mind’s eye. Now once again the saliva flows sweetly To the abused palate. Now the rasping throat is Pacified. And one succumbs to that sense of Pastoral anticipation As the brain And the spleen And the bile And the liver And, inter alia, the noble ascending colon All agree Now is the time Now the blessed moment Now We can begin again. Set ‘em up.
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 6:24 PM UTC
Hangover
It would be pleasant, would it not, If in the world one found a spot Where peace and tranquil tempers reigned, No grudges borne nor lives profaned; Where one could sit and contemplate In undisturbed surroundings, fate, Instead of devastation. No doubt all parties have just cause, Or think they have, and hence the wars That scar the waters, land and skies And in doing so give rise To doubts of man’s professed desire That he should rise above the mire Of constant devastation. Man’s history records with awe Long millennia of war, And to its heroes points with pride— A monument to suicide. Does this prove that man’s insane Inflicting wretched endless pain Pursuing devastation? So will it be man’s timeless fate: Continuing carnage, endless hate? Or can he ever have the will To disobey the order: **** Can it come about? It may A long night’s journey into day Rejecting devastation.
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Sep 14, 2016
Sep 14, 2016 at 6:11 PM UTC
Devastation