Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
If Shakespeare were to rise From the cover of the brick-like tome Bought in the year I was born If Shakespeare’s head like a dome Detached from the sky of the page A photocopy turned three-dimensional Though yellow and dulled due to age Imagine Shakespeare’s paper legs Walking about my apartment Sitting where the cat hair piled up Imagine cat hairs in droves On Shakespeare’s dark woollen clothes Which surely must be washed by hand Though no label this fact will disclose Wouldn’t he be surprised to find That so many centuries later We are all still fleeing the plague Though as many have noticed by now We don’t all write plays in our downtime At best, some humorous remark To make the rounds on the web Of this he would surely know nothing And would likely be shocked by the view Of a woman of such dubious virtue Who’d be seen wearing pants like a man And letting her belly go loose No corset nor hint of excuse For the lack of a gown or a gem All the same, I’d invite him for tea Place his cup quite intentionally By the spot where his book proudly lies And lest my company bore Slyly start dropping verse after verse Amid our amiable discourse To be or not to be, shall I compare thee Being two he could not quite ignore And I’d do my best to avoid The more sensitive points of his life Being born to illiterate parents Or worse, the spiteful suggestion The he, himself, could not read And no work by one William Shakespeare Could be penned by the man of such name Aye, the proof that since Man is Man Achievement has warred with acclaim
0
Aug 19, 2020
Aug 19, 2020 at 11:35 PM UTC
If Shakespeare were to rise
If Shakespeare were to rise From the cover of the brick-like tome Bought in the year I was born If Shakespeare’s head like a dome Detached from the sky of the page A photocopy turned three-dimensional Though yellow and dulled due to age Imagine Shakespeare’s paper legs Walking about my apartment Sitting where the cat hair piled up Imagine cat hairs in droves On Shakespeare’s dark woollen clothes Which surely must be washed by hand Though no label this fact will disclose Wouldn’t he be surprised to find That so many centuries later We are all still fleeing the plague Though as many have noticed by now We don’t all write plays in our downtime At best, some humorous remark To make the rounds on the web Of this he would surely know nothing And would likely be shocked by the view Of a woman of such dubious virtue Who’d be seen wearing pants like a man And letting her belly go loose No corset nor hint of excuse For the lack of a gown or a gem All the same, I’d invite him for tea Place his cup quite intentionally By the spot where his book proudly lies And lest my company bore Slyly start dropping verse after verse Amid our amiable discourse To be or not to be, shall I compare thee Being two he could not quite ignore And I’d do my best to avoid The more sensitive points of his life Being born to illiterate parents Or worse, the spiteful suggestion The he, himself, could not read And no work by one William Shakespeare Could be penned by the man of such name Aye, the proof that since Man is Man Achievement has warred with acclaim
A bit of silliness, because why not? Also, one verse was slightly revised on 22.01.2021
adrianabarreiros
Written by
Aug 19, 2020
Aug 19, 2020 at 11:35 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem