Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#pimps
NOVELTIES by Thomas Campion loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Booksellers laud authors for novel editions as pimps praise their ****** for exotic positions. This is my translation of a Latin epigram by the English poet Thomas Campion. In Campion’s era some English poets continued to write poems in Latin and/or Greek. For instance, John Milton and Andrew Marvell wrote poems in Latin, while Shakespeare was criticized by Ben Jonson, if I remember things correctly, for having “little” Greek and Latin. Not being “versed” in the senior languages was seen as a deficiency in literary circles back then. Shakespeare was called an “upstart crow” for daring to write “litter-chure” without a proper university degree. How could he properly quote the ancients if he couldn’t read them in their original languages? The Bard of Avon was doomed to failure and obscurity … or perhaps not, since the English language was finally in vogue in England (where for centuries English kings had been unable to read, write or even speak the mother tongue, preferring French, Latin and Greek). My title is a bit of a pun, because novels were new to the world when they first arrived, and were thus considered by the literary elites to be “novelties” not on par with more serious verse plays. Some of the more popular early novels were “subversive” (pardon the pun) explorations of ****** naughtiness, through characters like Tom Jones, Moll Flanders, et al. Campion probably didn’t have such campy (enough with the puns, already!) novels in mind when he wrote his epigram, since the more titillating (cease! desist!) ones had yet to arrive. But perhaps he would prove to be a “profit” (I’m udderly hopeless!). Keywords/Tags: Campion, Latin, translation, epigram, novels, novelties, booksellers, publishers, authors, pimps, ****** prostitutes, prostitution, exotic, positions
0
May 12, 2020
May 12, 2020 at 4:25 PM UTC
Naughty Novelties
NOVELTIES by Thomas Campion loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Booksellers laud authors for novel editions as pimps praise their ****** for exotic positions. This is my translation of a Latin epigram by the English poet Thomas Campion. In Campion’s era some English poets continued to write poems in Latin and/or Greek. For instance, John Milton and Andrew Marvell wrote poems in Latin, while Shakespeare was criticized by Ben Jonson, if I remember things correctly, for having “little” Greek and Latin. Not being “versed” in the senior languages was seen as a deficiency in literary circles back then. Shakespeare was called an “upstart crow” for daring to write “litter-chure” without a proper university degree. How could he properly quote the ancients if he couldn’t read them in their original languages? The Bard of Avon was doomed to failure and obscurity … or perhaps not, since the English language was finally in vogue in England (where for centuries English kings had been unable to read, write or even speak the mother tongue, preferring French, Latin and Greek). My title is a bit of a pun, because novels were new to the world when they first arrived, and were thus considered by the literary elites to be “novelties” not on par with more serious verse plays. Some of the more popular early novels were “subversive” (pardon the pun) explorations of ****** naughtiness, through characters like Tom Jones, Moll Flanders, et al. Campion probably didn’t have such campy (enough with the puns, already!) novels in mind when he wrote his epigram, since the more titillating (cease! desist!) ones had yet to arrive. But perhaps he would prove to be a “profit” (I’m udderly hopeless!). Keywords/Tags: Campion, Latin, translation, epigram, novels, novelties, booksellers, publishers, authors, pimps, ****** prostitutes, prostitution, exotic, positions
Continue reading...
10
Novelties by Thomas Campion loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Booksellers laud authors for novel editions as pimps praise their ****** for exotic positions. *** Original Latin text: IN LIBRARIOS by Thomas Campion Impressionum plurium librum laudat Librarius; scortum nec non minus leno. Keywords/Tags: Campion, Latin, translation, epigram, novels, novelties, booksellers, publishers, authors, pimps, ****** prostitutes, prostitution, exotic, positions, quote, quotation, saying, witticism, bon mot
0
Mar 17, 2020
Mar 17, 2020 at 10:12 PM UTC
Thomas Campion "Novelties" translation
Behind the eight ball she sits. Resigned. From her pimp's leash, she's lead. Deadweight, she feels his ways and ills, like cattle, that's branded. Best she hustles, or be backhanded. Once molded, she learns to light up Big Daddy's cigar and bring him his pie loaded. More cabbage to fill his gold baggage. Sometimes he spares a small leaf for her. Though times she short, his fist takes sport. And every night she plays for the band of her john's, singing their song, while a thousand ****** of light inches along all wrong. The nameless, faceless and most relentless getting their fill. A flower in her wails loves not fear. However, Big Daddy's eyes are always near. She knows better than to run past the pasture gates onto verdant fields, free as a bird, without a home, money or vocation and ever so fearful of Big Daddy's gun. A flower in her wails loves not fears. As she remembers those first tears. A Big Daddy's indoctrination. It started off on social media, a whim a fantasy went wrong. Three nights her body violated, Big Daddy's cavalry, descending on her picnic, wax and whips, a thousand ****** of might, and the scream of the night. Coldcocked. Say hello to the new girl on the block. A flower in her wails loves not fears. Her youth robbed as the days morph into years. Like a blur. The guise, the lure, the drugs, the fear. The trap. Eighteen young became twenty-four old. A lost puppy to her folks back home. And every lost night she struts her Prada dress a little higher Big Daddy has a buyer. Logan Robertson 7/27/2018
0
Jul 27, 2018
Jul 27, 2018 at 6:32 AM UTC
Big Daddy Has a Buyer
Behind the eight ball she sits. Resigned. From her pimp's leash, she's lead. Deadweight, she feels his ways and ills, like cattle, that's branded. Best she hustles, or be backhanded. Once molded, she learns to light up Big Daddy's cigar and bring him his pie loaded. More cabbage to fill his gold baggage. Sometimes he spares a small leaf for her. Though times she short, his fist takes sport. And every night she plays for the band of her john's, singing their song, while a thousand ****** of light inches along all wrong. The nameless, faceless and most relentless getting their fill. A flower in her wails loves not fear. However, Big Daddy's eyes are always near. She knows better than to run past the pasture gates onto verdant fields, free as a bird, without a home, money or vocation and ever so fearful of Big Daddy's gun. A flower in her wails loves not fears. As she remembers those first tears. A Big Daddy's indoctrination. It started off on social media, a whim a fantasy went wrong. Three nights her body violated, Big Daddy's cavalry, descending on her picnic, wax and whips, a thousand ****** of might, and the scream of the night. Coldcocked. Say hello to the new girl on the block. A flower in her wails loves not fears. Her youth robbed as the days morph into years. Like a blur. The guise, the lure, the drugs, the fear. The trap. Eighteen young became twenty-four old. A lost puppy to her folks back home. And every lost night she struts her Prada dress a little higher Big Daddy has a buyer. Logan Robertson 7/27/2018
Continue reading...
60
You don't know strength until you have been a real *** You have no idea how deep this **** really goes, Its not for the faint of heart nor you squares, Too much of the game is not being sold but shared, The cold breeze that chills your bones at night, The dark eyes of other girls standing under the streetlight They don't understand our struggle or see our strength They only know the bad and try to stop it at any length Yet we all share the same vision with similar goals Inspired to stay down by his game that has no holes We have all been given instructions to carry out fast Breakin a trick make him give you his very last Show him your down for him add it up He will take care of your trap and stack it up Every real 304 stands up when her folks is around Every real p loves a real one who's down for his crown Some say its silly to pay a **** your hard earned doh But it races through our veins so when he sends me I go Maybe I'm a dreamer and he is the merchant of dreams And I am investing in our future crazy as it seems But when he speaks I believe in the words that are spoken And I make sure that I don't get too deep in my emotions A **** is a born and from day one he is already game To build himself a stand up *** and and get his fortune and fame. So a message out to those of you who don't know They say pimpin ain't easy but it takes true strength to be a real ***
0
Feb 23, 2016
Feb 23, 2016 at 9:23 PM UTC
304