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"brumble" poems
I found a man of great Tilly stock, And asked him for a frilly walk, Unto which he said he’ll tell The way to Heaven and the way to Hell. “Pimply weaves of basket bread, And a golden goose upon the head; Let it squawk with plumpy feathers With that you’ll relinquish worldy tethers.” Frowned up in loofy days, “Sir tell me of your ghangly ways!” I loosed and cried; simply confused “Worry not my sun and moon your muse! For water is a half-penny to a tree, And snickle-snacks don’t sell for free. Yet if you must know of my tale, Then sit there yonder and make a trail.” However Sir, I am not meek I have no cunning for the week. “Your tale I do not wish to know, Simply tell me which way to go!” Crimpets high and yellow traps, “You’ll lose yourself with the bats. Go up; go down with nickle fritz, Beware to lose yourself upon the blitz For in rush and haste there in gleeb, Wear ignorance for the trancy steed. I let loose of many brumble yunk, To sail for seas I never thunk Yet wax and wane for waves ah-do, And loose bracknees in multitude. Traverse tall grass and shundy groves And you’ll lose those things you thought you loathe.” “My oh my old man I sigh, For those things be near nor nigh.” And with that I give my sullen reply And turned and a bid a fair goodbye. Yet upon reminiscence I bade in lye, And whim my eye not to cry. For in the tall tale of thy, Taught I was to live; not die. Question not a method sly. But he mumbled and grumbled, Though he never stumbled. Living for him he never frumbled. Many days he spent catching geese, Upon a head knit with fleece. OH! I should have let him talk; not cease For to iron a book you can use yeast. Heaven to Hell dived by two, Heed the old man and crux with yew. And ewe and ewe will catch the flu Sheep don’t lead in a society so true.
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Mar 6, 2012
Mar 6, 2012 at 1:08 PM UTC
Perhaps Per Not
I found a man of great Tilly stock, And asked him for a frilly walk, Unto which he said he’ll tell The way to Heaven and the way to Hell. “Pimply weaves of basket bread, And a golden goose upon the head; Let it squawk with plumpy feathers With that you’ll relinquish worldy tethers.” Frowned up in loofy days, “Sir tell me of your ghangly ways!” I loosed and cried; simply confused “Worry not my sun and moon your muse! For water is a half-penny to a tree, And snickle-snacks don’t sell for free. Yet if you must know of my tale, Then sit there yonder and make a trail.” However Sir, I am not meek I have no cunning for the week. “Your tale I do not wish to know, Simply tell me which way to go!” Crimpets high and yellow traps, “You’ll lose yourself with the bats. Go up; go down with nickle fritz, Beware to lose yourself upon the blitz For in rush and haste there in gleeb, Wear ignorance for the trancy steed. I let loose of many brumble yunk, To sail for seas I never thunk Yet wax and wane for waves ah-do, And loose bracknees in multitude. Traverse tall grass and shundy groves And you’ll lose those things you thought you loathe.” “My oh my old man I sigh, For those things be near nor nigh.” And with that I give my sullen reply And turned and a bid a fair goodbye. Yet upon reminiscence I bade in lye, And whim my eye not to cry. For in the tall tale of thy, Taught I was to live; not die. Question not a method sly. But he mumbled and grumbled, Though he never stumbled. Living for him he never frumbled. Many days he spent catching geese, Upon a head knit with fleece. OH! I should have let him talk; not cease For to iron a book you can use yeast. Heaven to Hell dived by two, Heed the old man and crux with yew. And ewe and ewe will catch the flu Sheep don’t lead in a society so true.
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52
Muse : "Move over fool and watch a Muse Master at work" In the blackness of my soul I sit listening to far off thunder As inside it also rolls For long long seconds There is no sound Then begins the brumble bound Quicken flashes does my mind's Hindsight cause flashes white Of the truth hidden by the night It is perhaps then I stir And begin to think of you A soul's ***** as if a burr Then the truth will crash And I slow count to ten Before I hear rumble within Then comes a calm No more flash or sound I have burried my thoughts of you Me : "I don't know ," I say. "Maybe by tomorrow's light . . . . I'll have a say ." Then the muse did stare With such a cold cold glare All the fluids in my glass froze There she was Then she wasn't And she vanished Into the cold thin air
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Oct 31, 2014
Oct 31, 2014 at 12:39 AM UTC
The Muse Master