Showing posts with label alliteration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alliteration. Show all posts

2025/01/27

No, You Mind the Gap

Shall you this line catch again?
Or did you shunt and passage end?
'Tis three past twelve; I here remain.

Tell me not I wait in vain.
I know not all the routes you wend;
Shall you this line catch again?

As a refrain is a city train
On whose return I may... depend?
'Tis four past twelve -- I here remain.

How lose a briefcase in a refrain?
This far th' simile can't extend.
Shall you this line catch again?

Stand and count I each sand grain
That descends to my doom portend:
'Tis five past twelve! I here remain.

Is it your toot my ears attain?
To be tardy did you intend?
'Tis far past twelve, I here remain
So you this line catch again.


-----

Rhymer's notes. The villanelle soars in One Art and Are you not weary of ardent ways, and perches highest at Do not go gentle into that good night. Line 16 was thrice composed. First it was through a misunderstanding of the rhyme scheme 'Is that your roll round the bend?'. Then it became 'Arrive you at last at the quatrain' before a less meta option was picked.

2024/08/04

Limericks #33--39: Henry and His Six Wives

Henry VIII (1491-1547) gained renown for two things. In matters falling under the crown, he achieved unification of church and state, and in matters falling (or perhaps rising) under the belt, separation of skull and spine. He serial-married six women: "divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived," as the mnemonic goes. Below, more or less, is their history.


Henry, illegible bachelor.

Hercules of Britain, Henry Number Eight
Saw as the Hydra his every other mate.
Say "I do" to his face,
And there were two ways
Your per capita income could grow great.


Catherine of Aragon, who spawned "Bloody" Mary I.
                                    

King Henry he sought an alteration to home,
Made up his heart and wrote thus to Rome:
"Annul us, sir, for I ha' decyded my Queene didst lie wyth mine Fifteen-Year-old Brother after all. True, thou hadst Suffered me to wed her on Groundes that she Never did consummate her Union wyth the Wretche (may God bless his Soul in Heavene), but Surely that be an Error, sire, for Else wouldst she not Torment me these score Winters with nary a male Heire yet no End to babes stillborn, miscarryed, or Daughtery. Annul, annul. Mark'd have I a fresh Bride."
To which the pope replied,
"Have you tried transmitting the Y chromosome?"

Anne Boleyn, who bore Elizabeth I. 

Henry, happy ruler, espoused anew
A wit to pursue, a beauty to woo!
(The one time she carried,
She "It's a girl, I'm sorry"-ed.)
O he loved her to pieces! (Exactly two.)

Jane Seymour, who begat Edward VI.

Had his breeder only been shrewder,
She'd have laid him another Tudor.
But wholly unprovoked,
She up and croaked,
Leaving the widower a blubbery brooder.

Anne of Cleves as painted for Henry's assessment. He was crestfallen upon meeting her in the flesh, likely calling her a "Flanders mare"; the marriage lasted six months.

Long before the days of Instagram
The way to a gent's electrocardiogram
Was a portrait; only, in person
The impression may worsen,
Perhaps even end an alliance program.

Catherine Howard, who had had a passionate past, and was accused of an adulterous present.

Upon discovering his partner's C. V.,
With two strokes of the pen Henry
Behead-
ed
His consort, and banned the word "spree".

Catherine Parr, instrumental in passing a crucial Succession Act.  

Sage, ready queen, kept her head!
Smile on her lips, heart full of dread.
By and by the Eighth died,
Whence C. Parr duly cried,
And ensured his girls one day England led.

2022/05/19

Limericks #21--32: The Labours of Heracles

 I. The Nemean Lion

There was a full-time predator in Nemea
Suffering from pernicious anaemia.
Before he could delve
Into hunting B-twelve
Heracles lured him into academia.


II.
The Lernaean Hydra


The lake of Lernaea was home to the hydra
Whose venomous fumes singed the hide raw.
For anybody Greek
Heracles v The Freak
Turned out to be that year's high draw.


III.
The Golden Hind of Ceryneia


Whereas as asses it too has grass,
Despite its name a hind ain't an ass.
Now Heracles did pinch
Its every square inch,
But I can't stress enough that wasn't crass.


IV.
The Erymanthian Boar


There was in Erymanthia a boar,
Until there it was no more.
As Heracles drifted,
It'd quietly shifted 
Hearing it was Labour Number Four.


V. The Augean Stables


The stables of King Augeas stung your lung,
For three decades' worth of dung had clung. 
Lest he lose his mind, 
Heracles sought to find 
The cleanest notes any tongue had sung.


VI. The Stymphalian Birds


Next he declared: "Stymphalia or bust!"
Its metallic flock never could rust,
But met their fate
In his sly bait:
What chewed the plastic, bit the dust.


VII.
The Cretan Bull


A lonesome creature in Crete
Heard a man wished to meet.
"I'm calf, not bull,
Grown half, not full.
Surely my feelings he'll tenderly treat?"

VIII. The Mares of Diomedes 


Pegasus the beautiful, he could take wing;
Diomedes' terribles were man-eating.
Can you guess which
The hero had to hitch?
Why not the Trojan one? was his thinking.


IX.
The Girdle of Hippolyta


"Amazon dread queen, Hippolyta, I'm.
State your purpose, waste no time."
The Herculean task
Was then to ask:
"Is your belt available on Prime?"


X. The Cattle of Geryon


Three-headed Geryon -- how his waist narrows!
Eagle-eyed Heracles --  beware his arrows!
The cattle! the battle!
Hark! the death rattle!
(OK, Geryon now lies with the pharaohs.)

XI. The Golden Apples of the Hesperides

The Hesperides' garden bore forbidden fruit
Whose juices immortalized the lowest brute.
Had our chap taken a bite
I'd've'd the pleasure to write
He was found impossible to hang or electrocute.

XII. Cerberus

Down in Hades to anyone who'd heed
Cerberus woofed, "Pray, what's my breed?"
He learnt it the day
H took him away:
One moment retriever, the next retrieved.

-----


Images from
https://www.kidslovegreece.com,
https://www.theoi.com,
https://www.vectorstock.com,
https://www.sciencephoto.com,
https://www.greekboston.com,
https://www.ipernity.com.

2021/12/04

Collateral Adjectives: an Introduction

It looks like a long poem but 
something about the opening line 
gets my attention.
I quite like how it cuts to the chase 
with the metaphor of 
adopting a dog versus an infant.
How it patiently elaborates 
that neither aqueous nor watery 
would have a life of its own without water
but that only one of them 
can be mistaken for a biological child 
of the noun.
I don't know about you, but
I personally find that a nice explanation 
of the titular subject.
Which is why I don't mind
when a couple more examples 
are shoehorned in, like end vs terminal
and moon vs lunar.
There is even a joke 
about collateral and loan words 
that I'm willing to give a polite chuckle.
At the same time I also begin to suspect here
that the poem is perhaps not really about collateral adjectives, 
that maybe it wants to do something else altogether,
something that reminds me of adjective vs epithetic.

Out of nowhere then comes this river in South Bend, Indiana.
There is that phrase, 
ribbon of sparkling silver, 
which I love, but there are also those two names, 
St Joseph and Sakiwasipi.
So presumably this is another metaphor.
That much is confirmed in the next line,
when we learn that St Joseph is the version
that freezes over, runs in 
straight lines, or beneath 
unsightly bridges, or by 
the crowded pier at Lake Michigan 
into which it merges and 
disappears against the clouded sunset beyond,
whereas when called Sakiwasipi the river
ripples under cackling geese 
and meanders 
under luminous spring clouds,
once having overdone it and
leaving behind 
a lake shaped like a horseshoe,
perfectly still,
a giant mirror 
into which bright yellow trees 
hang upside down, pointing 
to the clear blue sky 
at the bottom. 

It's not obvious to me what I'm supposed to make 
of that frenzy of imagery -- 
but I am left with no time 
to turn it over the swivels of my brain, 
because the poem now puts its arms together in front of it
and dives into a second big analogy.
This is when it gets tiresome, technical -- 
yes, I get that no single ancestor 
gave bats and dolphins 
their common blessing of echolocation, 
but do I really care that nor did 
one etymological great-grandmother 
spawn east and oriental?
That word, convergent evolution, 
makes me wince: 
it should have no place in poetry.
I want to go to the next stanza already.

Only it turns out to be 
a curiously defensive one, like
it is trying to prove a point.
Speaking for myself, though, I felt it had its moments,
like the spiel about how some collaterals
function as euphemism. 
The one with cystic vs bladder,
the one about mortal remains for dead body,
and my favourite, gluteal vs buttock.
But hang on, hymeneal vs marriage
shouldn't belong here.
That sounds to me like 
the opposite of euphemistic. 
We then go off on 
an unnecessary moralistic tangent on what it feels like to
savour stewed goose and smoked steak versus 
bite into birds and bison.
I suppose that was for those s's and b's.
Next we are abruptly dropped into the periodic table 
and asked to contemplate stannic acid 
and ferrous oxide and Auric Goldfinger.
Then it gets awkward with 
all those obscure collaterals for common nouns, though I dig the one on 
hodiernal vs today. Yummm.
Also, estival vs summer
Estival cracks me up.
The final bit here is for me the best, 
the one with all the sneaky types, 
you know, the ones we use all the time 
but don't think of as collaterals.
Like I am startled that second and best
slipped under my radar just now.

To be honest, the next stanza loses me completely.
Do I really need to use digital exchange 
in place of fingers crossed
Sure, feline and canine precipitation 
faintly tickles me,
but xeric uniformity? Colour me unimpressed. 
That's not even what "just deserts" really means.
That also goes for the one on 
carpal gyration vs wrist spin.
And maybe I'm just too cynical at this point, 
but dextral absence for right away 
strikes me as too clever by half. 
I sense the poem is in panic mode now,
as if guilty of having 
bullet lists masquerading as its stanzas.
Pitiful, really.
  
I am pretty inspired, though, 
to see it recover to hit some high notes 
in the final stanza.
Those nouns lacking collaterals 
do make a good theme for wrapping things up.
Like when we are challenged 
to produce one for sin or Portugal or TV, 
I, for one, fail to.
And it is odd indeed that window has fenestral 
and door has nothing.
Pet haters? Ha, that's a good name -- 
having me doubt if the original metaphor 
was set up for this payoff.
(Then the volume of my mind 
inexplicably turns down as I read 
that side remark on how sooner or later 
I'd be thinking of the collateral shelter 
as one boasting no unclaimed animals.)
And I really like the way the examples 
in this category are juxtaposed.
The cake, guillotine, democracy sequence 
is a nice touch, for instance.
But also coffee, bean, cup
It gets me when we then immediately go
from coffee to scatological.
Seeing how the clock on the poem 
is running out, I become curious 
about how it is going to end. 
That is when I am a trifle jarred, 
but mostly amused, to discover that, 
in its own words, 
"As a poem do I long to sound,
 as thy eyeballs come southbound."
Fancy.

2020/12/27

Oregon Pacific


Come morning tide up the wayside,

By whales and wharfs and dunes I glide,

I slide by rock, mount, bridge and bay.


I wave, I roar, I leap, I pour,

With briny tongues lap up the shore,

Through cliff, cape, chasm find a way.


I shape the shell and wash Thor's Well,

Entrance the lighthouse clientele,

And arches, churns and punchbowls spray.


And as the beach I sweep to reach,

I catch Ponsler's pebbles in speech,

Or stumps and wrecks rue their birthday.



2020/03/28

All Deck on Hands

Call a spade a rake never;
A gainful club must meet.
Diamonds may be forever,
But hearts will cease to beat.

Yoke abacus to alphabet:
Ten-J-Q-Joker-Ace.
Then cast your silver in the bet,
And keep a poker face.

2018/06/15

Through a Mirror Cracked


Right is funny sometimes.


This is the side of the car I mis-enter 
outside Arrivals 
with the fresh sting of a tropical lungful of air.
This is the earthing-wire limb of Nataraja,
the useful arm of God in the Sistine Chapel,
the hemisphere of the brain
out of which paint flows, and humming-birds fly.
This is where the choir of rhymes stand in an ode,
where you would lay down 
the first syllable of an Arabic haiku.
Where Hitler leaned, 
and Italy -- and italics.

Left is hilarious.

This, and not that, is the hand of Tendulkar that drops
the mushroom autograph.
This is the hand of an acquaintance you glimpse
for a ring, to trace their bliss or misery;
the hand of mine that holds a teacup in restaurants 
because my grandmother had suggested
this cuts down contact with public spit;
the lively hand of a protein --
the only hand of a neutrino.
The eardrum of Caesar that had ceased to stir.
The ear Mike Tyson 
lets you keep, if it is yours.
The ear Vincent van Gogh
lets you keep, if it is his.
Hither hover hearts; here 
align 
alliterations.
Once, I dreamed I walked this way on the number line
-- passing all the numerals in a fencing pose
(and I could swear they were getting bigger, 
only, I was told, they were getting smaller) --
until I encountered a sinister southpaw
from the occident,
who seemed a bit on the portly side.


2018/05/31

Proceedings of The Ornithology Society


             
"Was it a warbler you met?
Does it fly? Get wet?
A brand new breed of bird?
We stand in need of word."

"Aye, a brand new breed of bird,
The kind of which's unheard.
To describe her we need
Words of phrasal breed.

Finefangled is she, and in new fettle,
She builds her dint with loggerheads and lays eggs in a kettle.
Her dudgeon's short and shrift is high,
A riddance reddish in her cry:
A brand new breed of bird,
And that's just the first third.

Her down -- at least from what I saw --
Was spick and beck, and kith and haw,
Kit and whit, and not a caboodle.
All in all, a jetsam doodle
Was the brand new breed of bird
That I had encountered.

She bandies a shebang raringly,
Drinks neap and petard sparingly;
She wears her bill in kilter,
Up skelter and fro helter.
A brand new breed of bird,
A true crossword absurd."

2015/11/23

Hourglass


Brigitte Bardot keeps off starch
And Greta Garbo hydrates,
Yet Humphrey lets his throat to parch
And bites them carbohydrates.

Rita Rudner lives on crumbs,
Marilyn Monroe, celeries;
Orson hungry when he becomes 
Eviscerates he sculleries.

Dancercises Lindsay Lohan,
Weightlifts Lucy Lawless;
"Burrrp" comes Denzel's slogan,
You wish he would gnaw less.

Amy Adams turns to pose, 
Lucy Liu winks;
Is that cheese on Joaquin's nose?
I bet his breath stinks.

2014/04/19

A Grandfather's Guide to Poesy

Catching her kvetch thusly, we was keen to teach Kim a trick:
"Incapable of completing my poems am I, though they begin with promise."
We prescribed ye ol' family formula, Ocean-Heaven-Joint-Pun:
"To seek inspiration, seafare," advised we. "Hatch a Miltonian paradise.
Attempt cannabis. Should all fail, cast dignity aside and play on words.
Why couldn't you be a gent? All comely women of circular countenance
Spout perennial male poetry from moles located at midwicket..."
Pensioners' mouths, like air conditioners, only stop for autumn --
Free rolled the pearls of wisdom, and other spherical schemes.
Yet civilly did Kim nod her head and mutter,
"You do know this is my bread and butter",
Check the flow of thoughts said, and utter,
"But, Gramp, isn't that our bread and butter?"
Let her bright pink face to redden but her
Tone was even-keeled: "Bread and butter."
Her trouble wasn't, explained she, a deficit of lyrical themes,
But that she possessed an imagination with neither top nor bottom.
It chirped itself hoarse like a negligent mama cricket's kid cricket,
Spiced everything up and set off smoke alarms, like brown tenants;
Kibitzed, quivered and cooed with flying colours, like crayon birds.
Inheriting her clan's sonnet nose, doggerel ears and ballad eyes,
Inflated she with uncontrollable stanzas every revision -- ere quitting at v7.1.
"Sweet child, there is a fix as surely within your reach as your left palm is,"
We suggested pitifully. "Make your rhyme scheme symmetric."


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In case you missed it, here's another version.

2011/05/26

Culinary Wisdom

For the Discerning Madrasi in Yankeedom

Pico de gallo and idli
Is a combination deadly
(They fit like lock and keys)
Never munch on fries
When you lunch on rice
(They're as chalk and cheese)

2007/08/07

Rotten Rime

Buds mayn't blossom, snakes mayn't slither,
Joeys mayn't jump, but divorcees may date!
Falcons mayn't fly, bestfriends mayn't bother,
Bradmen mayn't bat, but all may alliterate!