Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Monday, December 29, 2008
Nice and Warm
I've found that sleeping while it's cold
Increases the fortitude of my general disposition;
It centers me between either side of the bed,
While I tuck in my head,
And if I have been sloppy in making that bed?
Well then I reap the drafty whirlwind about my toes,
Forcing me to action: Fixing the error of my ways
or Inaction: Huddling closer and telling myself fables about how it really isn't very cold and that hypothermia is very unlikely for people inside.
Really the inaction is only the lazy man's delay; it never lasts long,
It cannot, for hypothermia cares not a whit for indoors or out,
Only for low-riding mercury and making the lazy man wise or dead.
Now don't for a minute think that there is complaint in any of this;
It is interesting beyond these rambling words to think about sleep and how one procures one's portion. There is a certain joy that is dispensed in want that one savors in plenty.
Plenty cannot live without its poorer cousin.
And the splendor of a warm bed?
Play footsie with Frosty and gratitude will well up in your heart when next you lie warm and comfortable.
I'm off to bed now.
Nice and Warm.
Increases the fortitude of my general disposition;
It centers me between either side of the bed,
While I tuck in my head,
And if I have been sloppy in making that bed?
Well then I reap the drafty whirlwind about my toes,
Forcing me to action: Fixing the error of my ways
or Inaction: Huddling closer and telling myself fables about how it really isn't very cold and that hypothermia is very unlikely for people inside.
Really the inaction is only the lazy man's delay; it never lasts long,
It cannot, for hypothermia cares not a whit for indoors or out,
Only for low-riding mercury and making the lazy man wise or dead.
Now don't for a minute think that there is complaint in any of this;
It is interesting beyond these rambling words to think about sleep and how one procures one's portion. There is a certain joy that is dispensed in want that one savors in plenty.
Plenty cannot live without its poorer cousin.
And the splendor of a warm bed?
Play footsie with Frosty and gratitude will well up in your heart when next you lie warm and comfortable.
I'm off to bed now.
Nice and Warm.
Friday, December 26, 2008
Cuban Holiday
Today is Boxing Day,
The poorer cousin of Christmas.
It is for cleaning up
And not really making a fuss;
Except in Cuba,
Where they lace up their gloves
And go to their in-laws,
And show exactly who they loves!
The poorer cousin of Christmas.
It is for cleaning up
And not really making a fuss;
Except in Cuba,
Where they lace up their gloves
And go to their in-laws,
And show exactly who they loves!
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Nuts!
I got nuts for Christmas
In a 5 pound bag.
If you will imagine
And see my tail wag.
Pistachios are gorgeous,
Prettier than gold
I think I will go eat them now
Before they e'en get old.
In a 5 pound bag.
If you will imagine
And see my tail wag.
Pistachios are gorgeous,
Prettier than gold
I think I will go eat them now
Before they e'en get old.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Wind
The wind was cold,
As cold as ice,
But less solid,
And more vapory.
Nevertheless
It beat me about the head
Like I was Gerry Cooney.
As cold as ice,
But less solid,
And more vapory.
Nevertheless
It beat me about the head
Like I was Gerry Cooney.
Monday, December 22, 2008
.45 and .22
I shot a gun.
It went boom.
Shells on the floor.
Smokey room.
On down the range,
Piled up high,
Spent bullets stretch
T'wards the sky.
It went boom.
Shells on the floor.
Smokey room.
On down the range,
Piled up high,
Spent bullets stretch
T'wards the sky.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Nursery Rhyme
There was a reporter who threw a shoe
He had so many freedoms he didn't know what to do.
So he wasted them on insults, without any class,
Then got tackled by the secret service
And fell on his ass.
He had so many freedoms he didn't know what to do.
So he wasted them on insults, without any class,
Then got tackled by the secret service
And fell on his ass.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
3 Years
Three years ago today I saw the future and didn't know.
Three years ago today I kept my hands low.
But now great love is growing
And the future is glowing.
Three years ago today I kept my hands low.
But now great love is growing
And the future is glowing.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Saturday, December 6, 2008
Minnie-soda
The wind bit like an enraged terrier
Not enough to kill, but more than enough.
And the sun shone like a 15 watt bulb,
Tepid and weak like like a pound of bird fluff.
The similes buzzed around like fruit flies
Alighting on the inappropriate
Areas, while avoiding the apt ones.
The weather? Screaming like a chanteuse
And changing like a tarted-up floozy.
Not enough to kill, but more than enough.
And the sun shone like a 15 watt bulb,
Tepid and weak like like a pound of bird fluff.
The similes buzzed around like fruit flies
Alighting on the inappropriate
Areas, while avoiding the apt ones.
The weather? Screaming like a chanteuse
And changing like a tarted-up floozy.
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Fish and Socks
Fish and chips are good to eat.
Socks look good upon your feet.
If I'm feeling underclad
I just eat some fries and shad.
That's just silly, there's no doubt.
At least I don't eat eelpout!
Socks look good upon your feet.
If I'm feeling underclad
I just eat some fries and shad.
That's just silly, there's no doubt.
At least I don't eat eelpout!
Monday, December 1, 2008
Onward White Stuff, Onward!
Tis the first of December
And all through the state
There's a blanket of white stuff
And boy ain't it great?
Just a dozen more inches
Then out come the skis.
The trails are a-beckonin'
Who cares if we freeze?
And all through the state
There's a blanket of white stuff
And boy ain't it great?
Just a dozen more inches
Then out come the skis.
The trails are a-beckonin'
Who cares if we freeze?
Thursday, November 27, 2008
The Shadow of the Axe (part five)
{Part One}
{Part Two}
{Part Three}
{Part Four}
Cesar and his turkeys crept up the stairs from the dank basement into the kitchen. A chill ran down their giblets when they saw the oven door leering at them out of the darkness. It quietly taunted them, "I've known your kind. And I'll know each and every one of you too. Just give it time. There's no use fighting." It was a curiously verbal oven. Or so it seemed.
Cesar mastered himself, gobbling under his breath; ultimately he had no quarrel with an appliance. "Focus," his inner voice said, "on the task at hand. Down the hallway, second door on the left." He floated down the corridor like a barnyard ninja, axe in hand, nerves taut and ready.
And then a muffled sob pierced his ear like whatever it is those people at Claire's use to pierce ears with. Cesar wheeled around back towards the kitchen, signaling the others to follow. And there was Sylvester sobbing and beating his fists impotently on the oven door.
Cesar didn't hesitate. He swung the axe with deadly grace, artfully detaching Sylvester's head. "Fool!" he hissed.
The other turkeys were frozen, transfixed by the spectacle, horrified by the bloodied axe and the malevolent Cesar. His gaze turned towards theirs and it was as if he was basting them with fear. The tension couldn't hold, something had to give.
And then light invaded the kitchen like a blitzkrieg. There stood Farmer Earl decked out in longjohns and his Colt 45. "Dumb turkeys" he said softly.
And then he started to shoot.
----------------------------------------------
Happy Thanksgiving!!! Keep an eye on your turkey; they're crafty beasts.
{Part Two}
{Part Three}
{Part Four}
Cesar and his turkeys crept up the stairs from the dank basement into the kitchen. A chill ran down their giblets when they saw the oven door leering at them out of the darkness. It quietly taunted them, "I've known your kind. And I'll know each and every one of you too. Just give it time. There's no use fighting." It was a curiously verbal oven. Or so it seemed.
Cesar mastered himself, gobbling under his breath; ultimately he had no quarrel with an appliance. "Focus," his inner voice said, "on the task at hand. Down the hallway, second door on the left." He floated down the corridor like a barnyard ninja, axe in hand, nerves taut and ready.
And then a muffled sob pierced his ear like whatever it is those people at Claire's use to pierce ears with. Cesar wheeled around back towards the kitchen, signaling the others to follow. And there was Sylvester sobbing and beating his fists impotently on the oven door.
Cesar didn't hesitate. He swung the axe with deadly grace, artfully detaching Sylvester's head. "Fool!" he hissed.
The other turkeys were frozen, transfixed by the spectacle, horrified by the bloodied axe and the malevolent Cesar. His gaze turned towards theirs and it was as if he was basting them with fear. The tension couldn't hold, something had to give.
And then light invaded the kitchen like a blitzkrieg. There stood Farmer Earl decked out in longjohns and his Colt 45. "Dumb turkeys" he said softly.
And then he started to shoot.
----------------------------------------------
Happy Thanksgiving!!! Keep an eye on your turkey; they're crafty beasts.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
The Shadow of the Axe (part four)
{Part One}
{Part Two}
{Part Three}
"Honey?"
"Scnixgh-uhngfff"
"Honey!"
"What?" Farmer Earl rolled over and tried to open his eyes, but the art of sleep and the mysteries of physiology contrived to make them curiously unresponsive.
"Earl, there's a noise in the kitchen!"
Well art and mysteries be darned to heck, nobody messed with Earl's abode, which he lovingly called Chateau Jones. His eyes flew open and without needing to think his body left the bed and his hand reached towards the antique box under his nightstand. The box was black except for some gouges and chipped edges that it had acquired through more years of service than Earl even knew. The box and its contents were the one thing that the cranky old farmer had received when his pappi had died so many years ago. There hadn't been any money and the land had passed to his older brother Josiah who had quickly sold it and used the proceeds to move to the city, a longstanding dream. That golden dream had turned to pyrite within a year when the bottom fell out of the real estate market after the dumb government forced lenders to make bad loans to underqualified applicants. No matter to Earl, who had never cared for his elder brother's self-indulgence (or his explosive flatulence for that matter). And anyways, Earl had gotten what was of real value, the worn black box, his father's treasure and his grandfather's before that.
He silently reached inside.
(to be continued)
{Part Two}
{Part Three}
"Honey?"
"Scnixgh-uhngfff"
"Honey!"
"What?" Farmer Earl rolled over and tried to open his eyes, but the art of sleep and the mysteries of physiology contrived to make them curiously unresponsive.
"Earl, there's a noise in the kitchen!"
Well art and mysteries be darned to heck, nobody messed with Earl's abode, which he lovingly called Chateau Jones. His eyes flew open and without needing to think his body left the bed and his hand reached towards the antique box under his nightstand. The box was black except for some gouges and chipped edges that it had acquired through more years of service than Earl even knew. The box and its contents were the one thing that the cranky old farmer had received when his pappi had died so many years ago. There hadn't been any money and the land had passed to his older brother Josiah who had quickly sold it and used the proceeds to move to the city, a longstanding dream. That golden dream had turned to pyrite within a year when the bottom fell out of the real estate market after the dumb government forced lenders to make bad loans to underqualified applicants. No matter to Earl, who had never cared for his elder brother's self-indulgence (or his explosive flatulence for that matter). And anyways, Earl had gotten what was of real value, the worn black box, his father's treasure and his grandfather's before that.
He silently reached inside.
(to be continued)
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
The Shadow of the Axe (part three)
{Part One}
{Part Two}
That night the frosty wind made moan. The earth stood hard as iron. The farmhouse stood unlit, Letterman was over and even Conan was asleep. It was the second watch of the night... but nobody was watching. Nobody save for Cesar and his ill-tempered cohort. Yes, they were watching the farmhouse with icy malice.
And the clock ticked.
Cesar quietly contemplated the razor edge of his axe and lost himself in a dream wherein he danced a perfunctory tango on the sharpened apex of steel, which plunged down cruelly in either direction. Yet he danced unconcerned. His partner was a shadow, a mere vapor, perhaps death itself. No matter; he danced as unto himself.
"Cesar!"
The calling of his name startled him out of his morbid reverie. He knew that it was time.
The band of turkeys advanced on the house from the side opposite the bedroom where Earl and his wife lay asleep. The old-fashioned cellar door was never locked. The turkeys knew this from the regular poker nights that they held in the farmhouse basement. And so they slipped in, as quietly as tea infusing hot water, as lethal as eating the wrong kind of mushroom.
(to be continued)
{Part Two}
That night the frosty wind made moan. The earth stood hard as iron. The farmhouse stood unlit, Letterman was over and even Conan was asleep. It was the second watch of the night... but nobody was watching. Nobody save for Cesar and his ill-tempered cohort. Yes, they were watching the farmhouse with icy malice.
And the clock ticked.
Cesar quietly contemplated the razor edge of his axe and lost himself in a dream wherein he danced a perfunctory tango on the sharpened apex of steel, which plunged down cruelly in either direction. Yet he danced unconcerned. His partner was a shadow, a mere vapor, perhaps death itself. No matter; he danced as unto himself.
"Cesar!"
The calling of his name startled him out of his morbid reverie. He knew that it was time.
The band of turkeys advanced on the house from the side opposite the bedroom where Earl and his wife lay asleep. The old-fashioned cellar door was never locked. The turkeys knew this from the regular poker nights that they held in the farmhouse basement. And so they slipped in, as quietly as tea infusing hot water, as lethal as eating the wrong kind of mushroom.
(to be continued)
Monday, November 24, 2008
The Shadow of the Axe (part two)
{Part One}
The wind cut less sharply amongst the trees, but that wasn't why the turkeys were gathering there. No, it was a different kind of cutting that had their wattles all a-quiver. The kind of cutting that left their wattles and snoods next to the bloody axe in the yard while the rest of them got innapropriately touched and shoved in an oven. But not this year. Thisgaggle, brood, flock, gang of hardened turkeys wasn't going to take so much as a word of friendly advice from the farmer much less a blow to the head. And so they gathered.
Not being much for words they milled around and made gobbley noises. It was a combination of nerves and very small and easily distracted brains. But when Cesar arrived with the axe their focus got razor sharp... like an axe.
"Brothers," he intoned, "the time has come to bury the axe." Cesar paused, looked around with and intensity that only a large, flightless bird can muster, and then spat towards the farmhouse. "The time has come to bury the axe in Farmer Earl's back!" he roared, though in truth it just sounded like some spastic and overly ernest clucking.
No matter. The other turkeys understood his words. They understood his grim truth. And any sense of mercy or philosophical resignation on their part had died along with Phil the year before. Earl had to die.
(to be continued)
The wind cut less sharply amongst the trees, but that wasn't why the turkeys were gathering there. No, it was a different kind of cutting that had their wattles all a-quiver. The kind of cutting that left their wattles and snoods next to the bloody axe in the yard while the rest of them got innapropriately touched and shoved in an oven. But not this year. This
Not being much for words they milled around and made gobbley noises. It was a combination of nerves and very small and easily distracted brains. But when Cesar arrived with the axe their focus got razor sharp... like an axe.
"Brothers," he intoned, "the time has come to bury the axe." Cesar paused, looked around with and intensity that only a large, flightless bird can muster, and then spat towards the farmhouse. "The time has come to bury the axe in Farmer Earl's back!" he roared, though in truth it just sounded like some spastic and overly ernest clucking.
No matter. The other turkeys understood his words. They understood his grim truth. And any sense of mercy or philosophical resignation on their part had died along with Phil the year before. Earl had to die.
(to be continued)
Saturday, November 22, 2008
The Shadow of the Axe
The sky was brooding over the stubbled fields like an angry mother hen, just waiting to criticize the rural landscape with sleety derision. Cowed, the cows kept close to the barn door, which was open. They were not interested in picking fights or suffering the consequences of being too big for their, um... britches. But the turkeys? Now they were a different story. The turkey's didn't give a damn about the poultropomorphic sky. Chickens weren't their allies anways, certainly not come November time. And so the turkeys wandered to the pine windbreak along the edge of the field, sauntering casual-like in small groups so as not to attract undo attention....
(to be continued)
(to be continued)
Friday, November 21, 2008
Leaky Skills Lead to Harvest! (eventually)
Alas, I fear, a lack of sleep
Has caused my versing skills to seep
Out on the ground, where sinking deep
They'll spring to life! And then I'll reap.
Has caused my versing skills to seep
Out on the ground, where sinking deep
They'll spring to life! And then I'll reap.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Made Up
There was a young lass named Sharia.
Her parents were stricter than most.
One day she was caught with some eyeshadow on
And they tied her out back to a post.
Apparently Allah was angry.
He didn't support Maybelline.
Or at least not the manifestation he saw
On the eyes of the face that he'd seen.
And so the young lass named Sharia
Decided to try L'Oreal
But the sass in her choice and the tint on her cheek
Landed her back at the post for a week.
"Best from now on to be covered,
Three strikes and you will be gone!"
Her dear mother said. But Sharia instead
Spent all her cash on Revlon.
Her parents were stricter than most.
One day she was caught with some eyeshadow on
And they tied her out back to a post.
Apparently Allah was angry.
He didn't support Maybelline.
Or at least not the manifestation he saw
On the eyes of the face that he'd seen.
And so the young lass named Sharia
Decided to try L'Oreal
But the sass in her choice and the tint on her cheek
Landed her back at the post for a week.
"Best from now on to be covered,
Three strikes and you will be gone!"
Her dear mother said. But Sharia instead
Spent all her cash on Revlon.
coffee
I would that coffee did adorn
My mouth on every single morn',
A joyful liquid full of vim
Sooth, casting out the murky grim.
My mouth on every single morn',
A joyful liquid full of vim
Sooth, casting out the murky grim.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
The Foolish Foal
There once was a young horse I'll call Wilbur.
He ran with an elan I'll call quick.
Whether chasing the sun or fleeing the darkness
'Twas all of a piece of his schtick.
He ne'er did feel the flick of the switch
Or give his obedience to man.
Solo he flew down the roads of his youth
Both-sided blind and knowing no plan.
The speed was a reduction of hoping
To terms which his hooves could control.
The foam on his flanks and his desperate eyes
Were the rendering of his soul.
But foam was a poor consolation
For ceaselessly running in vain.
His whinnying self-isolation
Brought no certainty, save for the pain.
He ran with an elan I'll call quick.
Whether chasing the sun or fleeing the darkness
'Twas all of a piece of his schtick.
He ne'er did feel the flick of the switch
Or give his obedience to man.
Solo he flew down the roads of his youth
Both-sided blind and knowing no plan.
The speed was a reduction of hoping
To terms which his hooves could control.
The foam on his flanks and his desperate eyes
Were the rendering of his soul.
But foam was a poor consolation
For ceaselessly running in vain.
His whinnying self-isolation
Brought no certainty, save for the pain.
End Times
Eschatological musings
Are thoughts about what will be
When 'beyond my control' meets 'today',
When the one most loved departs,
When the verdict comes down.
But the dirty little secret
Is that every day is thus.
You live at the behest
Of one greater than you.
Muse on that.
Are thoughts about what will be
When 'beyond my control' meets 'today',
When the one most loved departs,
When the verdict comes down.
But the dirty little secret
Is that every day is thus.
You live at the behest
Of one greater than you.
Muse on that.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Sin
If sin is only minor,
A petty little thing,
Simply part of who we are,
just the way we swing,
Then Jesus' blood is optional
And God is pretty small.
We can just forgive ourselves!
Never mind the Fall.
Out with condemnation!
In with fuzzy love!
We'll just worship who we are
Forgetting God above.
That's today's "compassion"
The evil of our age.
Many call that wisdom.
Many think it sage.
But sin is not a minor thing,
Just a thing we do.
Nor is it acceptable
Forgiveable by you.
Sin is death inside you,
Blindness of the soul.
Sin is bowing to yourself
Pretending none is whole.
Sin is doing what you want
While standing on God's 'grace'.
Sin is calling God one's own
While spitting in his face.
What a work of death it is!
To hate the LORD and say,
"Sin is but a minor thing,
I'll do my will today."
A petty little thing,
Simply part of who we are,
just the way we swing,
Then Jesus' blood is optional
And God is pretty small.
We can just forgive ourselves!
Never mind the Fall.
Out with condemnation!
In with fuzzy love!
We'll just worship who we are
Forgetting God above.
That's today's "compassion"
The evil of our age.
Many call that wisdom.
Many think it sage.
But sin is not a minor thing,
Just a thing we do.
Nor is it acceptable
Forgiveable by you.
Sin is death inside you,
Blindness of the soul.
Sin is bowing to yourself
Pretending none is whole.
Sin is doing what you want
While standing on God's 'grace'.
Sin is calling God one's own
While spitting in his face.
What a work of death it is!
To hate the LORD and say,
"Sin is but a minor thing,
I'll do my will today."
Saturday, November 15, 2008
The Perils of Short Legs and Sidewalks
Wiener dogs, when walking low,
As they are wont to do,
Sometimes get, but can't remove,
Stuff on their belly-boo.
If it's only grass that's fine,
For grass will come right out,
But bubble-gum and nicotine
Need elbow grease and Shout!
As they are wont to do,
Sometimes get, but can't remove,
Stuff on their belly-boo.
If it's only grass that's fine,
For grass will come right out,
But bubble-gum and nicotine
Need elbow grease and Shout!
Hope in the Face of Hope
If "hope" is the word that you heard
Then you'll know that the word is absurd
For "hope" in the hands of a pol
Is nothing but sweet sounding gall
When this is the day that you face
And you're in that audaciousy place
Take a long breath and relax....
One, two, three, four, five, six, and...
Calm.
He isn't the lord of your life, now is he?
Nor the love of your wife, noshizzy!
So live with the hope that is real
And rejoice and be glad, and kneel...
Then you'll know that the word is absurd
For "hope" in the hands of a pol
Is nothing but sweet sounding gall
When this is the day that you face
And you're in that audaciousy place
Take a long breath and relax....
One, two, three, four, five, six, and...
Calm.
He isn't the lord of your life, now is he?
Nor the love of your wife, noshizzy!
So live with the hope that is real
And rejoice and be glad, and kneel...
Friday, November 14, 2008
Don't Kick the Fish
Kicking a fish ain't so easy.
Just ask my ol' uncle Jeb.
He took a great swing with his Nike
And mistakenly kicked my aunt Deb.
Though her poor bottom was ample,
And softer than most I dare say,
The kick touched a nerve
And Jeb started to swerve,
He hopped in that boat
Which was yet still afloat
And then it flipped o'er
And Debbie said, "Grrrrr"
And the kick that he'd meant for the fish
Made him wish an impossible wish
To reverse the events of that hour
And avoid the sopping wet glower
Of my auntie Deb.
Poor uncle Jeb!
Just ask my ol' uncle Jeb.
He took a great swing with his Nike
And mistakenly kicked my aunt Deb.
Though her poor bottom was ample,
And softer than most I dare say,
The kick touched a nerve
And Jeb started to swerve,
He hopped in that boat
Which was yet still afloat
And then it flipped o'er
And Debbie said, "Grrrrr"
And the kick that he'd meant for the fish
Made him wish an impossible wish
To reverse the events of that hour
And avoid the sopping wet glower
Of my auntie Deb.
Poor uncle Jeb!
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