I know you love me but if you follow me I'll love you too!

Tuesday 30 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Thirty

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Thirty

WHEELS WITHIN WHEELS
Any bit of sunshine brings them out
outside my front gate this morning
mourning the death of this cold spring
rings on their fingers banging tins.

Tinsel town it's not - Sunchester
Manchester with wheels - tyres screeching
ching ching cheers the mad mullah sings
singing over his car radio.

Radiotelegraphy phew!
hewn with an axe wheels within wheels
heels from Columbia - streetwise
wisdom comes from knowledge acquired.

Acquitted but guilty as sin
Sinbad  says - any bit of sunshine.
300413

Day Thirty last year.

Monday 29 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Nine

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Nine

THE GRASS IS GREENER
The grass is greener shorter than before
foreigners come and go the seasons change
anger consumes the abused - boils over
undercover officers roam the streets.

Treat or trick she says dipping his pocket
skyrocket taking his bus fare back home
homesick as a suicidal student
entering the lions den for the first time.

Timepleasers sheltering under the trees
essentially in the shadows dealing
lingering there no longer than they need
needlework inked in the prison workshop

Shop work wages won't pay the rent boys rent
rents his clothes plants trees - the grass is greener.
290413

Day Twenty-Nine last year.

Sunday 28 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Eight

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Eight

Poetic Flash Fiction in 51 Syllables!

SELLING SINGLES
They say that thugs are selling drugs to mugs, but who's selling cigs to kids? Don't you know that if you do one thing wrong, you're doing everything wrong. And they keep on selling singles to nine-year-olds at the corner shop!
280413

Day Twenty-Eight last year.

What will you write?

Saturday 27 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 DayTwenty-Seven

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Seven

WHO CAN TELL
She sits there waiting to hear what he wrote
Her hair still wet the blanket pulled up tight
It’s night time now and she dreads the morning
Tomorrow who can tell how she will feel.

She doesn't want it to end like last time
Her memory comes flooding back now fast 
It’s easy to take the first step but then
Tomorrow who can tell how she will feel.

She can see clearly in her own minds eye
Her blindness is no handicap to him
It’s time for him to read the words he wrote
Tomorrow who can tell how she will feel.

India
Lima Oscar Victor Echo
Yankee Oscar Uniform he says.
270413

Day Twenty-Seven last year.

Friday 26 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Six

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Six

ROUND ABOUT HELL
Not that hot all strangers to each other
Hermione told Helen about her dad
Dado rails won’t make the house trendy
Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s.

Sarcastic as a naive art dealer
Alerting the world to the latest scam
Scampering up the hill like Jack and Jill
Illegally pocketing all that cash.

Cashless as they would like us all to be
Beer tax and credit card society
Etymologise each thought to the root
Route one end to end stuff just kick the ball.

Ballooning in the playground about hell
Helen told Hermione it’s not that hot.
260413

Day Twenty-Six last year.

Thursday 25 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Five

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Five

UNSOCIAL HOURS
Punish the victim kick him when he's down
Own your own home or pay through the nose twice
Icicles hanging off his hob nail boots
Boob jobs and Botox best before breakfast.

Faster and faster quick as a vixen
End this stupidity while you still can
Canada would be a good place to hide
Hidden away in the giant snow lands.

Outlandish as it might seem there's a queue
Queens and Brooklyn are good to hide in too
Tomorrow is almost another day
Other days don't count as unsocial hours.

Ursa Major rocks at this time of year
Earlier they said punish the victim.
250413

Day Twenty-Five last year.

Wednesday 24 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Four

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Four

WINNERS AND LOSERS
They build you up and then they knock you down
Downtown Chicago winners and losers
Los Angeles is a bit like that too
Tomorrow another thousand will come.

Welcome to America and all that
Thatchers bricklayers and hatters wanted
Tedious as it might seem to the poor
Or even more so to the rich out there.

Here they come Ellis Island once again
In their droves to build the Chicago Loop
Loopy as a two bit Hollywood flake
Lake Michigan will never be the same.

Samantha changed her name and became Sam
Sambucas for the winners as they build.
240413 

Day Twenty-Four last year.

Tuesday 23 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Three

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Three

I'm doing the prompt at napowrimo.net today.

Today, let’s try writing triolets. A triolet is an eight-line poem. All the lines are in iambic tetramenter (for a total of eight syllables per line), and the first, fourth, and seventh lines are identical, as are the second and final lines. This means that the poem begins and ends with the same couplet. Beyond this, there is a tight rhyme scheme (helped along by the repetition of lines) — ABaAabAB.

Here’s an example by Thomas Hardy:

Birds at Winter
Around the house the flakes fly faster,
And all the berries now are gone
From holly and cotoneaster
Around the house. The flakes fly! – faster
Shutting indoors the crumb-outcaster
We used to see upon the lawn
Around the house. The Flakes fly faster
And all the berries now are gone!


Here’s mine:

UP AND DOWN
Life’s more like a rollercoaster
Thrill seekers coming back for more
For the cherries in the orchard
Life’s more like a rollercoaster
Up and down and squashed and tortured
Always more as time gets shorter
Life’s more like a rollercoaster
Thrill seekers coming back for more
230413

Day Twenty-Three last year.

Monday 22 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-Two

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-Two

HER/HIMSELF
Writing her/himself into history
his/her story was much the same as mine
minerals buried deep beneath the ground
sounds like nature's taking over again.

Ayn Rand and her cultist followers
Lower Manhattan's never been the same
Sambucas wouldn't help them that much
that much I do know about  these things.

Ingenuity comes in droves sometimes
time's running out for some of us
usually it's me that's running away
way down south and up the yellow brick road.

Frog and Toad we're off to see the Wizard
arduous as it is it beats writing.
210413

Day twenty-Two last year.

Sunday 21 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Twenty-One

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty-One

Inspired by but not posted to the prompt at Sunday Whirl.

Poetic Flash Fiction in 51 Syllables

HEARTS HARDEN
Promise me you will shelter against the bomb, when infidels fire one. Resilience is time well spent, no matter what, the drugs will be shipped. Hearts harden to shock us, they want their land to thrive and ours to struggle.
210413 

Day Twenty-One last year.

Saturday 20 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twenty

The prompt today at NaPoWriMo.net is as follows: Today I challenge you to write a poem that uses at least five of the following words: owl, generator, abscond, upwind, squander, clove, miraculous, dunderhead, cyclops, willowy, mercurial, seaweed, gutter, non-pareil, artillery, salt, curl, ego, rodomontade, elusive, twice, ghost, cheese, cowbird, truffle, svelte, quahog, bilious.
Happy writing!

Here's mine: (I chose - upwind, clove, twice, ghost, and mercurial).

A MERCURIAL GHOST
A mercurial ghost came to visit
it isn't a ghost it's a ghoul is it
sitting there upwind
Indian Queens grinned
edging over the clove twice revisit
200413

Friday 19 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Nineteen

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Nineteen

Today’s prompt at Napowrimo.net comes to 
us from a list that Daisy Fried put together: 
Write a poem in the form of a personal ad!
Or, if you like, try any kind of want ad. 

Personal ads, though, do have a kind of poetry to them. 
The personal ads of the London Review of Books are 
particularly famous, and have even spawned a book
When I was younger, one of my favorite guilty pleasures 
was getting a copy of the local alternative newspaper and 
reading through the personal ads for (a) witty ones and 
(b) really horrible ones. One of my favorites was a witty one, 
which went something like this:
Antonymically Correct?
Ham-fisted, vindictive milquetoast seeks ineducable, filthy 

harridan to castigate, bore, and neglect. 

Try and top that, if you like. (Oh, and by the way, the 

personal ad doesn't actually have to be about you, of course. 
Feel free to invent every last thing about it). Happy writing!

Here’s mine:

HELP!
Beatles fan wltm similar
perhaps please please me at the cinema
or Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
Old codger coffin dodger hold my hand
190413

Thursday 18 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Eighteen

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Eighteen

I'm doing today's prompt at Napowrimo.net!

This prompt comes to us from Cathy Evans, 
who challenges us to write a poem that begins and 
ends with the same word. You could try for something
in media res, that begins and ends with “and,” for example. 
Or maybe “if.” Or perhaps you could really challenge 
yourself and begin/end your poem with a six-dollar word 
like “antidisestablishmentarianism.” (Just kidding!) 
Whatever word you choose, I hope you have fun with it!

Here's mine:

THE ONE
One on one they're about the same as us
usually we'd rush out and take them on
only as I can see their weaponry now
no way will we beat them one on one

None of them out there last time were yet born
ornamental as that might sound to you
your young soldiers will surely die tonight
night after night none will be spared no none

Oneness in the ranks will beat these chancers
erstwhile as they might think they are out there
here we go then into battle once more
rebuffing the enemy with oneness

One of us and only the one will win
in this total war we will be the one
180413

ONION ON YOU HERO
(THE ONE REVEALED)
Only as I can see their weaponry now
no way will we beat them one on one
in this total war we will be the one
ornamental as that might sound to you
none of them out there last time were yet born

Oneness in the ranks will beat these chancers
night after night none will be spared no none

Your young soldiers will surely die tonight
one on one they're about the same as us
usually we'd rush out and take them on

Here we go then into battle once more
erstwhile as they might think they are out there
rebuffing the enemy with oneness
one of us will win and the one only
180413/1

Day Eighteen last year.

Wednesday 17 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Seventeen

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Seventeen

Today is Margaret Thatcher's funeral
and it was revealed during the service
at St. Paul's Cathedral in the City of London
that she was part of the scientific team that
invented Mr Whippy ice cream.
My prompt for today is to write a nursery rhyme
about her. So for today only, no matter what
your political persuasion, this is just for fun.

MRS. THATCH
Grantham grocers counter slices
mixing Mr Whippy ices
A ceremonial dispatch
at Saint Paul's for Mrs Thatch
170413

Day Seventeen last year.

Finally, just for the record - Bus Degradation. 

Tuesday 16 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Sixteen

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Sixteen

Yesterday was my five hundredth post on this blog
and the phone didn't stop ringing, which inspired my
poem for this the sixteenth day of NaPoWriMo 2013.

Here it is:

DEAD WRINGERS
His home phone never stopped ringing
Ringing, ringing, ringing in his ears
Tearfully he disconnected his Ansaphone
Phone calls were taking over his life

Life was for living he told himself
Elfishly he turned the damn thing off
Offering the ringers no choice at all
All that happened was - they rang him some more

Some moron had found his cell phone number
Cucumber dog and partridge trombone
One two three, five-five-five, six nine, nine eleven
Eventually though something had to give

Give me strength he said, jumping into the canal
All the ringers were watching, waiting, wringing him out
160413

Monday 15 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Fifteen


Day Fifteen

SHE DON’T
She don’t see things that way no more
No more than she ever did how’s about you
Useless as a broken tambourine
Urination is hardly the answer

Swerving dodging left field and right
And writing down every rite of passage
Sage and onion would make a better stuffing
Stuff like that always bugs her sideways

Wayside in the jungle of discontent
Tentative as it might be she must discuss it
Cuss it or swear on oath or her babies’ life
Living that way isn't the answer ever

Everest is the tallest mountain still
Illuminate her a little bit more
150413

LAWSUITS CENSUS
(SHE DON’T REVEALED)
Living that way isn't the answer ever
And writing down every rite of passage
Wayside in the jungle of discontent
Stuff like that always bugs her sideways
Useless as a broken tambourine
Illuminate her a little bit more
Tentative as it might be she must discuss it
Sage and onion would make a better stuffing

Cuss it or swear on oath or her babies’ life
Everest is the tallest mountain still
No more than she ever did how’s about you
Swerving dodging left field and right
Urination is hardly the answer
She don’t see things that way no more
150413/1

Halfway last year.

Sunday 14 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Fourteen

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Fourteen

I used Mad Kane's weekly Limerick prompt for my Day Fourteen.


IMELDA SHE'S NOT


A woman who likes to cook stews
goes upstairs to count all her shoes 
Imelda she’s not 
but soul food she’s got 
Or is it sole food that she brews 
140413


Saturday 13 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Thirteen

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Thirteen

PROPAGANDA
Propaganda all-out war
who can really know for sure
Pyongyang who's right who's wrong
who pulls his strings sings this song
130413

Friday 12 April 2013

Na PoWriMo 2013 Day Twelve

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Twelve

TOTAL WAR
Thought control in Pyongyang
total war for all the gang
Who pulls his strings Kim Jong-un
Beijing perhaps very soon
120413 
Day Twelve last year.


Thursday 11 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Eleven

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Eleven
The prompt today is to write a tanka. This, like the “American” cinquain, is a poem based on syllables, with the pattern being 5-7-5-7-7. They work best when those final two 7-syllable lines contain a sort of turn or surprise that the first three lines might not wholly anticipate. You can string a bunch of them together to make a multi-stanza poem, or just write one!

Here's mine:

ROCK 'N' ROLL
The rock 'n' roll years
on stage in front of the crowd
the deafening throng

looking for a miracle
five thousand more mouths to feed
110413

Day Eleven last year.

Wednesday 10 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Ten

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Ten
Inspired by but not posted to Haiku Heights

INCENSE

Morning prayers 
long before breakfast
the monks rise
100413

Tuesday 9 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Nine

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Nine

NOBODY LISTENS
Sitting here looking at a blank screen
one day melds into the next
time disappears into the pot
melts like it's not that important
who knows who cares what's real
I do but nobody listens to me

Why would they what have I done
for them what have I done that matters
to them when was I their hero
what did I do to help them when
I had all the money in the world
all those years ago in the old country
090413

Day Nine last year.

Monday 8 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Eight

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Eight

Posted to Haiku Heights

GRASSHOPPER

Between the goalposts
he bounces like a football
this season and next



Sunday 7 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Seven

NapoWriMo 2013
Day Seven

Posted to Haiku Heights

APRIL

Cold wind in April
The Redstarts worm their way home
Spring is late this year
070413


Wise Words from a Troglodyte, 
time doesn't exist - till you miss the train.

Day Seven last year.

Saturday 6 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Six

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Six

UN POCO LOCO
(MISHMASH)
Dance doodle
doodle boogie
woogie doodle
dance doodle doodle jazz
Un Poco Loco
fast fast slow slow 
Un Poco Loco 
and all that jazz
Oh so extravaganza
surely dancing mambo 
the way they groove to
the sax so Un Poco Loco
with Bud with Curly with Max
 060413

Day Six last year

Friday 5 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Five

NaPoWriMo 2013

Day Five
I challenge you to write a cinquain on this, the fifth day of NaPoWriMo. A cinquain is a poem that employs stanzas with five lines. Each line has a certain number of accented or stressed syllables, and a certain number of overall syllables per line. In the “American” cinquain, a form invented by a woman with the highly unfortunate name of Adelaide Crapsey, the number of stresses per line is 1-2-3-4-1, and the number of syllables is 2-4-6-8-2. So the first line would have two syllables, one stressed and one unstressed. The second line would have four syllables, two of which are stressed, and so on. This kind of accent/syllabic verse can be a bit frustrating at first, but it’s useful for learning to sharpen up your language!

Here's my Day Five

YOU BET
Okay
here it is then
Ladies day at Aintree
then the sold out Grand National
You bet
050413

My Day Five last year.


Thursday 4 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Four

NaPoWriMo 2013
Our prompt for today (again — totally optional!) is a little odd, but here goes. Recently, I read an article about the Scottish science fiction writer Iain M. Banks. His books often have spaceships in them. And those spaceships have extremely odd, poetic names. Like: Prosthetic Conscience, Irregular Apocalypse, Unfortunate Conflict of Interest, Gunboat Diplomat, Very Little Gravitas Indeed, A Series of Unlikely Explanations, Just Another Victim of the Ambient Morality, Jaundiced Outlook, Frank Exchange of Views, Lightly Seared on the Reality Grill, Falling Outside the Normal Moral Constraints, Abundance of Onslaught, Refreshingly Unconcerned With the Vulgar Exigencies of Veracity, A Fine Disregard For Awkward Facts.
There’s a whole twitter account devoted to tweeting Iain-M-Banks-like names for spaceships. So your challenge for today is to write a poem with a title drawn from one of these spaceship names. Feel free to pick a genuine Banks, like the ones listed above, or to take one from the twitter. And if you think of your own Banks-like spaceship name title, feel free to use that! The poet Barbara Guest wrote an essay warning poets about starting from the title, but while I've found that a wonderful poem usually finds its right title, I've also found that the right title can easily lead to a wonderful poem!
Happy writing!

Here's my Day Four

INVINCIBLE JIM
(THE INVISIBLE MAN)
In his imagination he was invisible
invincible nothing was broken
tokens and toys all in the box
the box was locked and bolted 
malted milk and biscuits ready
steady go up the wooden hill to bed 
bedlam in his head screaming
dreaming he was invincible
invisible nobody could see him
Jim the invincible invisible man

Wednesday 3 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Three

NaPoRiMo 2013
Day Three

PINK LINT
sooner or later (and he hoped sooner)
something had to give
they talk about experimental
and state the obvious

bang it all goes up in smoke
cream cakes would have been better
cheaper even much cheaper
but there's always a reason for

the things that governments do
they never call the shots they
just react to them and withdraw
back into anonymity

that's what he told me anyway
of course he should know
because his girlfriend went out
with a policeman once or did she

just get arrested I really can't
remember it was all so long ago
he was the sort of geezer that
always knew someone who knew

something about everything so
of course I trusted him you would
have done too he was very convincing
later (much later) I found out that he

was a con man he just got you to
trust him and then he ripped you off
I was lucky because I didn't have any
money in my bank account you see

I didn't trust banks anymore than he
trusted governments so when he told
me that he'd moved all his money
offshore to Cyprus I just laughed

sorry mate I said I'm pink lint
030413

Day Three last year.

Tuesday 2 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day Two

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day Two

MOTIVATIONAL
like the day
it all came back to haunt you
when you lost your memory
and the words failed you
just when you needed them the most
she said and you did the opposite she said

like the day
you sold your soul to the devil
for a pocketful of change
whose dreams did you steal
with that dream-catcher you bought
with the money that you stole
when he crushed you with his sole
she said you're so fake so unreal she said

like the day
that you really thought
that people wouldn't talk
how much did it cost you
to burn the midnight oil
and you plastered incantations
onto the cavern wall
she said how motivational was that she said

like the day
you sat there preaching to yourself
like you were the new guru
and hung the crutches on the cavern wall
and proclaimed another miracle
she said if only you could make him walk she said
020413

Day Two last year.


Monday 1 April 2013

NaPoWriMo 2013 Day One

NaPoWriMo 2013
Day One

THIS BUGLER
He sits there waiting what for he knows not
not for the first time it won't be the last
last night was of course a little bit worse
worse than he could ever have imagined
imagination is where it's all at

All at sea perhaps please don't rock the boat
boating lake blues like you can't imagine
imagination is where it's all at
at the risk of of of repetition
repeat this anagram if you dare to

Two million renters can't be wrong can they
they can't this bugler he sits there waiting
010413

TWIRL IN A BATH
(THIS BUGLER REVEALED)
Two million renters can't be wrong can they
worse than he could ever have imagined
imagination is where it's all at
repeat this anagram if you dare to
last night was of course a little bit worse

Imagination is where it's all at
not for the first time it won't be the last

At the risk of of of repetition

Boating lake blues like you can't imagine
all at sea perhaps please don't rock the boat
they can't this bugler he sits there waiting
he sits there waiting what for he knows not
010413/1

Day One last year.