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Thread: And the word is...

  1. #346
    Ruadh gu brath ampoule's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by PrinceMyshkin View Post
    Some, it seems, are born old
    or never acquire the knack
    of being foolish and young!
    And some, it seems, have both
    in good measure.

    Yesterday, my daughter, 37,
    her lover, 24, and my next to youngest
    grand-daughter, going on 6, discovered
    the school playground
    across the way from me, entered
    and went climbing on everything
    they could find, then
    one of them proposed a game of tag

    and 37, 24 and going-on-6 were soon chasing each other
    around and around, laughing
    their fool heads off and you couldn’t have told
    37 from 24 from going-on-6!
    Prince...how very very delightful!

    Quote Originally Posted by motherhubbard View Post
    A quickie that comes to mind- I've had many spaghetti kisses

    You little necked choochy butt,
    With spaghetti on your face
    Gum in your hair
    Mud between your toes
    And sticky sucker fingers
    It’s time for a bath.
    I’ll draw up the warm water with
    Lots of bubbles and too many tub toys.
    You can leave sand on the bottom
    And a ring around the tub.
    Once the water has turned cold on the floor
    And you are clean and dry,
    We’ll find your Spiderman pajamas
    And think all the thinks you can think.
    Awwww...that is really really sweet! And Prince's reply is darn cute too!
    I'm in love with The Vinegar Man and Mr. Tanner, but be careful, it could just as easily be you.

    "If you're going to write you better have somewhere to come from." Flannery O'Connor

  2. #347
    solid motherhubbard's Avatar
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    prince it is very good. I can see them with rosy cheeks running and happy. It made me think of this which I have posted before-

    I didn’t want to hear to them when
    they said it would happen over night,
    in the blink of an eye.

    A week ago today I watched you play tag,
    running and reaching with childish abandon-
    free, uninhibited.

    Today you applied eye shadow and lip gloss,
    flipping your hair in the mirror
    for hours.

    What are you doing?
    Go outside and run in the wind,
    make a mud pie, get dirty!

    There’s time and more time to be old,
    but today is short and fading.
    Take this minute and make it last.

    Face the sky and spin.
    You are young, but not for too long,
    There’s no need to rush

  3. #348
    Ruadh gu brath ampoule's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pendragon View Post
    For the word was Childhood, I believe?

    TRANSFORMATION #2

    The snowflake skies were bright with cold;
    the porch sprouted icicle fangs, the roads grew slick.
    Strangely, the old man didn’t feel quite so old;

    life bubbled inside him; something seemed to remold
    him—the years fell away. (Now, that’s quite a trick!)
    The snowflake skies were bright with cold

    and his boots skidded, frantic for a foothold,
    but he laughed at his grandson, hidden behind the Buick.
    Strangely, the old man didn’t feel quite so old.

    He ducked a well-aimed snowball and didn’t scold.
    Instead he fired one back yelling, “You’re on, Rick!”
    The snowflake skies were bright with cold

    as they snowball fought their way back to the threshold,
    laughing wildly at each other’s antics.
    Strangely, the old man didn’t feel quite so old,

    grabbing his grandson in thin arms to enfold
    him in a hug that belied the fact that he was old and sick.
    The snowflake skies were bright with cold—
    strangely, the old man didn’t feel quite as old…

    Dale Harris
    ©4/4/98
    I love it Pen. Children keep us young. Playing is a child's work but it is our reward.

    I'll comment on novelty later.
    I'm in love with The Vinegar Man and Mr. Tanner, but be careful, it could just as easily be you.

    "If you're going to write you better have somewhere to come from." Flannery O'Connor

  4. #349
    feathers firefangled's Avatar
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    Pen, Childhood was so sweet and reminded me of the scene in the Godfather where Vito and his grandchild were playing in the tomatoes. Very nice.

    Quote Originally Posted by PrinceMyshkin View Post
    Some, it seems, are born old
    or never acquire the knack
    of being foolish and young!

    This especially rang true.

    Such a genuine life picture of losing (or is it finding) ourselves during a moment with how we used to play. Wonderful!

  5. #350
    feathers firefangled's Avatar
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    Monday's Child

    It was Sunday night; they had been dancing slow,
    in some Chapel St. dive, maybe feeling a highball —
    my father had just come home from two years in Fiji,
    and with her face burning from whiskey and waiting,
    she was pressing into him, arms around his neck,
    perfume and heat rising with his breathing.
    There would have been no guilty hesitation later,
    they would have ravaged each other like animals
    and then lingered for hours in the chimerical sweetness
    of touching, the light of nakedness pouring into dilated eyes.
    They would have smiled like sleepy children and then slept
    in the twisted singularity of forgetting they were two.

    There are no photos of where I was waiting that evening,
    but some say I made the choice knowing both of them —
    that his hearing was growing lost with his lullabies,
    and he would carry unknown for his life the incessant
    shock and recoil of the guns aiming into his spot of light.
    I knew, they say, and regardless went to her tenderness
    that would petrify in the harsh desert of his fatherless anger,
    I wanted to arrive, captured in the tangled web of Rome,
    where they played out their duty in a different kind of story
    than I can now write, and that would have served them better.
    And though I can imagine remembering the music of their dance,
    I am lost forever between that waltz and early Monday morning.
    Last edited by firefangled; 08-28-2007 at 07:24 AM.

  6. #351
    feathers firefangled's Avatar
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    Rows and Ears

    This is mine, I think, the words
    in their rows, like an ear of corn,
    unique, and of course the screen with titles:
    The Garden, Fortress, Love Poem.

    Then I read a book of poems
    by a “courageous writer,” “slicing
    through the arbitrary,” “a writer
    of astounding novelty.” Page
    after page with gardens, and love,
    fortresses of syntax and form.

    How alike we are to use the same words
    over and over and mean so many different things.

  7. #352
    Flying against the wind CdnReader's Avatar
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    ^^^ I love this, FF. The anthropology of language looks at WHY we choose the words we do.... both in speech and in writing. Not to mention wondering whether we can or how we can think of things if we don't know the "words" that go with them. This aspect of humanity is utterly fascinating, I think.

    You're so right. All we do is continue to rework the same words into different orders, different formats. But what does it all MEAN?
    *

    "Courage is not the absence of fear but the judgment that something else is more important than fear." -- Ambrose Redmoon

    CR: Madame Bovary, by Gustave Flaubert
    JF: Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen. My review is here.

  8. #353
    Flying against the wind CdnReader's Avatar
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    .

    play


    play house, drink pretend tea
    climb in the tent, hide and go seek
    read a book, tell a story
    snuggle

    run outside, sing a silly song
    push each other on the swing
    share a pizza
    giggle

    a three-year-old pretending to be grown
    and a grown-up pretending to be three


    .
    cdn/16may06
    .


    P.S. Amp.... Loved your "More" under the theme of avarice. Well done!
    Last edited by CdnReader; 08-28-2007 at 09:26 AM.
    *

    "Courage is not the absence of fear but the judgment that something else is more important than fear." -- Ambrose Redmoon

    CR: Madame Bovary, by Gustave Flaubert
    JF: Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen. My review is here.

  9. #354
    Ruadh gu brath ampoule's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CdnReader View Post
    .

    play


    play house, drink pretend tea
    climb in the tent, hide and go seek
    read a book, tell a story
    snuggle

    run outside, sing a silly song
    push each other on the swing
    share a pizza
    giggle

    a three-year-old pretending to be grown
    and a grown-up pretending to be three


    .
    cdn/16may06
    .


    P.S. Amp.... Loved your "More" under the theme of avarice. Well done!
    Thank you Cdn. Makin that little ball was fun. It reminds me of a Friendship Ball I got once that was full of very special treats and I was very greedy and did not share.

    I like your play poem. Pretending is such fun.
    I'm in love with The Vinegar Man and Mr. Tanner, but be careful, it could just as easily be you.

    "If you're going to write you better have somewhere to come from." Flannery O'Connor

  10. #355
    :) Stephweet :) stephofthenight's Avatar
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    hey guys, whats the new word?

    "Be careful of quotes you find on the internet, they may not always be true" -Abraham Lincon-

  11. #356
    Ruadh gu brath ampoule's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by stephofthenight View Post
    hey guys, whats the new word?
    Hey Steph! Good to see you. The word is CHILDHOOD.
    I'm in love with The Vinegar Man and Mr. Tanner, but be careful, it could just as easily be you.

    "If you're going to write you better have somewhere to come from." Flannery O'Connor

  12. #357
    Registered User Granny5's Avatar
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    Summer

    We don’t need no stinking shoes
    Or toys to keep us happy
    We just need an empty field
    And trash to mark the bases
    A watermelon patch in dark of night
    And salt to add more flavor
    Under the street light we’ll eat the hearts
    And hope the farmer don’t catch us
    A cotton field that’s tall enough
    To hide our heads from the seeker
    A neighbor lady who likes to tell
    Stories of ghosts and undertakers
    Give us a shovel and we’ll dig a pool
    Cause someone has new flooring
    We’ll use the old to line our pool
    And we’ll swim till our toes are swiveled
    Tomorrow will be another day
    And we’ll find a new game to play
    And when we grow old and think
    Of these things we’ll smile and not
    Remember of the toys we wanted
    Avatar by Pendragon
    "All we are saying is give PEACE a chance." Beatles[/SIZE]
    Granny5's Blog
    http://www.online-literature.com/for...p?userid=35805

  13. #358
    Ruadh gu brath ampoule's Avatar
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    Granny, I adore this. How did you know about my childhood? Well, some of it anyway. Mmmmm....watermelon hearts. I used to steal them from my husband's watermelon. He knew I could not be trusted but he would always go into the TV room after slicing his watermelon leaving the other half for my temptation....and I was weak and never prayed for strength.
    I'm in love with The Vinegar Man and Mr. Tanner, but be careful, it could just as easily be you.

    "If you're going to write you better have somewhere to come from." Flannery O'Connor

  14. #359
    Something's gotta give PrinceMyshkin's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Granny5 View Post
    Summer

    We don’t need no stinking shoes
    Or toys to keep us happy
    We just need an empty field
    And trash to mark the bases
    A watermelon patch in dark of night
    And salt to add more flavor
    Under the street light we’ll eat the hearts
    And hope the farmer don’t catch us
    A cotton field that’s tall enough
    To hide our heads from the seeker
    A neighbor lady who likes to tell
    Stories of ghosts and undertakers
    Give us a shovel and we’ll dig a pool
    Cause someone has new flooring
    We’ll use the old to line our pool
    And we’ll swim till our toes are swiveled
    Tomorrow will be another day
    And we’ll find a new game to play
    And when we grow old and think
    Of these things we’ll smile and not
    Remember of the toys we wanted
    How lovely how this flows out like one long breath of exaltation!

  15. #360
    Something's gotta give PrinceMyshkin's Avatar
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    Blonde Jews!

    “Hope,” it was said,
    “is the childhood of the world.”
    I passed mine by the other day
    on Villeneuve Street in Montreal
    where it always waits for me.

    The neighbourhood kids were still out there
    playing sidewalk handball, roiller-skating,
    Norma Dishell and Lionel Segal
    and the Dalfen boys with their intriguing
    older sisters, seldom seen,
    but fantasized about in their young
    womanhood, and Barney
    Furstenfeld, Muriel and Harriet
    Atkins and of course

    the Garfinkle boys assisting their father
    in the grocery. Blonde Jews!
    Calm, soft-spoken, vigorous-bodied Jews!
    I never knew what to make of them
    but I loved going there
    on errands for my Mom.
    I make a point of driving by that block
    whenever I can, to revisit my childhood
    and wave fondly at it as I drive by...

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