Rallentanda

Rallentanda

Friday, July 23, 2010

Winter


Response to BTP prompt.
It is impossible for me to have a favourite anything but I owe it to Will to place him at the top of all poets. The more literature I study the more I realise how much the English language is in his debt. When I was about ten I was introduced to
'Winter' by Shakespeare and it struck a chord. I wrote my first poem that year .I had never seen snow but I knew of the bitter wind and the hacking coughs in the school chapel and saw the whole Shakespeare scene with a great clarity . The picture that the poem conjures up for me is the same in detail even to this day.

Winter

In Heidi plaits
And pink flannelettes
She danced
With her big orange cat
In her kitchen flat
To the strains of
Old time tunes

I'm going to be an artist
I'm going to be a writer


She sang by the light of the moon
But as she swayed and cavorted
The mood began to change
The soft white paws around her neck
Clawed deeply into her vein

Thud! Suddenly doubt's hand of gloom
Dropped her orange furred boy
And as she stood up
Boltright still
It mocked her song of joy
And cried plaintively into the night

Tu-whoo
Tu-whit Tu-whoo!
Is it true
Is it true?
Are you sure
That you are you?


Knowing that the game was up
Poor greasy Joan
Then lost the plot
Her day dreams buried and denied
Reality exchanged for her sin of pride
Grease and grime in rag torn frocks
Chillblained feet was for her lot
Back to fetching chamber pots
Back to bending bowing and scraping
Keel Joan Keel
Keel that pot

44 comments:

  1. Shattered dreams, eh? Guess we all have some...

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  2. Strange to think of you "In Heidi plaits
    And pink flannelettes", Rall but each to her own! At least dreams help make the drudgery bearable?

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  3. It is terrible to be a misunderstood poet.
    I know Flaubert supports me on this one.
    Sigh...not everything is autobiographical!

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  4. Rall I am sure Flaubert does support you!I love what you did with this prompt.
    The English language is a beautiful thing.
    Pamela

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  5. I like the fun you have with rhyme in this poem.

    http://thelaughinghousewife.wordpress.com

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  6. I agree Pamela . She is a true beauty.

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  7. I love it Rall. Autobiographical or not, braids keep hair from beautiful faces! The italicized bit has a lovely lilt, and you've done excellent work with rhyme throughout the piece. Bravo!

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  8. If you can't be William Shakespeare, you might as well be Charles Dickens, or even better; somewhere in between...

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  9. Poor, poor Joan
    and oh, what a shock
    that she'd give up
    her dreams, resign
    herself, only to keel pots.

    Let's hope that the day
    dawns, comes very soon,
    when she gives up despair
    aims straight for the moon.

    Thank you Rallentanda, I needed that,

    Elizabeth

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  10. OK Stanski you have just won the Teacher's Pet
    Prize!

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  11. Don't get me started on this Elizabeth.

    But of course she wont
    she's so folorn
    The mistress' diatribes
    are full of scorn
    The parson says she's very slack
    the meals she serves are burnt and black

    The moon is bleak and out of her reach
    S'pose if desperate she could always teach
    But creepy Marian with her red raw nose
    is constantly poking about
    sabotaging Joan's stove
    Her stews are too hot
    Her noodles too cold
    And Rupert the footman
    keeps treading on her toes
    "Very Funny" said Joan
    giving him a smack on the head
    "If you keep this up
    You can forget about bed"

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  12. Her stews are too hot
    because she loves all that spice,
    and her noodles too cold
    'cause she puts them on ice.

    Yes, the moon is so far away,
    but if Marian keeps poking,
    she'll get a bloody reaction
    and go there one day.

    The parson looks almost handsome
    in shiny/dull black
    and diatribes of scorn are meant
    to get Joan to react.

    It is Joan who needs to forget
    about going to bed,
    stay awake writing sonnets to Rupert
    really mess with his head.

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  13. I love your take on the original, but I think Joan shouldn't put so much stock in the opinion of a cat :).

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  14. T'is not Joan who writes
    It's Marian Brown- Light
    signing Joan's name
    to sonnets of shame
    And as for the Parson
    Pray do not go there
    He's known as the terror
    the irk with no hair

    The last time on duty
    on breakfast room shift
    Poor Joanie got gro-ped
    By the Parson quite pissed
    Her only feint hope
    to get out of this estate
    was to marry young Rupert
    or one of his mates

    So the wedding day occured
    on July day the third
    They packed up and left
    and headed for the west
    Got jobs on a farm
    Labouring was too hard

    So Rupert decided that
    more money was needed
    Became a highway robber
    Poor Joan pleaded and pleaded
    but he finally got caught
    on one of he escapades
    for stealing warm coats
    His was sentenced to exile
    transported by boat
    an unwanted sad failure
    with no faith or hope

    He arrived in Australia
    bedraggled and wrecked
    the sea voyage out here
    was hardly first class deck


    his failure

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  15. Oh. I forgot what I was going to say - but I know it was good. Something about plaits of plates, but...

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  16. Plaits are braids in English.Blossombuds needs an outing. Teddy Bears Picnic here next week!

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  17. I hear somewhere the teddy bears
    are planning a nosh in the forest

    if you go out in the woods today
    wear something on your head
    a hat is never out of place if you’re about to peregrinate
    the birds have been eating pomegranates
    you know how birdies congregate
    (it may have been premeditated)

    if you go out in the woods today
    be certain to take a chair
    the servants have taken the furniture
    and left the clearing clearly bare
    they’ve taken the stumps and the windfall and briars
    there’s really nothing there

    if you go out in the woods today
    you might want to take a stick
    there have been sightings of ruffians and curs
    the hound dressed in motley is under a curse
    it’s apt to make his temper worse
    he’ll take your sandwich and leave you your purse
    this may not be the best of days
    to go out in the woods for a picnic

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  18. Oo-er! This is turning into quite a feast. But before I quite lose track of the original post, can anyone tell me how to keel a pot?

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  19. Thought you said you were English?

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  20. I don't know which I find more interesting -- the original poem or the comments!

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  21. Don't go out in the woods today,
    there's lions and tigers, and bears
    that way. They've come for a summit
    about that old curse,
    the one Marian wrote in elegant verse.

    Seems the young lass had longings galore
    for a certain clod of a footman
    totally witless about what was in store.
    So, got her heart broken in pieces that day
    when Rupert and Joan just up, ran away.

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  22. Tis true that Marian
    was sad of heart
    When Joan wed Rupert
    it broke her heart
    She got a nose job
    to ease her pain
    and solved the other problem
    of being so plain
    But now that Rupert
    was in ball and chains
    Joan was alone homeless
    and living in the rain
    Dick the shepherd
    saw her plight
    took her in
    but they began to fight

    Marian was not about
    to give up on life
    so she got with Tom
    and became his wife
    he makes a good living
    up at he Hall
    She clens and caters
    for the manor's Spring balls

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  23. So, Marian is the one
    who now keels the pots,
    while Joan's at the casino
    playing the slots,
    drinking one drink
    she's been at it for days,
    and her dreams have become
    a smoke induced haze.

    Rupert is out on parole
    driving a cadilac someone
    says that he stole.
    And Tom, what of Tom
    that mysterious man
    who works at the manor
    and eats nothing but Spam.

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  24. Tom still bears logs
    into the hall
    Stooped and bent
    Marian is appalled
    Dick the shepherd
    blows his only nail
    the others are missing
    He's terribly frail
    And Joan hit the gin
    was as miserable as sin
    and thought of past lot
    it wasn't such a swot
    to keel and keel
    the grimy potato peels
    dropped deliberately into the pot

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  25. great job setting up the scene and the characters in that first stanza!

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  26. Thanks Carolee. It was never meant to be a collaborative poem. Elizabeth hijacked it and so it goes:) If anyone wants to join in please do so. Although remember it is in the 18th century and cadillacs and nose jobs were not part of the scene in those days. 'Winter' by Shakespeare can be googled.I think the Parson is the only character still not developed in any way.Thanks Elizabeth and erm Barbara for the Teddy Bears Picnic segment which is hard to relate to the Shakespeare but Elizabeth
    deftly manged to squeeze it in somehow:)

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  27. holly molleeee again.....you aalways amaze me with what you write and the knowledge ....thanks again for sharing Rall

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  28. My apologies Rall, I didn't mean to high-jack anything. Where I come from, a response in kind is a high compliment, and I meant it in the nicest way possible. But, once you responded in kind, well I just had to follow suit, you ken? Then just got caught up in the release it facilitated and the sheer fun of it all.I really like your Winter response. It is rich in detail, sound, and sense. Love the images it draws and the emotional relativity. Sorry,

    Elizabeth

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  29. o and woe and a great rheumy woe
    Festus, the parson set out in the snow
    tom said he drownt in the overflow
    weighted with turnip and mutton stew
    and no one saw but the dun cow
    the fey witch snatch Festus into her barrow

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  30. you brought up the teddy bears, she harrumphed

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  31. Rall I have nominated you for one lovely blog
    and you must go to my blog and pick up the logo and the info
    here is the link:
    http://flaubert-poetrywithme.blogspot.com/2010/07/lovely-blog-award.html
    Cheers!
    Pam

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  32. Thank you Pam for the thought. If picking up means linking ..well, I have not mastered that part of computer technology yet.

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  33. One of the reasons this site was created Elizabeth was to cater for wit humour and a slight thrust and parry in jest.It slipped my mind that you are newcomer and are unsued to these (and from where I come ) extremely mild exchanges. So nothing to apologise for.

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  34. OK your Harrumphedness what's it with letting mad Nelle out again.Thought she was locked up with Mrs Rochester.I didn't mean that you should use middle english. I see that you are determined to get witches and bears into this somehow. This collaborative poetry could end up in full scale poetry war...Which reminds me
    Where's Viv?

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  35. So the parson still lives
    punished by the witch of Kincade
    for meddling with scrumptious scullery maids
    and even the mistress of the house
    yes, the mistress of the house
    all outward appearances of a doormouse
    but inside a turmoil of sex lashin'
    a veritable man eater of hot pashin'
    with no respect for a man of the cloth
    only took her a sec to throw all her
    petticoats and girdle off
    the old master was a dozy ole bloke
    huntin' with the hounds and poking at stoats
    was oblivious to everything couldn't care less
    just wanted to hunt and fish and counted himself blessed

    Meanwhile Joan coveting Marian's job
    set about plotting her return to the hall
    There was only one way to get herself reinstalled
    And that was to capture the master's enthrall
    She rouged her red lips
    and powdered her plump cheeks
    marched up to the hall prepared to do battle
    and win all

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  36. You are right Francis. That is one of the problems associated with having a cat that talks.I don't think you have them over there.
    It is strictly an antipodean thing.

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  37. You've got one running here, Rall, for sure! The Collective can learn how to keel the pot HERE

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  38. Thank you Doctor Footesque. And what? no bawdy contribution to the saga of Greasy Joan!

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  39. I love that you went back to the first poem that inspired you to write a poem.

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  40. Nelle thought the wee people might be amused by the parson.
    She's been around, nelle has, and even answered a prompt or two, but she's shy since she's lost her Raison d'être. it's hard being an ancillary personality

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  41. Now I know how to keel: thank you Doctor footsie.

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  42. it was a very bad day to call
    up at the hall
    everything was mayhem and strife
    the master was appalled at the
    information he had been tald
    and decided to get rid of his wife

    Her bags were packed and off she was sent
    to a very strict nunnery in Kent
    The master huffing and puffing
    and tired of all this stuffing
    said
    I'll need someone to run a tight ship
    So Marian already installed
    and known for her unctious crawl
    was promoted as quick as a blink

    Joan was forgiven
    got her old job back
    as long as she promised
    not to be slack
    Resigned and relieved
    bedraggled and broke
    Greasy Joan returned
    felt a littl remote
    the stove was hot
    mutton stew boiled in the pot
    She keeled and keeled
    and keeled the lot

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