Poetry thread anyone?

Options
189101113

Comments

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited March 2010

    just wanted to share this fart lymerick.. gas is an issue we deal with.  A colon surgeon sent this to me for fun.

    There was a young farter from Sparta,
    A really magnificent farter,
    On the strength of one bean
    He'd fart "God Save the Queen",
    And Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata.

    He could vary, with proper persuasion,
    His fart to suit any occasion.
    He could fart like a flute,
    Like a lark, like a lute,
    This highly fartistic Caucasian.

    He could whistle, could warble and hum,
    By constricting the hole in his bum,
    And make animal sounds,
    Or fire artillery rounds,
    With the force of a field cannon gun.

    The fabulous farter from Sparta,
    Performed at command by Royal Charter,
    Did Brahms, Grieg and Mozart,
    For 'piano and fart',
    And for an encore he did Bach's Toccata.

    His repertoire ranged from classics to jazz,
    He achieved new effects with bubbles of gas.
    With a good dose of salts
    He could fart a waltz
    Or swing it in razzamatazz.

    He's accompanied Oasis and Blur,
    And done backing music for Cher,
    Though his style is obscene,
    It's been used on big screen,
    In sound effects on the movie Ben Hur.

    He'd fart a gavotte for a starter,
    And whiffle a fine serenata.
    He could play on his anus
    The Coriolanus:
    Ood, boom, er-tum, tootle, yum tah-dah !

    His basso profundo with timbre so rare
    He rendered quite often, with power to spare.
    But his great work of art,
    His fortissimo fart,
    He saved for the Marche Militaire.

    When Sparta's farter was truly on form,
    His asshole could outplay a French horn,
    He'd give all day recitals,
    With the air from his vitals,
    After a large plate of leeks and some corn.

    This sparkling young farter from Sparta,
    His fart for no money would barter.
    He could roar from his rear
    Any scene from Shakespeare
    Or Gilbert and Sullivans Mikado.

    He could imitate jets supersonic,
    Or play compositions symphonic,
    He played Handel's Messiah,
    He reached top C and higher,
    But only after a mammoth colonic.

    A family size can of baked beans,
    Could fuel the main movie themes,
    Star Wars and some westerns,
    Were most often requested,
    Though the odour was somewhat obscene.

    Spurred on by a very high wager
    With an envious German named Bager,
    He'd proceeded to fart
    The complete oboe part
    Of a Haydn Octet in b-major.

    He could play Holst's Mars and Uranus,
    By expelling the air from his anus,
    He did Copacabana,
    But his Carmina Burana,
    Was proclaimed a cantus profanus.

    This man with the musical arsehole,
    Was asked to perform at a castle,
    He ignited his gas,
    Near exploded his ass,
    And the Count cried out 'Once more, you rascal!'

    One day he was dared to perform
    The William Tell Overture Storm,
    But naught could dishearten
    Our spirited Spartan,
    For his fart was in wonderful form.

    The Count hosted the concert with style,
    And the queue to get in was a mile,
    The farter ate leeks,
    Lived on beans for two weeks,
    Knowing his farts were on trial.

    He practised by farting some tunes,
    Till his arsehole made sounds like bassoons,
    Symphonies, sonatas,
    Serenades and cantatas,
    And the theme from The Mouse on the Moon.

    He played The Ride of The Valkyries,
    And brought the whole crowd to their knees,
    Women fainted and screamed,
    At The Dambusters theme,
    And The Flight of the Bumblebee.

    He farted on feeling quite merry,
    Did the Dance of the Sugarplum Fairies,
    His farts echoed and swelled,
    (And so did the smell),
    And his face went as red as a cherry.

    With a smell like a heap of manure,
    He began the William Tell Overture,
    They gasped as it started,
    Cheered the farter from Sparta,
    And soon they were screaming for more.

    It went off in capital style,
    As he farted it through with a smile,
    Then, feeling quite jolly,
    He reached the Finale,
    Blowing double-stopped farts all the while.

    The selection was tough, I admit,
    But it did not dismay him one bit,
    Then, with arse thrown aloft
    He suddenly coughed....
    And collapsed in a shower of ****.

    One mammoth turd blocked up his arse,
    Around it no fart could be passed,
    His bowel filled with farts,
    From his arse to his heart,
    And inflated his belly with gas.

    All at once the poor farter exploded,
    His expanding bowel overloaded,
    The room filled with screams,
    As gas-filled intestines,
    Rose up to the ceiling and floated,

    Like a string of long brown balloons,
    His innards were strung round the room,
    The odour was ripe,
    So the Count lit his pipe,
    And the whole place went up with a BOOM!

    His bunghole was blown back to Sparta,
    Where they buried the rest of our farter,
    With a gravestone of turds
    Inscribed with these words:
    "To the Fine Art of Farting, A Martyr."

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited June 2010

    bump..

    this thread cannot die with a fart poem at the end

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2010

    Hi,

    Love this thread, and totally agree with you Apple, a thread like that can't die with a fart!!

    This is an amazing poem by Audre Lorde that I always found very inspiring

     

    A Litany for survival

    For those of us who live at the shoreline      

    standing upon the constant edges of decision                                                                      

    crucial and alone                                                                                                                

    for those of us who cannot indulge                                                                                       

    the passing dreams of choice                                                                                            

    who love in doorways coming and going                                                                                 

    in the hours between dawns                                                                                                

    looking inward and outwards        

    at once before and after                                                                                                 

    seeking a now that can breed                                                                                        

    futures                                                                                                                              

    like bread in our children's mouths                                                                                          

    so their dream will not reflect                                                                                                 

    the death of ours:

    For those of us                                                                                                                       

    who were imprinted with fear

    like a faint line in the center of our foreheads

    learning to be afraid with our mother's milk

    for by this weapon

    this illusion of some safety to be found

    the heavy-footed hoped to silence us

    For all of us

    this instant and this triumph

    We were never meant to survive.

    An when the sun rises we are afraid

    it may not remain

    when the sun sets we are afraid

    it may not raise in the morning

    when our stomachs are full we are afraid

    of indigestion

    when our stomachs are empty we are afraid

    we may never eat again

    when we are loved we are afraid

    love will vanish

    when we are alone we are afraid

    love will never return

    and when we speak we are afraid

    our words will not be heard

    not welcomed

    but when we are silent

    we are still afraid

    So its better to speak

    remembering

    we were never meant to survive

    AUDRE LORDE

                                                                                                    

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited August 2010
  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited January 2011

    maybe if this thread include haikus it would be active for a while.

    goodbye twenty ten
    hello twenty eleven
    the year is two days

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Hi gals! Just discovered this thread! I am going to enjoy reading all the posts. Absolutely hilarious, Apple. Funniest, most brilliantly written flatulence poem I've read! Thanks so much for keeping this thread going.

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited January 2011

    i believe the flatulence poem was written by someone else.. for the record.  I am not that clever.

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Thank you for sharing a good laugh! I just recently moved and my journals are in one of these boxes, but I scribbled down poetic thoughts and lyrics along the way in them. I'll share when I dig them up. I am now inspired to write. Don't think I've tried to write a haiku since school. Here goes:

    i am the sky

    black cloud drifts away

    the sun will rise in me

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Don't know how strict the rhythm is of a haiku. Here's another one:

    how long will you wait

    arms outstretched with waiting hands

    lonely souls need grace

  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited January 2011

    Great thread! Here's a poem I wrote after my lymph node dissection:

              Hunting the Eagle

    Tip-toeing forth from a hazy day
    that bristled with pain and fear
    Fuzzy fronds waft away
    leaving trails of compassion and cheer

    Capable confidence, true concern
    sprinkled with tinklings of love
    Through the mist, I follow the tern
    to the other side there-of

    New pieces of music flow through to my soul
    soothing the warrior within
    A balm of hope claims a leading role
    as defiance juts out my chin

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Sandy, I think you captured a moment in this journey so well. Fear, courage, hope, defiance. I especially like the last line.

    Here's another haiku about how solitary we can feel in this process.

    Cypress tree stands proud

    Alone on a high seacliff

    The wind will not break

  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited January 2011

    Love that haiku, missbianca. It does capture the solitary feeling, but it also exudes strength!

  • amyK
    amyK Member Posts: 41
    edited January 2011

    Hi all,

    I am loving the poetry thread. Here's my contribution, also posted it on my blog...

    I understand now that life is short
    that forty is young
    that now matters
    that later is tantamount to never
    that I am temporary
    and so are you.

    I keep coming back to the desire
    to give all my gifts
    to orchestrate my life's energy
    around giving
    both personally and professionally
    and to practice
    on myself.
  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited January 2011

    amyK, your poem has a wonderful uplifting message and is so wise!  Here is another I wrote about our journey:

    This Path

    The path I walk is not my own
    I did not choose to follow
    Yet a voice from deep within me
    warns me not to wallow

    This random road wreaks havoc
    With anyone it chooses
    And there's no telling who will win
    the battle or who loses

    I will fight this foe with all my might
    With courage and good manner
    And tread this course with restrained remorse
    Till I wave the victory banner

     

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Amy and Sandy, so happy to have you here sharing your hearts with your powerful words. I wrote this tonight to share with you all, about my struggle with depression. It's so therapeutic to be able to. Thanks for being here.

    Dragon of Despair, you will not win

    For light that transcends will reveal your plan

    You may try to wrestle me into your pit

    But my Rescuer is the one who finds the lost lamb

    I am so much more, Dragon, than merely my flesh

    I am more than my skin, my bones, and my blood

    I have Hope inside that you cannot touch

    For I seek higher places than mire and mud

    Go back to your pit, hideous beast

    Extinguish yourself with your own flame

    Your agents of darkness in careful disguise

    Will ensnare themselves with their own wicked game

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    The New Day

    Faint morning light from my shutters

    Between the slats I see grey

    What will the new day bring

    My bed seems a safe place to stay

    To live bravely is to be alive

    To have paid a cost to see the sunrise

    I will seek beauty with the gift of today

    From ashes I'm given the greatest prize

    The phoenix does rise from the flames

    A firebird to soar so high

    Gold, scarlet and purple plumes

    Yesterday's cage is open: FLY

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Sowing Seeds

    Did I not, Lord, take care of the body You gave me?

    I ate from Your garden, Your clean foods

    I abstained and did not indulge in vices

    I moved my body, pushing it for miles at a stretch

    I took good care of what you gave me

    I have been a good steward

    Did I know I should be vigilant against my own flesh?

    NO!

    You gave me eyes, should I fear blindness?

    You gave me ears, should I fear silence?

    You gave me a heart, should I fear it stop beating?

    You gave me limbs, should I fear they stop moving?

    The flesh that satisfied my baby

    The breasts that dripped with life sustaining milk

    Should I have feared them?

    To grow death inside still in my youth

    I have trusted that You have wanted the best for me

    I have a plan for you, Your scripture says

    Not for calamity but to prosper you, for a future and a hope

    Have I not sown the good seeds

    Seeds for harvest, not for lack

    Seeds for good health, not for illness

    Seeds for love, not for heartbreak

    Seeds for a future, not to count my days

    Let Your Harvest day come, Lord!

    Let me see Your bounty for your faithful

    Let my soul sing a Hallelujah other than a Broken one

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2011

    That's beautiful Miss Bianca I got goosbumps reading it

    Daniela

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited January 2011

    Thanks so much, Daniela. I'm glad to have found this thread, and to be able to share where I am at with this journey, with words that just don't seem to fit elsewhere. Thanks for reading! Please join me ladies. Just pull up the blank post and see what comes out.

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited January 2011

    I thought I had commented, but probably forgot to hit the submit button.

    MissBianca, your Sowing Seeds poem is absolutely lovely and powerful.  I love it.

  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited January 2011

    Yes, MissBianca, your Sowing Seeds poem IS very powerful and lovely.

  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited January 2011

    Fighting the Bear



    Gazing out the window

    With my chin against my fist

    Watching Mother Nature and

    The beauty I have missed



    Since Summer I've been busy

    My head bowed low in fear

    Breast cancer and its treatments

    Are like fighting with a bear



    The danger and the pain

    When you get a swat or bite

    Then praying for survival

    With this rival full of might



    Two biopsies, three surgeries

    Plus chemotherapy

    Dissections and infections

    Then balding vanity



    Next comes radiation

    Will my skin survive or burn?

    This is information that I

    Wish I did not learn



    Come Summer I'll have

    Hair again

    My independence too

    I'll greet our Mother Nature

    With vitality anew



    The future is uncertain

    I know this more than ever

    I never will forget this strife

    I'll be my best forever

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited January 2011

    i love your last verse sandymess. here's to your future.

    I am so glad this thread is experiencing a revival.

  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited January 2011

    Thank you, apple. Here's to your future, too! I am glad to have found this thread.

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited February 2011

    Thanks so much, Apple. I am so glad that you revived this thread! I like to send out the Sparta poem in emails! I have a friend who sang tenor in a choir that performed Carmina Burana. My dad used to politely refer to his escaped "chamber music"! LOL

    Sandymess, I love your metaphor. You find yourself fighting with strength you did not know you had, against a ferocious, yet silent beast. May summer greet you with warmth and beautiful abundance.

  • sandymess
    sandymess Member Posts: 299
    edited February 2011

    Thank you, MissBianca. I appreciate the compliment and the poetic good wishes. You certainly have a wonderful way with words.

  • feistybluegecko
    feistybluegecko Member Posts: 133
    edited February 2011

    I love this thread - words have been (and continue to be) very imortant to me for expressing the sometimes overwhelming thoughts in my mind.

    Here are a few words which contrast so much to diagnosis and treatment, and note how good it is to be in a different place over a year later.

    The sound of thankfulness

    Classical guitar

    playing

    under the lakeside stars

    harmonising

    with gentle evening birdsong.

    The sounds of water

    lapping

    as the sun creeps over the horizon

    harmonising

    with chatty sunrise birdsong.

    Blessings

    truly

    simply

    counted.

     

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited February 2011

    BlueGecko, thank you for sharing your beautiful words of serenity, hope, and gratitude. The imagery in your poem is very lovely and calming.

    St Mary Lake Rising Sun's Sunrise 

    I found this photo of sunrise at St. Mary Lake, Glacier National Park, Montana.

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited February 2011

     0_61_nebula_ngc2818_hubble[1] copy

     Infinity

    Star bright, star light

    Endless skies I see tonight

    Galaxies of wonder

    My troubles are usunder

    I am stardust

    And I am filled with awestruck wonder

    One day I will return to dust

    Yet I am loved, so very loved

    And in this Love I hold my trust

    That one day I'll see the holy dove

    I am exquisitely created

    And so are you, and you, and you

    By a mindful, loving Power

    By the Hand that made the flower

    By the Light

    That glistens in the morning dew

     5093907-lg

    Star Nebula pic taken by Hubble Telescope, courtesy of NASA

  • MissBianca
    MissBianca Member Posts: 2,193
    edited February 2011

    LOL! I just showed my DH this post, and he looked at the last picture, and asked, "What is it?" (his mind works more on the technical side of life!)

Categories