Tuesday, August 9, 2011

A Vazambam Exclusive: Incredibly Virtuoso Hellenic Rat Hurdles Another Language Barrier!






Believe it or not, this linguistically gifted, high-achiever of a mighty big mouse jumped from LOWER level to HIGHER—an ordeal usually requiring anywhere from 180 to 360 classroom teaching hours—after only 60 hours of intensive language instruction at one of the many RAT RACE SCHOOLS OF ENGLISH that have overrun the private language school sector in Greece—how did he perform that difficult task, you might ask. Elementary, my dears—He bamboozled his teachers by pretending English was not all Greek to him!

[Transcript of teacher instructing pupil] OK, Let’s try it again. C’mon buddy, there you go, eh, there you go, jump up again, c’mon!


NB: The few language schools that have remained loyal to cherished old teaching methods are now using the following poem as a stopgap teaching aid and rallying cry to ward off any more assaults on their turf. Suffice to say, these language schools—including the Zambara School of English—admit only cats, or in case English is all Greek to you—γάτες!

THAT’S ALL SHE WROTE, FOLKS!
(A 5-ACT TRAGIC FARCE FOR LANGUAGE SCHOOLS)


1.

The saucy mouse said tit,
The sassy rat said tat;
Seductive in the kitchen,
Lady de la Roquefort, sitting pat.

2.

The gnawing was ferocious,
The dame delicious, too;
Enamored with their gnawing,
They gnawed till they were bleu.

(A classic case of biting off
More than you can chew.)

No sign of consternation, no inkling of chagrin,
No reining in of hubris—O overweening sin!

(By Zeus! Such uninvited cheeky din
Was doomed to do our duo in.)

3.

His catnap abruptly truncated by the ruckus,
Our couch potato Tom exclaimed:
Sounds like hocus-pocus woke us!

With drat and drat and double-drat,
That’s quite enough of this and that,
He went gumshoeing to the kitchen.

4.

Zounds!

Brazen raiding scoundrels out-of-bounds
Ravishing our Lady Roquefort!

To arms! To arms!

5.

And with that, dear students,
His Tommy gun reverberated—
Ratta-tat-tat!

Cut the knaves down
To modest wedges,
Just like that.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Momentum

Every body perseveres in its state of being at rest or of moving uniformly straight ahead, except insofar as it is compelled to change its state by forces impressed.

--Newton’s First Law of Motion


Hurrying out
Of the baker’s

To bring the still
Warm daily bread home,

This somebody comes close
To missing

The funeral notice tacked
On the light post

But does pause long
Enough to see

It’s nobody

He knows or else
He would’ve been stopped

Right there and then,
Cold too—like you

Or me.



Friday, August 5, 2011

The Intricate Evasions of As, Selected Poems, 1985-2010




In between swimming and relaxing, most of my creative energies these past five days were spent trying to come to terms with a manuscript (see photo above, courtesy of Eleni) that I’ve been wrestling with over the past 25 years and which has burgeoned from a chapbook of about 40 poems to a monster ms. now comprised of approximately 120. I don’t even want to think about how many times I’ve inserted new poems into the ms. or taken old ones out, or how often I’ve juggled the poems in a vain attempt to find the best possible arrangement or how the much smaller original manuscript was accepted by a publisher in England back in the 90s but who later informed me that he couldn’t do it owing to a lack of funds or that about ten years ago, I sent a longer version to a small-press publisher in the western US who rejected it after two years or that five years after that, I sent another even longer version to a small-press publisher on the east coast who also rejected it after two years—all of which leads me to what Joe Hutchison has to say about Bill Knott’s post re publishing one’s work: Do you DIY or keep sending it out in hopes that some publisher will mercifully DI4U—perhaps even before you die?




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