Sunday, 15 August 2021

Three Poems by Ken Gosse

 



Music Hath Charms to Savage a Foolish Breast

(Imagine Burl Ives singing it to any melody you like.)

 

A man fell outa Heaven, and near as we could see,

his multi-coloured parachute got tangled in a tree.

We stopped and chatted in the road and pondered how to help.

No need to fear, no traffic here—it’s safe for you and me.

 

Chorus:

Well, the tree looked on and smiled,

then it told me, “Oh my child,

step back and see the forest

lest the details drive you wild

because you can’t see it once you’re gone,

although the world keeps rolling on;

go out and play, roll in the hay,

for none of us are here to stay,

you’ll cross that road some other day—

til then you’re just a pawn.”

 

We heard an allegory as he called us from the tree;

I thought he was an angel, ’cause that’s how he looked to me.

Then he began to sing a song and strum his guitar, too,

and music wove his nonsense into our eternity.

 

Repeat the Chorus:

 

Some fruit was floating by, some very high, some very low;

the sweeter ones were out of reach, the bitter ones below.

While suckin’ fruit, we heard a toot beyond the road’s horizon,

but we stayed there. The road was fair; the tree must surely know.

 

Repeat the Chorus:

 

The truck kept coming down the road as fast as it could haul.

We knew we shouldn’t worry, though we heard its warning call.

“The tree knows best—don’t be a pest.” We didn't ask again.

“The devil’s in the details; focus on the overall.”

 

Repeat the Chorus:

 

I met my end and lost that friend—I don’t know if he stayed.

I think the truck kept rolling over others as they played.

I see the bigger picture now and know the tree was wrong.

It didn’t care—it called us there to hear us sing-along:

 

Repeat the Chorus:



The Comfy Chair of His Despair

 

Romeo in Oubliette:

a story that I can’t forget.

Enchanted by his lady fair,

her father sat him in a chair

then stomped three times upon a door

beneath the chair upon the floor

which opened wide and deep inside,

where he would never have a bride,

the young man fell into his hell—

the place his final bell would knell—

for her good father ne’er would let

this Romeo have Juliet.



Go Figger!

 

Dextrous Erectus

wasn’t a hunk,

but he had a title

and that made his junk

seem bigger.

 

One day at the Forum,

just on a whim,

he stripped off his armor

to show off his vim

and vigor.

 

The masses applauded

and reached out to touch,

but found that his laurels

just didn’t take much

to trigger.

 

(While writing this tale,

although it’s been fun,

I can’t tell the rest

’til I’ve had at least one

more jigger.

 

Well, two hit the spot.

My disclaimer: “It’s gory,”

but just like Paul Harvey’s

“The Rest of the Story,”

de rigueur.)

 

Ten lithe, lovely virgins

at his noble word

all joined him in dancing

when everyone heard

a snigger.

 

It seems that his pugio

too quickly had failed.

The sniggler was fed to

(while Dextrous was veiled)

a tigger.

 

That was life then—

not much different today.

The peons are eaten

while nobles all play.

Go figger.



   Ken Gosse usually writes short, rhymed verse using whimsy and humor in traditional meters. First published in First Literary Review–East in November 2016, since then in The Offbeat, Pure Slush, Parody, Home Planet News Online, Sparks of Calliope and others. Raised in the Chicago, Illinois, suburbs, now retired, he and his wife have lived in Mesa, AZ, over twenty years.


 

 









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