Pitter-Patter With a Hatter
The Mad Hatter had a matter
(there were many on his platter)
which the March Hare didn’t much care
to discuss or make a fuss,
avoiding grousing or espousing
what the Hatter put to chatter;
indication of a troubled
syndication, “Strange R Us.”
Although when they’d douse the Dormouse
with their tea, in repartee
he’d share retorts (though still
asleep)
of many sorts as he would keep
up with the fog of dialogue
of each of three who drank the tea
(and although wine was also offered,
none was there, so none was proffered).
But a question sans suggestion
of an answer for digestion
lingers on and on and on
long after all of them are gone:
“Why’s a raven like a desk?”
Like most of Lewis’s burlesque,
absurd and garrulous in style,
a cause to pause and smile a while.
The Gravity of Being a Macavity (a reversing rhyme)
Does he know he’s a cat or not bother
with that
but take life as it comes (sans
opposable thumbs)
as he tinkers with gravity, much like
Macavity,
knocking down apples on old Newton’s
head
(although, I think that was a fig tree
instead)?
Does he know he’s of felines, not
canines or birds?
Does he know that his humans don’t
understand words
which he mews and meows, sometimes
snarly with bites,
and they really don’t treasure his love
tats most nights?
He begins gently kneading until we
start bleeding,
that’s when we respond very fast from
beyond
in that state of repose from the daily
grind’s woes
(the state in which most of his life passes
by
as he naps in the sun, somehow keeping
one eye
ever open, ensuring he’s not caught
off-guard
by no-see-ums inside or by birds in the
yard).
Ever watchful from windowsills since
he’s been barred
very thoughtlessly by those who take no
regard
for the freedom desired as the world
passes by,
which is why, when you open a door, he
will try
to reach out with clawed toes just
before it will close
for a stealth sneak beyond, just before
you respond—
though once out, he reminds you he’s
needing his feeding,
and scared by the many strange things
in his sights
(which, watched from inside, had
appeared as delights),
so he’ll mew and meow with his
growliest words
saying “Please rescue me from these
frightening birds!”
Then once back inside, he’ll climb onto
your bed
(or a windowsill, if there’s still
sunlight, instead)
or seek serene gravity of some dark
cavity
where he succumbs to a nap’s purring
thrums
just because he’s a cat, and a cat is
like that.
The Morning After
She stopped and sniffed; I couldn’t see
the phantom who had stopped to pee
(or maybe pooped, though his good
walker—
host or ghost or midnight stalker—
demonstrating courtesy,
removed signs of unpleasantry).
But certainly, my pup’s intent
was focused on where someone went
the night before: the spot now taken,
curiosity unshaken,
evidence engraved in stone,
more fascinating than a bone.
If there were ants or grubs or bees,
she would have sniffed them up with
ease
but disregarded any scent
except that which was evident
to prove who claimed to own this route;
all other scents blown out her snout.
No tug of leash or call of voice
deterred her from this anchored choice
and very soon I saw my lot:
awaiting near this damnèd spot
until she marked it to the core,
reclaiming it forevermore.
Ensuring Tomorrow Today
Nature is neither a father nor mother
nor sister or brother, and not any
other
persona, not even one we call non-grata
as if any person could cause an errata
so powerful it can destroy, at its whim
(though not really whim, neither her
nor a him)
what man has created in moments or
eons,
a shack or a nation, as if we mere
peons
could relegate nature to do our own
bidding
and care for our comforts, while also
outwitting
the challenges faced as we shelter and
feed
that unique speck of nature, the body
we need
to exist—and a mind to acknowledge we
do,
which is needed to help us consider the
view
of effects of our actions on what we
call clime,
not just local, but global, and all of
the time.
We’ve applied great resources to help
understand
things like cause-and-effect and how
human demand
has affected the atmosphere in which we
live
but has now reached a point where it’s
time we must give
full attention and effort, repair the
effect
of our selfish, self-harming ways and
redirect
feeble efforts to counter the damage
that’s done
and enhance any benefits already won
which have helped re-create the space
in which we live:
instead of just taking, we clearly must
give
of our time and our talents with
wisdom’s discretion,
enraged at the nonsense of selfish
aggression
which seeks to engender those few who
don’t care
for the fate of tomorrow, since they
won’t be there,
but the strength of mankind lies in
hearts and in hands
which will give of themselves for the
future’s demands.
Flu Flea, Don’t Bother Me (An Ogden Nash Poem in My Fever Dream)
Round one wasn’t fun;
I’m burning like Nero.
Flu’s score is One.
My score is Zero.
A receiver of fever awoke in the night
when a flea chose to light
and it gave him a fright
which put nightmares to flight,
but it wasn’t contrite
and its bite caused a blight
that was worse than the mightiest bite
of a mite.
Then the flea looked around him and
said,
“Mr. Flu, though it looks like he’s
dead,
he’s just out of his head
and can’t get out of bed
so it’s time you took over instead,”
and with that the flea flew
through a flaw in the flue
within view near the head of the bed.
Yes,
I know
fleas can’t fly,
or so I have read,
but when I said flew
perhaps I meant instead
the flea knew the fly flew
through the flaw in the flue—
so in thinking it thru, the flea fled.
Pitter-Patter With a Hatter is inspired by Chapter VII of Lewis Carroll’s
1865 story, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, "A Mad
Tea-Party."
A link to Chapter VII: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/11/11-h/11-h.htm#chap07
The Gravity of Being a Macavity (a reversing rhyme) borrows from personal
experience and from the famous cat of T.S. Eliot’s 1939 poem Macavity -
The Mystery Cat (on which Andrew Lloyd Webber’s 1981 musical Cats
was based).
A link to Eliot’s poem: http://www.famousliteraryworks.com/eliot_macavity_the_mystery_cat.htm
The Morning After is a tale of walking my dog Dilly on the morning after Halloween night
in 2021.
Ensuring Tomorrow Today began with the opening phrase, “Nature is neither a father nor mother.”
My muses carried it from there. It’s one of my more “serious” pieces.
Flu Flea, Don’t Bother Me (An Ogden Nash Poem in My Fever Dream) began in December 2011
when I wrote several phrases and rhymes while wandering in and out of fever
dreams courtesy of the flu. Ogden Nash’s protagonists from The Flea and
the Fly in the Flue apparently flew into my flu and struck up a
conversation with it. I’ve tweaked it frequently, including a last minute
change before submission, but always tried to keep its unusual form close to
its fevered origins.
Ken Gosse usually writes short, rhymed verse using whimsy and humour in traditional meters. First published in First Literary Review–East in November 2016, he has also been published by Pure Slush, Home Planet News Online, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, and others. Raised in the Chicago, Illinois, suburbs, now retired, he and his wife have lived in Mesa, AZ, for over twenty years, usually with rescue dogs and cats underfoot.
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