Time Won’t Tell (But I Will)
I will no longer wait for fate—
it stood me up on our last date!
(So did Emily.)
Lost and Dumbfounded
Stop looking and stop needing
since your memory’s receding.
Fruitless searching for what’s lost
will not reward your time or cost.
So, regardless of your pleading,
there’s no chance of your succeeding—
all the efforts you’ll exhaust
won’t find what since has been off-crossed.
There’s no use in losing sleep
for suddenly, like Bo-Peep’s sheep
what you’ve learned that you won’t find,
return like tails which wag behind.
Catnaps and Laps (150 Words)
At three in the morning, I sat on my cat—
we had no warning and he didn’t scat!
There, on my computer chair for a cat nap,
I found that I landed square on Mewie's lap.
I jumped up and stood but our cat didn’t budge.
I expected he would, so I gave him a nudge.
Asleep in my chair, clearly, he didn’t care
if another derriere might prefer to sit there.
I prodded and poked him till he raised his head.
Much more than a whim, he preferred playing dead.
I deftly slid hands ’twixt the seat and the cat,
making clear my demands, and became his cat mat.
As I moved him aside, he would stretch out his paws
and a yawn opened wide in quiescent applause.
At last, I could creep where my cat had just been
and he lulled me to sleep with a Cheshirey grin.
My Artifice of Intelligence
When I read what AI’s written,
I can’t say that I’ve been smitten
by its poetry or prose
in spite of everything it knows.
It really doesn’t know a thing,
but mashes mastery to bling.
Sometimes, me too, but when askew
I understand what words can do
and though mine might be artifice
I think they’re still more hit than miss.
Exception noted—point well-taken.
Yes, I often am mistaken.
Self Disservice (Five Sadryu)
Homo sapiens
enable Earth to weed out
Homo sapiens.
Mankind may persist
destroying Mother Nature—
but we’re on her list.
Climate change won’t hurt—
as long as we don’t believe
climate change will hurt.
Proving that we’re wrong
about our Earth’s life support
might not take that long.
Once all’s said and done,
when Earth moves on without us,
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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