Hungover and Over
A common tale of sad travail.
I was hung when I was young
but I’ve been hung since I was young.
A noose tied loose around my goose
was tightened by the one who’s done
me in since then, made mice from men.
She kept its cocky head from crowing;
blocked its flowing from ongoing;
stopped the juice within its sluice—
quite simply put, she said “Vamoose!”
I hung around, an albatross
tried ’round her neck, a double loss.
How soon my hopes all turned to
dross.
My voice no longer is among
the songs we sung when we were young.
I can’t unveil my holy grail.
Bye-bye Black Sheep on the Lam
Mary left a little lie;
its fleece was poisoned snow.
She brought a box without a pie
and left it where he’d go—
the lunch-room thief
who’d claim his fief
and thought no one would know.
Choices, Choices, Inner Voices
(100 Words)
Did modesty’s prow guide their where,
when, and how,
or did they kowtow to the needs of
the now?
Were they ever demure hoping love
would endure
or let nothing obscure what they
hoped to procure?
Did they gently concede to due
deference of deed,
or brashly proceed to procuring his
seed?
Were they sweet and discreet every
time they would meet
or converge till the urge of his
surge was complete?
Once they were married, had their
fervor varied;
the opportune tarried because the
pair parried?
Their care soon miscarried, their
happiness harried
till joy became buried, delights cemeteried.
Wordliness Gets Next to Someone
Rearranging my cliches
until they’re tight and fast,
to catch a siren who sashays,
though we know it won’t last.
When You Wish You Were A Star
Nopicchio once was a boy,
but without flesh and bones, a decoy.
He would if he could
but his wood is now wood.
All alone now, he’ll wonder
whom she has been under,
what skills she has plied
since her strings were untied.
But he’s just black sheep
she prefers not to keep
and his Spartans no longer deploy.


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