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Junk Mail

by James Graham 

Posted: 24 February 2006
Word Count: 260
Summary: This was first 'published' when I read it to a local poetry group. It got a few laughs. 'Kailyard' refers to a variety of Scottish dialect poetry, usually very homely ('couthie') and sentimental.


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Junk Mail

Whatever possess-
ed me, I gave my address
to a shifty-eyed man in a pub,
a rep (so he said) of a poetry club.
And sure enough
I got all the guff.

Oceans of brochures, flocks of fliers,
and endless glossy catalogues
of wherewithals for versifiers
of epigrams or Latin eclogues.

Terza rima for beginners,
a six-step method for sestinas;

a kailyard kit full of couthie bons mots,
a machine with a handle for chopped-up prose;

the most diverse poetic gadgets,
metonymies, exotic zeugmas;
oxymorons and all such widgets,
lexical gems, unique syntagmas;

the keys to masterly self-expression;
the Lego-bricks of fame.
(Which leads me to a wee digression
on honour, plaudits, and acclaim:

One of my favourite words is squamous;
it means scaly, reptilian - and rhymes with famous.

I'm not convinced I want to be famous.
George Bush and Tony Blair are famous.
They shame us, the famous.
Apart from the famous Seamus.

Would be great if I coulda
been famous like Pablo Neruda
but by and large the famous is
a bunch of ignoramuses).

Concrete poetry, ideal outdoors or in.
A graceful ornament for bed or border.
Easy home assembly and a chance to win
a Nissan Haiku every time you order.

Your tired old feet will step far fleeter
in lightweight anapaestic metre.

No more tossing or counting sheep;
read Tennyson for restful sleep.

Well, this was all a dream, of course,
for if poetry were a market force
we'd be talking money, a pretty penny;
but the trouble with poets, they haven't any.






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Comments by other Members



tinyclanger at 14:05 on 24 February 2006  Report this post
Interesting departure for you James! I enjoyed it - especially as I'm struggling with a rhyming piece myself right now...
loved the 'Seamus' lines!
Look forward to more.....?
x
tc

joanie at 14:35 on 24 February 2006  Report this post
This made me laugh aloud, James, especially the chance to win a Nissan Haiku!

I enjoyed the rhymes and the variety of them, the change of metre, the tongue-in-cheek references to technical terms!

Glad it went down well; this is yet another occasion when I want to hear these!

joanie

Elsie at 18:52 on 24 February 2006  Report this post
Brilliant - it immediately made me think of guff that arrives on a regular basis from The Writers Bureau -(I must've clicked a box somewhere) with exortations to join as if they're selling kitchens or windows. Did I detect a 'hinge' in the middle, where the tone and rhythm changed?

radavies1uk at 19:30 on 24 February 2006  Report this post
Spot on :)

It shifts round pretty well :) All the references integrated perfectly :)

Cheers
Bob

Tina at 07:18 on 25 February 2006  Report this post
James

HA HA HA - I read and I enjoy - great way to wake up on a Saturday!

This reads like the kind of stuff any serious stand up comedian would deliver - over two or three hours and an expensive ticket at a provincial theatre - I can hear Billy Connolly delivering these lines:

Terza rima for beginners,
a six-step method for sestinas;

a kailyard kit full of couthie bons mots
,

what on earth does the third line mean????

I have just posted elsewhere about the difficulty (for me) of writing rhyme and here you are with all this great stuff. Lots of rhyme about at WW at the mo have you noticed?

Anyway too many bits to say I like so thanks for a LAFF on a Saturday morning - loved it
Tina




James Graham at 13:49 on 25 February 2006  Report this post
Thanks all. Tina, you've written a serious rhyming poem, a different kettle of fish from a comic one where the rhymes don't need to be discreet and elegant! It's easier to do comic rhymes.

Kailyard, etc. - see Summary at the top of the page. I suppose a rough translation of 'kailyard poetry' would be 'cabbage-patch poetry'. In the 21st century it has probably had its day, but there used to be a lot of it about in Scotland. It's usually about country characters, village life, nature sometimes. Its horizon is the other side of the next field.

Elsie, you spotted a 'hinge' I didn't know was there! But it's there all right. I'm quite chuffed about that.

James.

Brian Aird at 18:06 on 28 February 2006  Report this post
The hallmark of success as a poet; to be told you're a card as a bard. (I'd better leave the funny stuff to you) - that was ace.


Brian



gard at 15:46 on 07 March 2006  Report this post
Hi james

Hallo. I just read this today. Very witty, entertaining and amusing.

I probably should not say this, it somewhat reminded me of a poetry reading by Roger McGough (radio 4 or 7..) a year or so ago. I cannot remember the exact piece, but it was filled with questions that children might ask - rhymed -. I will have to search for it in google or something.


I also read a lovely poem by Seamus Heaney recently called Wordsworth's Skates I think (in New Yorker).

Particularly like the rhythm of

Terza rima for beginners,
a six-step method for sestinas;

a kailyard kit full of couthie bons mots,


I too detect a shift in the rhythm half wayish through

Gina

James Graham at 19:31 on 08 March 2006  Report this post
Thanks, Gina. I don't do much light verse, so am quite pleased that this one has worked reasonably well.

James.

engldolph at 18:50 on 09 March 2006  Report this post
HI James,

Late coming to this..but this would light up any poetry slam-night...and give it a bit more depth than many of the simple rhyming/rapping pieces you hear....

I think stright rhyme actually is one of the easiest poetry forms to construct... but, to do so with energy and a slight of hand you use makes it more satisfying I think..

Oceans of brochures, flocks of fliers,
and endless glossy catalogues
of wherewithals for versifiers
of epigrams or Latin eclogues.

Terza rima for beginners,
a six-step method for sestinas;

really rolls..and makes you think at the same time..

I might drop the
George Bush and Tony Blair are famous
&
Apart from the famous Seamus.

and just leave


I'm not convinced I want to be famous.
They shame us, the famous.



but I know you love your political nudges..

anyway, really enjoyed on first reading...and plenty of details to revisit

Mike






James Graham at 21:46 on 10 March 2006  Report this post
Hi Mike - Well, rhyme's easy enough, I find, if the poem is humorous verging on daft! The sort of poem that lets you rhyme 'famous is' with 'ignoramuses'. But to write a strict, serious sonnet where the rhymes have to observe decorum and can't make faces or thumb their noses - that's a different story. Byron could do both, but Byron I ain't.

I can't resist political nudges. I can see the poem would get by without the dig at Blair and Bush, but I think I'll leave it in anyway.

James.

<Added>

P.S. I meant to add, thanks for your complimentary comments, especially about 'sleight of hand'!


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