Oh, fish, you wet and
slip’ry folk,
The butt of every smelly joke,
Of small
or monolithic size,
You look so good . . . next to my
fries.
And now, the jokes I spoke about,
Through all my grandkids, I did
scout.
Some downright finny, some, so-so,
If you find better, let minnow.
A seahorse moves from cave to cave?
He scallops through
the billowing wave!
The Tsar’s best fish to eat
at court?
Tsardines! They’d serve them by
the quart!
A fish of large
and ancient mein,
Makes threat’ning gestures at your
spleen,
And gives an offer you can’t slight?
The Codfather. Look out tonight!
Where’s the sad and smelly lout,
The octopus that’s down and out?
Well, he’s (Oh, you must be aware),
On Squid Row. In
a burrow there!
What’s a fish that has no eyes?
A fsh! Now that should not surprise.
A nutella spread on salmon called?
Why salmonella. (Be appalled!)
One more, and then I’ll let you be .
. .
There’s two fish swimming in the sea,
Into a wall, they headfirst ram,
One says unto the other, “Dam!”
Well DAM that was funny.
ReplyDeleteWhen you want more, let minnow . . .
DeleteOh, you are such a pro! Fitting jokes into a structured poem is no small feat!
ReplyDeleteExcellent :)
A monolithic feat? :)
DeleteThis is like one of those naughty children's songs passed down from generation to generation. Squid Row. Lol.
ReplyDeleteI can just see the kids chanting it while they skip! :)
DeleteI love this, had the first real laugh I've had all day, so thank you.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad I could bring you a smile, River! You're welcome!
DeleteToo funny! Thanks for this.
ReplyDelete