A man named Andrew had a shop,
And lots of people came his way,
In Dublin Town, his was the top,
Sold flowers nearly every day,
Working hard, he did impress,
With marketing and quality,
But then some monks saw his success,
And thought, like him, they all could
be.
And so they did what he had shown,
(They had a slight advantage there,)
Cause they could grow all of their own,
And undercut his blossom share.
Within three months, the damage done,
Poor Andrew’s business almost gone,
He thought to cut his losses: run,
Had little hope to carry on.
But bad boy, Hughie, came on by,
Andrew engaged him on the spot,
To destroy the Monks’ stall and let fly
With herbicide to kill the lot.
That night, Hugh did his
darksome deeds
And they proved most effective
then,
The devastated monks did
bleed,
And to their business
said, “Amen.”
Then Andrew's Flowers reigned
again,
And proved that when someone you hire,
And proved that when someone you hire,
To kill a business that’s
your bane,
Only Hugh can Prevent Florist
Friars.
If poetry you do enjoy,
And hope some more you now will find,
To grant your wishes, we'll employ,
And you can call us masterminds!
Karen of Baking In A Tornado: Blossoms, or are they Blooms?
Dawn of Spatulas On Parade: Blossoms and Blooming
Thought you were taking a bit of a dark turn, but no, you got me laughing in the end there!
ReplyDeleteGroan, but funny! You had me a second.
ReplyDeleteLOL oh my goodness!! That last line is priceless. I laughed so hard.
ReplyDeleteDawn aka Spatulas On Parade
GROAN! I am surrounded by relatives who love to pun and now you! You've gone to the dark side....
ReplyDeleteWhile i knew there had to be a joke somewhere, i did not quite expect that. Brava!
ReplyDeleteLOL - well done!
ReplyDelete