A rant.
Is that how we want our music, our movies, our conversations, our lives to sound?
See? C.U.T.E. |
Cute. But hard to carry . . . |
Today we honour the number 17. And our wizarding skills in creating paragraphs using only that number:
Jack
and Jill went up the hill
To
fetch a pail of water;
Jack
fell down and
broke
his crown,
and
Jill came tumbling after.
Up
Jack got, and home did trot,
As
fast
as he
could caper,
To
old Dame Dob, who patched his nob
With
vinegar and brown paper.
Okay, first of all, what wise-acre put the silly well at the TOP of a
hill?
Wouldn’t the oh-so-diligent diggers just have to dig that much further down
to get to water?
And what about the people who have to trundle up and down bearing
easily-spilled pails of liquid?
Some things to think about. (Oops. NOT a 17!) Ahem…
Jack and his twin sister, Jill, were tasked with fetching their mother a
pail of fresh water.
A simple enough job, surely? All it required was taking the bucket,
walking UP to the well…
Lowering the well’s pail into the dark water far, far, far below.
(Okay, fine. Maybe I’m exaggerating.)
Then bringing it up again, brimming with clear, cold water and pouring
said water into their vessel.
Hanging the well bucket neatly on its hook (because woe betide anyone
who fails to do so).
Then, working together, lifting their bucket between them and reversing
the whole trip back to the house.
What could possibly go wrong? Apart from the whole ‘cooperation thing’—a
nearly impossible task for many siblings.
Followed by the necessity of having to walk DOWNHILL with said brimming
bucket. (Can anyone say ‘disaster’?)
Well, as you’d expect, the aforementioned ‘disaster’ did, indeed occur.
With both siblings falling and/or tumbling.
Jack got the worst of it, however, breaking his ‘crown’—which I’m
assuming is his poor head.
I should point out that said ‘break’ wasn’t serious enough to warrant
medical intervention and/or expensive hospitalization.
And that he was able to ‘caper’ quickly in the direction of Old Dame
Dob’s soothing hands.
But I also want to call attention to the forgotten-ness of his sweet (I’m
assuming) sister, Jill.
Didn’t she tumble also? And (I’m just thinking out loud) have to carry
the water by herself?
Admittedly, the bucket probably wasn’t as full as it had been,
considering the whole ‘cart-wheeling’ incident.
But still, Jill was left to carry on (I mean this literally) by her own
small self.
Kudos to Jill. Well done! May your tribe increase. You’re definitely our
kind of folks, sweet girl!
I think a rewrite of the poem is in order—one more reflective of the current
situation…
Jill and Jack were coming back
Together with their water,
Cause some dumbbell had dug the well,
Atop the hill (the rotter!)
Both fell down, but Jack, the clown,
Garnished all the men-tion,
Jill, as asked; she did the task,
While Jack scarfed the at-ten-tion.
Was driving off to his next show,
A traffic stop soon halted him,
A cop approached, all fit and trim…
“I’m sorry for the wait,” said he.
A lumber wagon lost a tree.”
“Oh, that’s okay,” the juggler said,
“I’ve till tonight to earn my bread.”
The cop leaned on the window then,
Ready for a talk ‘tween men,
Then by mistake or just by chance,
He gave the car’s back seat a glance,
And saw, displayed for all to see,
A dozen knives just laid there; free.
A hand upon his copper’s gun,
“What’s with the knives?” (His good mood done!)
The juggler simply shrugged and said,
“They’re for my act. They keep me fed!”
The cop said, “That you’ll have to prove…
So come out here and show your moves!”
The juggler clambered from his car,
Scooped up the knives (and scimitars),
And struck a stance there with a sigh,
As cars and trucks went streaming by,
Then, to the cop, his talent showed,
As through his hands those weapons flowed.
Meanwhile, on the thoroughfare,
A car went past the two men there,
The driver, told his passenger,
As wide-eyed, he glanced o'er at her,
“I’m glad, my drinking, I’ve deferred,
Sobri’ty tests are now absurd!”
Photo Credit: Karen of bakinginatornado.com |
Juggling (April 18) Today!
Brothers (April 25)
Babies (May 2)
Music (May 9)
Purple for Peace (May 16)
Turtles (May 23)
Memorial Day (May 30)
Yo-yo (June 6)
Roller Coaster (June 13)
World Refugee Day (June 20)
The Happy Birthday song (June 27)