
http://genius.it/blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/06/divorcing-europe
This is an interesting article comparing Britain leaving the EU to a couple going through a divorce.

http://genius.it/blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/06/divorcing-europe
This is an interesting article comparing Britain leaving the EU to a couple going through a divorce.
Epitaph on a Tyrant
Perfection, of a kind, was what he was after,
Before we go to bed we vegetate
No need for teacher but a compost heap.
And as we vegetate, we drift to sleep
While in our dreams our little mind debates
But mostly we’re unknowing in this dark
Where God himself may manifest at will.
His dazzling darkness makes our souls be still
And wait for strikes by living ,glowing spark.
But in the morning ,we come back to strife
Take up our work and suffer every stroke.
From sapling to the oldest,strongest oak
Each must choose again its proper life
Every look we cast at others strikes
Reflects and shows us what we have become
And when there is no movement, we are done
Our mind and heart have chosen what they like.
So in our end we vegetate again
And no more rise to labour in the day
We fertilise the fields passed on our way
We show the end of woman and of man.
A daily round becomes our life and death.
We live because we’re breathed by sacredness.
Why did Jesus cross the road?
He saw the sign.
Why did Jesus wear sandals?
He couldn’t afford shoes.
Why did Jesus ride on a donkey?
He missed the tram.
Nothing is so beautiful as Spring –

The number of foreign born people here is estimated ti be 8.3 million
The number of abortions since 1967 is 8.2 million.
Funny that!
I have listened to the arguments of fools
I have heard them like a donkey bray
I have looked within and found dark jewels.
I have studied algebra like Boole’s
I read the works of Euclid and obeyed
I have listened to the arguments of fools.
I have been to colleges and schools
I have seen the wolves therein who prey.
I have looked within and found dark jewels
I have earned my knowledge and my tools
I have kept them current day by day
I have listened to the arguments of fools
I have loved strange men whom I thought cool
I have often felt the need to pray
I have looked within and found dark jewels
So we each must fumble through the day
Knowledge and perception show the way
I have listened to the arguments of fools
I have looked within and found dark jewels.

My husband was very impartial
He never cared what food he ate
Kippers with apple pie
Sardines in streams went by
He took it all well, as his fate.
My husband was neutral in conflict
He didn’t mind what others thought
He listened impartially
And always cautiously
Till up flew a thought which he caught.
Myself,I am well even handed
The left is as long as it’s broad
The right one is stronger
So it may last longer.
Keep me quite well,my dear Lord.
neutral synonyms: |
impartial, unbiased, unprejudiced, objective, without favouritism, open-minded, non-partisan, non-discriminatory, disinterested, even-handed,equitable, fair, fair-minded, dispassionate, detached, impersonal,unemotional, clinical, indifferent, removed; More |
| antonyms: | biased, partisan, combatant, belligerent |
| synonyms: | inoffensive, bland, unobjectionable, unexceptionable, anodyne,unremarkable, ordinary, commonplace, run-of-the-mill, everyday;More |
| antonyms: | provocative, offensive |
| synonyms: | pale, pastel, light-toned; More |
The pink flowers of the honeysuckle rise
Like crocuses in springtime from the green
Like eager maidens wanting to be seen
As sunshine glitters on their shapely thighs.
Too much sun has made them over-bold
They’re at risk of suffering from their desperate joy.
For all the rain and clouds made them annoyed;
They must be fertilised or die before they’re old.
This fierce sun makes me a melting splodge
A lick of oil paint mixed and uncomposed.
Who was this artist; what did she propose?
And will this portrait in her memory lodge?
As flowers will inevitably die
They do not lose by hurling up their joys.
But should we women imitate their ploys?
For we might live in shame, though we defy
Each child of nature feels the touch of sun.
Some stretch out in joy while others run.
If you vacillate and never choose,
She who chooses has the least to lose .
Time is a very strange thing, contrary to scientific thinking it does not pass in the same regular fashion. In the early hours of the morning the minutes pass so slowly they seem like hours, time …
Source: FRAIL.

A pencil skirt is ambiguous to wear,
If you look good, then men’s eyes wander where?
And if obese then love handles distract
With critical review folk’s eyes are stacked.
An elastic waist is frowned on though it’s kind.
And frees one from the body to the mind.
Trousers too have perils of their own,
When buttocks are like oranges not bones
A maxi dress may be a perfect choice
If you’re rich and drive a big Rolls Royce.
But if on public transport you must move
Take care, the hem may catch in some stray groove.
Isadora Duncan wore long scarves and wraps
And so by accident, her death was mapped
I guess you might as well wear apple peel.
For if you’re stout, it grants a strange appeal.
But if your friends and neighbours ever moan
Wear a trench-coat of the colour stone
For if it rains you will be well prepared;
And if the sun shines, you can soon be bared.
When a man drove a truck through a crowd in Nice, France, on Thursday night, the act of mass violence set off another all-too-familiar cycle of outrage, mourning and political gamesmanship. Media outlets ran stories of tragedy and heroism; politicians vowed to keep their constituents safe; citizens mourned at candlelight vigils. The attacks drew international…
via Which Countries’ Terrorist Attacks Are Ignored By The U.S. Media? — Features – FiveThirtyEight
A quatrain is a stanza in a poem that has exactly four lines. Some quatrains comprise entire poems, while others are part of a larger structure. Quatrains usually use some form of rhyme scheme, especially the following forms: AAAA, AABB, ABAB, and ABBA. Lines in quatrain can be any length and with any meter, but there is usually a regular rhythm to the lines as well. There are examples of quatrains in many eras and cultures, from Ancient Greece and China to Renaissance England and Iran to contemporary literature.
Though there are quatrain examples from around the world, the word quatrain that we use in English comes from French word for four, quatre. This, in turn, comes from Latin quattuor. Thus, the definition of quatrain most certainly existed before the word that
So mine is not actually a quatrain according to the above.It’s a half quatrain!

Oh,when the trees are fresh and green
We’ll lie down in the grass.
We’ll put our noses in the flowers
And so the hours will pass.
I love you once,I love you twice
I love you four and five.
My love is bigger than the moon
And wider than your eyes.
I’ll come with you to the church one day
And then we shall be wed
But until that day we shall stay chaste
When wed , we’ll go to bed.
I’ll love you once,I’ll love you twice
I’ll love you three and four.
And when I’ve loved you all night long
I think I’ll love you more

Mary had had coffee with Annie ;now she was eying a snake print pencil skirt in her local department store.Am I a temptress wearing snake skin as it reminds men of Eden and Adam’s sin.Curious how sex was a sin being as that’s how God had made them like that.He must be very naughty himself,she thought
We could have had some other form of reproduction,she told herself.But as we are lazy it would have to be fun.
Come here,Annie, she called.What do you think of this skirt?
No.Mary,it won’t look right on you.You still have an unnatural innocence and simplicity.I think seersucker or gingham dresses in pure cotton are your type of thing.You must be yourself so that a man will not mistake you for a woman of a certain type.
I don’t think they have any gingham,Mary replied calmly.If only I had not been so afraid of that sewing machine,I could make my own.And if a man did that it would be intriguing.
Oh,you would not have hsd the time with your job and the house and Stan,Annie advised her.How about some nice shorts?
Shorts! Are you crackers?My knees and thighs are private.
Well.Annie said,I am afraid you skirt is transparent like Princess
Diana’s.
Thank God I have 2 pairs of knickers on,Mary chuckled.
I’ve always been bad at checking my clothes.Last week I went to see Vi and my shoes were on the wrong feet.Another time my soles began to disintegrate… a bit like the EU.Stan liked me to wear lovely clothes like blue tights.
Just blue tights?Annie said suspiciously.
Don’t be so pedantic,Mary grinned.I wore a blue dress too.It’s not for you to ask what I wore in bed.Maybe I wore Laura Ashley
Don’t read Ted Hughes letters.And Sylvia Plath’s journals are even worse.You need some humour and fun.
You can say that again,said Mary.Not a newspaper.
And so say all of us.
Yoo No,a clot of filk here dislake the MsLim women wearing a veil over there fices..But luuk at it thas woy.. will they get skin cancer? Will they get a melanoma?Don’t detention thet to mee…boy,have I wuffered!
Do they wurry about bed hur days?Does chemotheropy make other English fowk even sodder as we cen all cee they are bald? Why,my nayboor was stared at.
You sea,it’s quote sansible, reelly… trust schemes a bit eerie tolking to someone who’s tooth is hidden.,Still it waves on lipstacks and lip glossies and other expansive items of make it all up.
So look out for my new Elfie…after I go somewear were they sell these torments for women.
I just wish other English women wore a dense veil over their orifices.
Dannyhttps://youtu.be/6ppdB6JX99Q
From the prevalence of different forms of quatrains in many different literary traditions, it is clear to see that quatrains have been a building block of poetry for a large part of human history. Though it has been so popular for many millennia and in many different cultures, there is no unified theory about why the quatrain is so fundamental to poetry. It could be that its brevity makes the form easier to memorize, which was important in the early days of oral storytelling and the tradition of nomadic storytellers later on, such as troubadours. Examples of quatrains also show that they can be just long enough to get an entire sublime concept across to the reader or audience member, such as in the tradition of Shichigon-zekku”
As estimated, you died. Things marched,
sufficient, to that end.
Just so much Zyklon and leather, patented
terror, so many routine cries.
(I have made
an elegy for myself it
is true)
September fattens on vines. Roses
flake from the wall. The smoke
of harmless fires drifts to my eyes.
This is plenty. This is more than enough.
My doctor was n’t highly astute
He downsized to a house in Beirut
He said he was deaf
But nevertheless
A chauffeur was hard to recruit.
My dentist came from Judea last year
But we call it the West Bank down here
But North,East or South
To tell you the truth
The politics are projections of fear.
The chiropodist came here from Ceylon
She came with false eyebrows glued on
For her thyroid was low
And one way it shows
Is the hair we once had is now gone.
So thyroid deprivation’s effects
Mean you don’t need a Brazilian wax
For our hairs are so weak
They fall off with no tweak
But we will not let them labelled as lax.
Now women are not shaved to give birth
So why treat this terrain with a curse?
A man who’s mature
Will not do a detour
If a few curls protect his wife’s purse.
NOUN
acute, argute, beaut, Beirut, boot, bruit, brut, brute, Bute, butte, Canute, cheroot, chute, commute, compute, confute, coot, cute, depute, dilute, dispute, flute, galoot, hoot, impute, jute, loot, lute, minute, moot, newt, outshoot, permute, pollute, pursuit, recruit, refute, repute, route, salute, Salyut, scoot, shoot, Shute, sloot, snoot, subacute, suit, telecommute, Tonton Macoute, toot, transmute, undershoot, uproot, Ute, volute
My old blue fountain pen allows
The ink across the page to flow
Like wet paint from an artist’s brush,
And words come in a rush.
Enchanting through the hand which writes,
Bewitched with art, beauty alights.
The script is like a music score
Through which we pass as through a door.
Imagination’s home.
As ,mysteriously.to you, to me,
The spirits of our hearts are tamed,
By rhythms of pen,of brush,of mind.
They enter vision quite unplanned,
Like moths to flutter softly round
Fire joined heart and hand.
The pen slows down,the hand goes still
And just as dreams at daybreak will,
They shrink,they disappear,they’re gone.
I almost caught that one!
Nerve endings shriek
Like new mown blades of grass
Arms are tender,feel raw inside
As if the hands can’t deal with loss
I satisfy them with scented lotion
They want to retract into my body
I have no shell to protect me.
Tension makes me steely.
But the hands can’t lie
Thin and bony,no fat to cover
The nerves give out a message
Lost,loveless,lonely
Touch me with your invisible glance.
Embrace me with your eternal mind.
Stunned
People wandering
Amongst the wreckage
Looking for a secure base
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