A "spirited" spoof of win-big-cash vanity poetry contests |
![]() The Bards Convention A poetry prom held once a year beckons to bards from far and near. The carrot is cash put up for contention; same tempting old tease, each Bards Convention. âPlus trophies and plaques,â to quote The Quill. Just pay for your prize, enjoy the thrill. I'm a contest rube who'd answered the call midst wide-eyed wanna-beâs filling the hall. Do join me, friend; come watch the show. I'm bound to win, I've paid them dough. *** Hush, hush... be quiet we must *** Emcees for The Quill bode all to be still as poets prepared to engage. It is a condition each give a rendition of verse for rehearsing on stage. But as lights dimmed low an afterglow went floating across the room. Not a mystical mist, but a whimsical wisp I tailed to a catacomb tomb. To sneak a peek I dared not speak, but stealth'ly nudged the door. I dropped my jaw with what I sawâ a poetry party with ghosts of yore. The spirits were restive, the gaiety festive; a passel of specters all having a ball. I copied Jack Horner, crept into a corner to spy like a fly on the wall. Twixt Aiken and Bacon stood four-footer Pope, 'side Binyon and Bunyon, Lord Byron, and Hope. There's Wentworth and Woodworth and Francis Scott Key. Two Taylors, three Brontesâ all sisters, you see; relating, debating while sipping their tea. Sir Ferguson, Tennyson, Dickenson, Rowe with Munday âtween Sunday and Fridayâs Defoe. Mackay, Magee, McKee, McCraeâ Hilton and Milton, and Chinaâs Wang Wei. Off to the left of 'nonsensical' Lear, Longfellow's in stride retelling Revere. "One if by land, and two if by sea!" squeal a bevy of bards; like children they be. O'er 'cross the crypt seen munching on cake, though anon in his prime, the Englishman Blake; a dissident mystic and foe of the State whose 'burning-bright Tyger's' still famous to date. And last but not least, a group in the rear, topping their tankards of shandies and beer, Greek ancients and Limeys, old Romans and Heinies; too many to nameâ My god, theyâre all here! They're citing, reciting, in candle-lit lighting while feasting and drinking their fill at this bash. They have dumplings with ducklings and roasted pig sucklings, two tubs full of taters in sour cream mash. Spring leeks and green scallions, brown gravy, sweet onions for garnishing ribs of roast beef. And stewing in crocks, split peas and ham hocks and a ghoulish goulash beyond belief. Cauldrons of crawfish, fried rice, and red beans. Tomatoes, potatoes and tossed salad greens. Kegs flowing with brews, red wine, and hard booze; delicious desserts of pies and pralines. As ghosts gathered round, grew quiet the tomb. A meeting of sorts seemed likely and soon. Walt Whitman gave word, "let's have your attention! It's time to be heard at this yearly convention." In front of the forum in charge of a quorum, the maven from Avon arose. âAll here?â asked âSpeare, âletâs stifle the cheer,â said the master of sonnets and prose. âI've heard many mention of rising dissension with grading our students upstairs. Now, free of constraints, letâs hear your complaints pervading these Odist affairs.â âWhoâs first to speak and proffer critique?â inquired of Will while panning the room. âIâll give it a go,â said the raven-haired Poe, the cynical savant of gloom. In a studious stance, he cleared his throat with theatrical flair before he spoke. âOnce upon a midnight session, while I squandered my profession marking many a quaint, but spurious ode of ludicrous lore. When perusing, nearly snoozing, suddenly I heard rehearsing, an obscenely shameless cursing, cursing 'yond my classroom door. âWhat vulgarity!â I shuddered. Cursing, by some smutty Moor. Mocking me, but nevermore!â âOh, thass absurd,â olâ Coleridge slurred. âMoors donât buy your brand of rappingâ as if some brazen bird came tapping, gently tapping on your chamber door. Tâwas merely a mouthy crow and nothing more.â âHow darest thou, Sam, imply thee a sham! You heinous hound from Hades below. Now take it back or risk a whack,â bristled the rather pugnacious, persnickety Poe. âBeg pardon, kind sir, Iâm truly a cur for surely I neâer did think. Unlike thine Ancient Mariner, Iâve âad many a drop to drink.â âTouchĂ©, tee-hee,â laughed Annabel Lee, patting the back of her beau. Van Dyke was next whose voice inflects disdain for same, in favor of Poe. âPoe postures a point to which I agree, for shame to them, and shame on them; purveyors of blasphemy. We never do cuss, need never to cuss, only virtuous verse for thee.â âHeâs right!â shouts Hammond. âHeâs wrong!â spouts Baconâ the duo divided but closely related in gist. âAye,â says Hammond. âWe've labored for ages redlining poor pages of aspiring Quill poets in classes.â âNay,â says Bacon. âThey pay us good wages to act as their sages for inspiring the poetry masses.â âAye, Iâm wrong, youâre right,â heeds Hammond. âNay, youâre right, Iâm wrong," cedes Bacon. Thence came a disruption with curt interruption, to wit: âLet me be Blunt, since be it my name. Unless thereâs a poem that I shall see as lovely and leafy as Kilmerâs old tree, I shall wheedle and coddle their vanity game. âI truly detest such gibberish scat, âtis purely a wearisome waste of my time. Piles of piffle they toss in my lap, yea nary a rhythm, no reason, nor rhyme. ââTis not why weâre hired, donât care if Iâm fired, I shall flatter each entrant the same. âEvaluations? Thereâs none! Salutations? Youâve won!â and leave them all dreaming of poetry fame.â Blunt graciously bowed to applause from the crowd while humbly conceding the stage to âSpeare. But a standing ovation persisted so loud, it forced Will's gavel to quiet things here. âYou there, Cummings? e.e. if prefer?â hailed âSpeare quite tediously. âMinus commas and gaps, curly-Qâs and big CAPS, can we take thee seriously?â âif you think me abstruse i haveno excuse but do have apitch to propose. Upstairs is a ruse for vanity rubes but not up to us to expose âand surely should mention weâre at this convention as honorable guests of the quill. we should treat with respect for the feasts that we get and they dutifully pay our bill.â âWe agree! We agree! with contrary e.e.â came a volley of hoots from a jury of spooks. Thence Kipling opined with a logical spin, whose squidgy-nosed idol's better known than himâ 'that beaten, flayed Injian' named Gunga Din. âThey say weâre immortal as poetry goes, we venerable bards of traditional lore. Weâll neâer expire! Weâre classical pros meant to infuse our muse and no more. âEach year weâre here where poetry thrives, with a jolly-good job we do to survive. No haunting old digs, or Halloween gigs. No shrieking, no freaking, or ghoulish disguise; by gawd, weâre âaving the time of our lives.â Next to speak up, the pious bard Donne whoâd none of the ale but plenty of rum. âSince ye have a majority, on William's authority, I pray ye panel of poets decease.â Oh, how the ghosts booed, bellowed, and hissed with jeers and sneers from many half-pissed, all cringing from Donne's impaired phraseology, who promptly untied his tongue with apology. âSo sorry, my brethren for comments unkind. Mere rummy-numbed lips, no fault of the mind. Dare not dismay, meant only to pray: for this meeting to cease and de-sist.â âI second the motion,â said minstrel bard Burns, whoâs quoted each year for Grandfather Tyme. âLetâs pop a champagne as the jury adjourns; Iâll lead us in song, a favorite of mine.â âLest our acquaintance be for naught, no way should we eâer resign⊠and neâer fâget what thee hath taught, ye bards of auld lang syne." Hence the headmaster bard brought the gavel down hard and declared, "It's a quarter-past partying time!" In sync with their grooving, my feet began moving like a whirligig dervish entranced. The beat was contagious, I know itâs outrageous but burst into song as I danced. When I sprung from my nook, they shot me a look but seemed to accept me as theirs. On went the clappinâ, carousing, toe-tappinâ embracing this twit from upstairs. âCha-ching, cha-ching, Quill registers ring. Whether genius or rubbish weâll always get published; we wanna-be bards just doinâ our thing. âCha-ching, cha-ching, their teller tray dings. Be it dollars and cents, pounds, shillings, or pence; amazing what coin that poetry brings." The spirits were rollicking, frolicking free. All rompin' and prancin', foot stompinâ and dancinâ as Sappho was jinkinâ and jivinâ with me. The ancient one Horace proposed us a chorus while swinging his tankard re-filled. âAye, everyone toast our generous host, letâs sing to the Sign of the Quill.â âStroke, stroke, donât rock the boat! Appease the poets who came⊠readily, wearily, steadily, cheerily, weâll stroke them all the same. âYou've won, you've won, you son-of-a-gun; the gimmick of the game⊠Loyally, happily, hopefully, merrily, theyâll all be back again.â The revelry paled when Whitman hailed above the rousing fun. âO brethren! my brethrenâ the Quill's charade is done! There's nothing left for bards to chase, the prize they sought is won. Itâs back to crypts perusing scripts, our pumpkin hour has come." Mild cursing was heard, but all had concurred that in view of Walt's mention, t'was time for suspension with a closing salute from Shakespeare. âAlas, fellow odists, thou kindred spirits as hither yon we flitter 'fore the morrow. Bemoan thee not this affair held dearest; merely savor the scent of parting's sweet sorrow. For I bid thee good cheer 'til we gather next year at this burgeoning Bards Convention. Here, here!â |