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View Poll Results: What do you think about the principle of 'ReVersing' | |||
Great! Keep it up! The poetry of the kind has an independent value, it deserves a book all to itself! | 8 | 40.00% | |
Good! It is re-creative in a sense it lives opon other’s work, but good application of one’s creative abilities nevertheless. Just don’t expect much from it | 11 | 55.00% | |
Indifferent. Really, it’s desultory. Have fun if you like, I don’t care, but stop forcing your megalomaniac ramblings on me! | 1 | 5.00% | |
Horrible! How dared you to deal with Tolkien in such an insulting way! Don’t even think about ReVersing another piece of rhyme! | 0 | 0% | |
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 20. You may not vote on this poll |
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05-28-2004, 10:50 AM | #1 |
Deadnight Chanter
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ReVerse
The thing I'm going to present to your attention started off as a feat of Another Way Round quotes game, when instead of reversing the prose quote, I chose some versified fragment of Tolkien's work to puzzle participants with. I liked the idea so much that I troubled myself with the turning inside out of poems as a whole, fruit of my toil to be given below
The idea is to reverse the entire meaning of the poem, but try and retain the form and 'spirit' of it. The originals are in italics So, here we go (and, of course, join in): EDIT: I've added up a poll. Though we have other effective ways of getting feedback - that is, reputation system, I've found that fellow B-Downers tend to be kind and use it to provide mainly positive feedback. Suppose somebody disliked the idea heartily, but refrained from rating me or other on the thread down due to kindness and generosity - the poll would be the good way for them to tell us what they think about the issue. If you're not sure wich correspondents to your opinion in a more precise way, be free to choose two answers - it's allowed. But hurry - the poll will be up for three months only END OF EDIT EDIT2: Me and my impatience! My former signature, about power to edit being a privilege but not a right, was mainly for myself - always expecting to have that power to correct any mistakes I'm so prone to making, I end with 'opon' in a second question, which I have no means to change. Now I left to hope for generosity of mods, who may happen around and do it for me, please END OF EDIT2
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! Last edited by HerenIstarion; 11-26-2004 at 12:51 AM. |
05-28-2004, 10:52 AM | #2 |
Deadnight Chanter
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Goblin Song
Burn, burn tree and fern!
Shrivel and scorch! A fizzling torch To light the night for our delight, Ya hey! Bake and toast 'em, fry and roast 'em till beards blaze, and eyes glaze; till hair smells and skins crack, fat melts, and bones black in cinders lie beneath the sky! So dwarves shall die, and light the night for our delight, Ya hey! Ya-harri-heyl Ya hoy! which became: Water, water stone and sand Swell and stifle! Whistling rifle! Darken the day for them to despair Derry dol! Sow and reap us, gather and heap us After cheeks pale and their breaths rale After horn shows and hide peels Meat denses and blood heals And fires leap Over the earth! And giants will live! So dark the day for them to despair Derry dol! Dol derry dol! Derry dol!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
05-28-2004, 10:55 AM | #3 |
Deadnight Chanter
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The song citizens of Esgaroth sang in praise of dwarves
The King beneath the mountains,
The King of carven stone, The lord of silver fountains Shall come into his own! His crown shall be upholden, His harp shall be restrung, His halls shall echo golden To songs of yore re-sung. The woods shall wave on mountains And grass beneath the sun; His wealth shall flow in fountains And the rivers golden run. The streams shall run in gladness, The lakes shall shine and burn, And sorrow fail and sadness At the Mountain-king's return! to become: The President over the oakery The President of molten fat The servant of wooden bakery Have gone from where he sat His shoes have been downtrodden His pipes've been snapped in two His shack with flood was sodden His creed gone to the blue The desert filled his tillages The sand mounts o'er the moon Privation seized his villages His lead is kept by loon The lakes are dried in sorrow The rivers're bleak and wet All glee have gone from morrow He's gone from where he sat!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
05-28-2004, 10:57 AM | #4 |
Deadnight Chanter
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Little Princess Mee
Lovely was she
As in elven-song is told: She had pearls in hair All threaded fair; Of gossamer shot with gold Was her kerchief made, And a silver braid Of stars about her throat. Of moth-web light All moonlit-white She wore a woven coat, And round her kirtle Was bound a girdle Sewn with diamond dew. She walked by day Under mantle grey And hood of clouded blue; But she went by night All glittering bright Under the starlit sky, And her slippers frail Of fishes' mail Flashed as she went by To her dancing-pool, And on mirror cool Of windless water played. As a mist of light In whirling flight A glint like glass she made Wherever her feet Of silver fleet Flicked the dancing-floor. She looked on high To the roofless sky, And she looked to the shadowy shore; Then round she went, And her eyes she bent And saw beneath her go A Princess Shee As fair as Mee: They were dancing toe to toe! Shee was as light As Mee, and as bright; But Shee was, strange to tell, Hanging down With starry crown Into a bottomless well! Her gleaming eyes In great surprise Looked up to the eyes of Mee: A marvellous thing, Head-down to swing Above a starry sea! Only their feet Could ever meet; For where the ways might lie To find a land Where they do not stand But hang down in the sky No one could tell Nor learn in spell In all the elven-lore. So still on her own An elf alone Dancing as before With pearls in hair And kirtle fair And slippers frail Of fishes' mail went Mee: Of fishes' mail And slippers frail And kirtle fair With pearls in hair went Shee! now to be read as: Huge Swineherd Him Ugly was he As the orckish prose reveals With bone in a nose Still bendy as hose Of a wood and a nail to kill Is his club hand-made And his shield all laid With spikes about its brim. Foul his hide all dark Stained with bloody mark Of one Eye so cruel and grim All round his loin Skulls and ribs be going Of unhappy elves he slew He crawled by night Outrun by fright In seek of live flesh to hew And he slipped by day As a spot dim grey Over the darkling lake Oh, his boots all strong Withered earth oft prong Like enourmous cruel rake When he arched his back Thirsted for slash an hack With his cruel and ruddy fang Foul helm of brass All stained and crass O'er hairy shoulder was hung When the pin-sharp claws Of his clutching paws Through the sinew and bone he tore He gazed all down As o'er the mobbed town Through pale and shining door All square he sat Into roomy vat Empty he thought it but, A swineherd Ai With winked eye… They ended right butt to butt! Ai was as grim, As Him and as prim But Ai was, easy to cry Flutterin' like bat Upside in the vat Up to the domed sky! His dirty ears Pointed like spears Rubbed to ears of Him Irksome a thing With a loud ding Vat drowned in lake so dim! Not only the butts Of both those mutts But ears and noses and eyes Were alloyed In pairs were toyed Both buzzed like cruel flies! Everyone said Be them live or dead That their seat may be found at ease By the smelly stench Of the last year's tench And the oily lamp of grease! But still they sit In a vat so neat One great lump o'meat Still buzzing like before! In great lump o'meat In a vat so neat There still they sit Behind the locked door!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
05-28-2004, 10:59 AM | #5 |
Deadnight Chanter
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The Hoard
When the moon was new and the sun young
of silver and gold the gods sung: in the green grass they silver spilled, and the white waters they with gold filled. Ere the pit was dug or Hell yawned, ere dwarf was bred or dragon spawned, there were Elves of old, and strong spells under green hills in hollow dells they sang as they wrought many fair things, and the bright crowns of the Elf-kings. But their doom fell, and their song waned, by iron hewn and by steel chained. Greed that sang not, nor with mouth smiled, in dark holes their wealth piled, graven silver and carven gold: over Elvenhome the shadow rolled. There was an old dwarf in a dark cave, to silver and gold his fingers clave; with hammer and tongs and anvil-stone he worked his hands to the hard bone. and coins he made, and strings of rings, and thought to buy the power of kings. But his eyes grew dim and his ears dull and the skin yellow on his old skull; through his bony claw with a pale sheen the stony jewels slipped unseen. No feet he heard, though the earth quaked. when the young dragon his thirst slaked. and the stream smoked at his dark door. The flames hissed on the dank floor, and he died alone in the red fire; his bones were ashes in the hot mire. There was an old dragon under grey stone; his red eyes blinked as he lay alone. His joy was dead and his youth spent, he was knobbed and wrinkled, and his limbs bent in the long years to his gold chained; in his heart's furnace the fire waned. To his belly's slime gems stuck thick, silver and gold he would snuff and lick: he knew the place of the least ring beneath the shadow of his black wing. Of thieves he thought on his hard bed, and dreamed that on their flesh he fed, their bones crushed, and their blood drank: his ears drooped and his breath sank. Mail-rings rang. He heard them not. A voice echoed in his deep grot: a young warrior with a bright sword called him forth to defend his hoard. His teeth were knives, and of horn his hide, but iron tore him, and his flame died. There was an old king on a high throne: his white beard lay on knees of bone; his mouth savoured neither meat nor drink, nor his ears song; he could only think of his huge chest with carven lid where pale gems and gold lay hid in secret treasury in the dark ground; its strong doors were iron-bound. The swords of his thanes were dull with rust, his glory fallen, his rule unjust, his halls hollow, and his bowers cold, but king he was of elvish gold. He heard not the horns in the mountain-pass, he smelt not the blood on the trodden grass, but his halls were burned, his kingdom lost; in a cold pit his bones were tossed. There is an old hoard in a dark rock, forgotten behind doors none can unlock; that grim gate no man can pass. On the mound grows the green grass; there sheep feed and the larks soar, and the wind blows from the sea-shore. The old hoard the Night shall keep, while earth waits and the Elves sleep ********************** The aged earth will lie all cold, senile With crust of mould and rotting vile Iron rust will cover ruins bare Brown dust for bleeding feet to fare When the mountains crumble an’ sweep Giants will die, and humans weep New-born orks will sprawl out, cover all Out o’darkling caves, and the trees will fall Ruin they will bring, hack and blood Cruelest of slaves, out they’ll come like flood Chance will rule, no law, the stronger hand Spoiled be alike the sea and the land Wretched they’ll be, and they will not last Like ants o’er hill and plain marching fast Crumpled steel and dusted lead With the wind blown like a seed There’ll be youthful giant on a stripped plain Steel and lead he’ll give away bain With nails and planks he’ll toy at will And with such a play his feet heal And cubes he’ll break, and squares he’ll smash Combined rule for him’ll be hash His toes’ll be quick, his fingers fast His stomach huge and waist so vast He’ll spy the sparrows flyin by And pebbles falling from the sky He’ll mark them go, all pigeons old As they pass over waters cold He’ll be reborn in green of pool And never will he loose his wool There’ll be dove over black mire Of all his tribe the king and sire Among their thousands youngster frail With finest feather of hue grey-pale Free for one day them all to lead With jet-black eye of fiery bead Droplets falling down his pearly wing Steely voice for his song to sing He will give no care for the giant’s cube And he’ll bother not with the orkish tube O’er the mire he’ll settle, pigeonhole to build Palace for himself, wordmoot for his guild Strong he’ll grow, of eye and of the heart Fast he’ll be as wind, as storm, as flying dart He will see them go, monks in hats of cork Who will heed him not, wielding rusted forks Heading off his mire, where he’ll grow so strong Ruling flying hosts and cooing throngs There they will be, humble monks of Fork Keen of sight beneath their hats of cork Shaven rosy cheeks utter sign of health Feasting day and night, needing there no stealth They will sing by day, they will dance by night They will keep no goods and will travel light Over shining water, mirror of the sky Like to clouds white in the breeze to fly Their forks they’ll polish to make them shine The fame of their cook will gather guests to dine Their huts so warm, shelter in the lee The keep of love, joy and leaping glee Tables will snow food and wine will fall like rain Fiddles hum the tune to praise their happy reign Realm they’ll found for seekers after quick to find Rest with peace of heart, neath the sign of hind There the wealth will be given free For each who asks on the count of three There the door will be open wide All secrets be gone, and no vice to hide The Day shall shine, the sea shore be calm Air be sweet, flowers bloom and exhale balm Woods will rise anew, all the ice be rived Sprinkling silver dew o’er the earth revived
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
05-28-2004, 03:10 PM | #6 |
Face in the Water
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 728
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Wow. This is impressive!
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10-29-2004, 06:21 AM | #7 |
Deadnight Chanter
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Shadow Bride
There was a man who dwelt alone,
as day and night went past he sat as still as carven stone, and yet no shadow cast. The white owls perched upon his head beneath the winter moon; they wiped their beaks and thought him dead under the stars of June. There came a lady clad in grey in the twilight shining: one moment she would stand and stay, her hair with flowers entwining. He woke, as had he sprung of stone, and broke the spell that bound him; he clasped her fast, both flesh and bone, and wrapped her shadow round him. There never more she walks her ways by sun or moon or star; she dwells below where neither days nor any nights there are. But once a year when caverns yawn and hidden things awake, they dance together then till dawn and a single shadow make. *** There is a maid who always taunts Her brothers thirty-three Her mum and dad, and uncle and aunt She teases from her tree Black mice she carries under arm Be it winter or fall She tickles their tummies and feeds them barm As on their backs they roll The gent to love her barely clad Is running wild and sad Her tease and taunt have drove him mad Too old was he, she said She sleeps with ease, and wakes in glee Whatever idlers think Her dance is gracious, movement free Her shadow jumps and kinks Before she did and hence she’ll climb Her lofty maple tree Her mocking laugh will often dumb Unhappy thirty-three But often still when wind a-howls And no one sees her go She weeps alone into her shawl And watches gulls ashore
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
10-30-2004, 06:21 PM | #8 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I finally worked out that tricksy last line! So, here's one from someone other than HI!
I can't quite remember how the original goes, and don't have my book handy, but it's Galadriel's song in Lothlorien, beginning with I sang of leaves, of leaves of gold, and leaves of gold there grew. **************************************** You spoke of roots, of silver roots, but silver roots dissolved, You spoke of calm, but no calm came into the hearts you loved. Before the earth, before the sea, the moon shone on the land, And silver stones of Ilmarin sat silent in your hand. Here short the silver roots have gone behind the long straight days, While there before the joining streams the joy of mortals stays. O Moria, the summer comes, the brightly starlit night, The trees are blooming in the spring, the blossoms fair and white. O Moria, how short my stay within that far-off wood, I would not wish to go again, not even if I could. And if of wings you now should speak, these wings of mine would fly, Far away, so far away, through starlit summer skies. *****************************************
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Don't let me die! Last edited by Elennar Starfire; 10-30-2004 at 06:25 PM. Reason: those pesky asterisks... |
11-01-2004, 01:08 AM | #9 |
Deadnight Chanter
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the original
I sang of leaves, of leaves of gold, and leaves of gold there grew:
Of wind I sang, a wind there came and in the branches blew. Beyond the Sun, beyond the Moon, the foam was on the Sea, And by the strand of Ilmarin there grew a golden Tree. Beneath the stars of Ever-eve in Eldamar it shone, In Eldamar beside the walls of Elven Tirion. There long the golden leaves have grown upon the branching years, While here beyond the Sundering Seas now fall the Elven-tears. O Lórien! The Winter comes, the bare and leafless Day; The leaves are falling in the stream, the River flows away. O Lórien! Too long I have dwelt upon this Hither Shore And in a fading crown have twined the golden elanor. But if of ships I now should sing, what ship would come to me, What ship would bear me ever back across so wide a Sea? Good job, Elennar
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
11-01-2004, 02:10 AM | #10 |
Deadnight Chanter
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Sing hey! for the bath at close of day
that washes the weary mud away! A loon is he that will not sing: O! Water Hot is a noble thing! O! Sweet is the sound of falling rain, and the brook that leaps from hill to plain; but better than rain or rippling streams is Water Hot that smokes and steams. O! Water cold we may pour at need down a thirsty throat and be glad indeed; but better is Beer, if drink we lack, and Water Hot poured down the back. O! Water is fair that leaps on high in a fountain white beneath the sky; but never did fountain sound so sweet as splashing Hot Water with my feet! *** Be not lorn! We splash in the mud at morn! That bakes our skin into scale and horn Wiseman is he that springs into dirt Tearing off his pants and shirt! O! Bitter is thought of the burning fire And swelling heat to dry the mire For good is swamp to stroll along Of leeches and slime we sing a song! O! Hungry one may devour some bread Or salad fresh with a gulp of dread But better is ooze and tadpoles green Some newts, some snakes and a toad’s splin! O! Sun may shine in the sky above But better is shade down the chilly cove For mucous floor and leaking walls Are better than any nobleman’s halls!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
11-17-2004, 05:13 AM | #11 |
Deadnight Chanter
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Probably appropriate to what we are up to here :)
O! What are you doing,
And where are you going? Your ponies need shoeing! The river is flowing! O! tra-la-la-lally here down in the valley! O! What are you seeking, And where are you making? The faggots are reeking, The bannocks are baking! O! tril-lil-lil-lolly the valley is jolly, ha! ha! O! Where are you going With beards all a-wagging? No knowing, no knowing What brings Mister Baggins, And Balin and Dwalin down into the valley in June ha! ha! O! Will you be staying, Or will you be flying? Your ponies are straying! The daylight is dying! To fly would be folly, To stay would be jolly And listen and hark Till the end of the dark to our tune ha! ha.' *************************** Ah! That’s what I’m being That’s whence I’m coming My dragon needs nothing But vulcano erupting! Ah! Tam tara ram it! Up there on the summit! Ah! That’s what I’d be finding The root of undoing The flow out-putting The blaze of star-shooting Ah! Doom doora doomy The pinnacle is roomy! Hey ho! Ah! That’s whence I’m coming With blade for a shaving The secret I’m keeping Is why I am climbing A-creeping, a-crowling Up, up the sheer wall With a winter a-stroll Hey ho! Ah! Would I be falling? Or would I be diving? My dragon’s back’s swaying Grey morn is a-coming And dive is so darin’ Whilst fall is so scarin' But to see and be seen Is the pleasure so keen High on that wall Hey ho!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! Last edited by HerenIstarion; 11-17-2004 at 05:19 AM. |
02-16-2005, 06:07 AM | #12 |
Deadnight Chanter
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after a while...
Look, there is Fastitocalon!
An island good to land upon, Although 'tis rather bare. Come, leave the sea! And let us run, Or dance, or lie down in the sun! See, gulls are sitting there! Beware! Gulls do not sink. There they may sit, or strut and prink: Their part it is to tip the wink, If anyone should dare Upon that isle to settle, Or only for a while to get Relief from sickness or the wet, Or maybe boil a kettle. Ah, foolish folk, who land on HIM, And little fires proceed to trim And hope perhaps for tea! It may be that His shell is thick, He seems to sleep; but He is quick, And floats now in the sea With guile; And when He hears their tapping feet, Or faintly feels the sudden heat, With smile HE dives, And promptly turning upside-down He tips them off, and deep they drown, And lose their silly lives To their surprise, Be wise! There are many monsters in the Sea, But none so perilous as HE, Old horny Fastitocalon, Whose mighty kindred all have gone, The last of the old Turtle-fish. So if to save your life you wish Then I advise: Pay heed to sailors' ancient lore, Set foot on no uncharted shore! Or better still, Your days at peace on Middle-earth In mirth Fulfill! *** Hear, there comes Armageddon But what is it? The End? The Dawn? This news is rather rare Come, let us ponder, let us think For we have come upon the brink Is meaning over there? Beware! Wise do not ask For all we know, in Trust they bask To teach the laymen is their task If anyone should care, To ask for ancient lore Or only for a while afore Their death the Real Love adore Dare not you to compare! Ah, blessed folk, who think of Him Or maybe see Him in their dream And hope for calm on sea It may be that He seems away He seems to sleep, His feet of clay But near is the spring of glee! He’ll come! And when we hear Him by the gate The knot unties, and done is fate For some! And some! Who promptly turned upside-down May be, and to the Void be thrown To lose their silly lives To their surprise! Be wise! There is no else to sooth but Him Or open mind and sight too dim To see afore Armageddon The day of Doom, the day of storm The last of all the days of old Sweeps stars and moon, turns fire cold. So say the wise: Pay heed to old forgotten lore And choose with care what you adore Or better still Love Him instead, with daily bread Be fed Or dead!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
02-16-2005, 03:00 PM | #13 |
Scent of Simbelmynë
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A short attempt
Heren, you've taken all the good songs already.
But I'll go for the Athelas verse, mercifully short it is. Original When the black breath blows and death's shadow grows and all lights pass, come athelas! come athelas! Life to the dying In the king's hand lying! ReVersed Where a white pause draws Or life's light shows flaws Or no dark stays Go loathsome haze! Go loathsome haze! Death to the living Out of peasant's foot giving Well, who knows how close "loathsome haze" is to an opposite of "beneficial leaf", but at least it rhymes! Sophia
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The seasons fall like silver swords, the years rush ever onward; and soon I sail, to leave this world, these lands where I have wander'd. O Elbereth! O Queen who dwells beyond the Western Seas, spare me yet a little time 'ere white ships come for me! |
02-17-2005, 12:31 AM | #14 | |
Deadnight Chanter
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Nice to see more participants, and good reversing, Sophia
Quote:
cheers
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
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02-17-2005, 05:33 PM | #15 |
Scent of Simbelmynë
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A second go...
Bilbo's Man in the Moon poem, reversed by yours truly and Roget's Thesaurus.
Original There is an inn a merry old inn beneath an old grey hill, And there they brew a beer so brown That the Man in the Moon himself came down one night to drink his fill The ostler has a tipsy cat that plays a five-stringed fiddle; And up and down he draws his bow, Now squeaking high, now purring low, now sawing in the middle. The landlord keeps a little dog that is mighty fond of jokes; When there's good cheer among the guests, He cocks an ear at all the jests and laughs until he chokes. They also keep a horn-ed cow as proud as any queen; But music turns her head like ale, And makes her wave her tufted tail and dance upon the green. And O! the rows of silver dishes and the store of silver spoons! For Sunday there's a special pair, And these they polish up with care on saturday afternoons. The Man in the Moon was drinking deep, and the cat began to wail; A dish and a spoon on the table danced, The cow in the garden madly pranced, and the little dog chased its tail. The Man in the Moon took another mug, and then rolled beneath his chair; And there he dozed and dreamed of ale, Till in the sky the stars were pale and dawn was in the air. Then the ostler said to his tipsy cat: "The white horses of the Moon, They neigh and champ their silver bits; But their master's been and drowned his wits, and the sun'll be rising soon!" So the cat on his fiddle played hey-diddle-diddle, a jig that would wake the dead: He squeaked and sawed and quickened the tune, While the landlord shook the Man in the Moon "It's after three!" he said They rolled the man slowly up the hill and bundled him into the moon, While his horses galloped up in rear, And the cow came capering like a deer, and a dish ran up with the spoon. Now quicker the fiddle went deedle-dum-diddle; the dog began to roar, The cow and the horses stood on their heads; the guests all bounded from their beds and danced upon the floor With a ping and a pong the fiddle strings broke! the cow jumped over the moon, And the little dog laughed to see such fun, And the Saturday dish went off at a run With the silver Sunday spoon. The round Moon rolled behind the hill, as the sun raised up her head. She hardly believed her fiery eyes; For though it was day, to her surprise They all went back to bed! Reversed Here was the jail the sober new jail above the valley callow, For here we drain the bread less clear a Woman outside a sun herself went near Two days long eating her hollow. A barmaid lost her straightlaced dog this works the thrice-snared drum; Or down or up she beats with club, Then booming down, then screaming up, then singing while she thrums. A tenant lost the mighty cat most sober and most grave; Where here's bad news within the folk, she lumbers in to hear them choke, Or cries the tears she craves. We ne'er did lose the bald-faced horse less humble than every wench; And silence stiffens her as a corpse, Her head hangs limp, she sighs perforce Or slumps down 'neath the bench. Or not columns of golden pans or a dearth of golden knives! Aganst Wednesdays here's the common few, Or those we've tarnished more than due in Monday morning's lives. A woman outside sun is eating scarce, Or a dog finished his nap; the pot and the knife under chairs did lie, a horse in the kitchen demurely sighed, Or a monstrous cat mice did trap. A woman outside sun declined a bowl, Or climbed atop the desk; Or here she woke and spoke of bread, Yet nighttime fell, and so she said That on the sea t'was dusk. Now the barmaid ran from her deadpan dog: those black cattle from a Sun, Moo and ding their golden bells; For our Mistress's sober and all is well, And the day is almost done! Now a dog with a drum beat out fi-fie-fo-fum, a waltz that could send one to sleep: She hemmed and she hawed, and she drew it out long, All the tenants heaved Sun back to where she belonged "'Tis not yet noon!" they'd bleat. We shoved the lass roughly down into the dell Or shimmied her out of the sun, Lest her cattle plodded cross ahead, Or a horse lay still as though 'twere dead, Or a knife divorced a pan. Then slower the drum came fi-fie-fo-fum; A cat then ceased to purr, The horses and cow fell upon their backs; a landlord smiled and went for a nap and slept like to wake no more. Without a sound the drumsticks flew! a horse tunnelled under the earth, Or a massive cat sighed to hear such despair, The pots broke out of their unlikely pairs and from them the gold knives hurled. A flat sun scraped across the dell, while the moon retired to bed. He quickly distrusted his shadowy nose; For though the day, like the birds had flown We all arose instead! *Mops brow* Whew! That is one long poem.
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The seasons fall like silver swords, the years rush ever onward; and soon I sail, to leave this world, these lands where I have wander'd. O Elbereth! O Queen who dwells beyond the Western Seas, spare me yet a little time 'ere white ships come for me! |
02-23-2005, 09:33 AM | #16 |
Deadnight Chanter
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Troll sat alone on his seat of stone,
And munched and mumbled a bare old bone; For many a year he had gnawed it near, For meat was hard to come by. Done by! Gum by! In a cave in the hills he dwelt alone, And meat was hard to come by. Up came Tom with his big boots on. Said he to Troll: 'Pray, what is yon? For it looks like the shin o' roy nuncle Tim, As should be a-lyin' in graveyard. Caveyard! Paveyard! This many a year has Tim been gone, And I thought he were lyin' in graveyard'. 'My lad', said Troll, 'this bone I stole. But what be bones that lie in a hole? Thy nuncle was dead as a lump o' lead, Afore I found his shinbone. Tinbone! Thinbone! He can spare a share for a poor old troll; For he don't need his shinbone'. Said Tom: 'I don't see why the likes o' thee Without axin' leave should go makin' free With the shank or the shin o' my father's kin; So hand the old bone over! Rover! Trover! Though dead he be, it belongs to he; So hand the old bone over!' 'For a couple o' pins', says Troll, and grins, 'I'll eat thee too, and gnaw thy shins. A bit o' fresh meat will go down sweet! I'll try my teeth on thee now. Нее now! See now! I'm tired o' gnawing old bones and skins; I've a mind to dine on thee now'. But just as he thought his dinner was caught, He found his hands had hold of naught. Before he could mind, Tom slipped behind And gave him the boot to larn him. Warn him! Darn him! A bump o' the boot on the seat, Tom thought, Would be the way to larn him. But harder than stone is the flesh and bone Of a troll that sits in the hills alone. As well set your boot to the mountain's root, For the seat of a troll don't feel it. Peel it! Heal it! Old Troll laughed, when he heard Tom groan, And he knew his toes could feel it. Tom's leg is game, since home he came, And his bootless foot is lasting lame; But Troll don't care, and he's still there With the bone he boned from its owner. Doner! Boner! Troll's old seat is still the same, And the bone he boned from its owner! *** The crowd of dwarves ran and jumped on turf By the lake they lived and watched the surf Just for a day, they all came to play For it was a feast of an open fist All wist! All gist! They left their cave and mushroom erf And came to the lake with the morning mist! Down came Smaug the Strong with his wings a-wide With an iron scale, and a foul hide Pouring fire a-soar, rising smokes a-roar! Swifter he flew than a gale! A hail! A wail! This very day nowhere to hide Their halls and gates had proved frail! ‘My dwarves’, said drake, ‘your halls I’ll take And burnt be down the town on lake Your lode and mine, all soon be mine And I’ll grow fat on dwarfmeat! Teeth bit! Tail hit! In the cave or by lake, I’ll skin you and bake And hence cave be lit with my breath heat! The dwarves forlorn, their beards they torn But almost all were dead by morn With an iron claw of his mighty paw He clove his passage in! Deep in! Crawl in! To grab their gold, the trove untold Of riches gather in! Not ax, nor sword, nor pleading word Could stop the drake across the ford He went ashore, threw down the door He held his feast on dwarves poor! On poor! The boor! The least of rings and gems a-hoard He clawed in heaps to pour! For many an year, noone came near For awe of the drake and for death’s fear He slept on his gold, and his heat went cold Pretty gems impressed to his belly! Soft as it was like a jelly! But not everywhere, some spots were bare With some slime showing off his belly! Though the tooth be long, and the wing still strong But the trove can’t be kept if it’s gain were wrong Not on top, nor under a barrow, on a path a-wide or a-narrow ... The man there lived who honed his bow Man of law! Of no flaw! In the south he lived by the Lake of Long And he knew how to shoot an arrow! Now some may be glad, or some maybe sad But the drake is no more, there he lies, he is dead And for all who care, the gems are there On the river bed, on the lake floor Says the lore! Under the waves where winds howl bad For those who dare to dive for more!
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! |
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