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Replying to a comment on:
Dead Poets' Society (Joke) (Other) by Yardbird
BIG, BIG, BIG, BIG, NOTE - I AM WELL AWARE THIS IS NOT A
POEM, SO DON'T SEND PISSY LITTLE COMMENTS ON WHETHER IT
SHOULD BE ON THIS SITE OR NOT! I THOUGHT, SEEING AS WE'RE
ALL POETS HERE, SOME OF YOU MIGHT FIND THIS JOKE AMUSING.
A poet dies, but instead of just dying, or going to Heaven,
Hell, Nirvana or what-have-you, he finds himself at a wine
bar, with the words "Dead Poets' Society" on a sign above
the door. He walks in, and sits down at a free space around
a table. At the head of the table is Ted Hughes.
HUGHES: Hello, friend! You're just in time for our
competition. Complete a rhyming couplet on a given subject
for a month's free drinks!
POET: Ok, what's the subject?
HUGHES: A man with bandy legs.
POET: Alright, here goes:
"As I was walking down the road,
I met a man who's legs were bowed".
Everyone is impressed, save for a dapper gent at the other
end of the table.
WORDSWORTH: Balderdash! That drivel is nothing compared to
any of my efforts, for example:
"One fine spring day, I saw a dandy,
Who's legs were long and rather bandy".
This draws applause from the rest of the poets, yet they
suddenly stop - William Shakespeare has entered the room.
HUGHES: Hey, Will! Fancy a stab at this weeks compo?
'The Shake' says nothing, sits down, and proceeds to win
outright with his submission:
"Lo - What form of man is this,
Who's balls hang in parenthesis?"
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