Society Magazine

POEM: Softening a Blow with Poetry

By Berniegourley @berniegourley

Nothing, these days, sounds mean or terse,
if you put it in metered verse.
Rhymes make a "screw you" whimsical,
not hostile or inimical.

So if you'd like to ride the fence,
and give insults benign pretense,
just rhyme your lines and count your feet,
they'll think it jest and call it sweet.

[Ex. 1]
Your breath is Death on crack and meth
gone ten days without a shower.
It'd stop a clock and kill the hour.
"What foul winds blow?" It is your breath.

[Ex. 2]
To say you're dumber than a post
gives the post too much room to boast.
I'd liken your wits more to toast,
but
one day you'll be sharp as pot roast.

So if you need make libel or slander,
you can do it with the utmost candor,
if you can make the barb zing like a song,
they will drop their riposte and sing along

This entry was posted in humor, poem, Poetry and tagged humor, poem, poetry by B Gourley. Bookmark the permalink.

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