Little Aggie by Marriott Edgar

Little Aggie

When Joe Dove took his elephants out on the road
He made each one hold fast with his trunk
To the tail of the elephant walking in front
To stop them from doing a bunk.

There were fifteen in all, so ’twere rather a job
To get them linked up in a row,
But once he had fixed ’em Joe knew they’d hold on,
For an elephant never lets go.

The pace it was set by the big ‘uns in front,
‘Twas surprising how fast they could stride,
And poor little Aggie, the one at the back…
Had to run till she very near died.

They were walking one Sunday from Blackpool to Crewe,
They’d started at break of the day,
Joe followed behind with a bagful of buns
In case they got hungry on t’way.

They travelled along at a rattling good pace
Over moorland and valley and plain,
And poor little Aggie the one at the back
Her trunk fairly creaked with the strain.

They came to a place where the railway crossed road,
An ungated crossing it were,
And they wasn’t to know as the express was due
At the moment that they landed there.

They was half way across when Joe saw the express-
It came tearing along up the track-
He tried hard to stop, but it wasn’t much good,
For an elephant never turns back.

He saw if he didn’t do something at once
The train looked like spoiling his troupe,
So he ran on ahead and he waggled tho buns
To show them they’d best hurry up

When they caught sight of buns they all started to run,
And they soon got across at this gait,
Except poor little Aggie-the one at the back,
She were one second too late.

The express came dashing along at full speed,
And caught her end on, fair and square
She bounced off the buffers, turned head over heels,
And lay with her legs in the air.

Joe thought she were dead when he saw her lyin’ there,
With the back of her head on the line
He knelt by her side, put his ear to her chest,
And told her to say ” ninety-nine.”

She waggled her tail and she twiggled her trunk ;
To show him as she were alive;
She hadn’t the strength for to say “ninety-nine,”
She just managed a weak “eighty-five.”

When driver of th’ engine got down from his cab
Joe said “Here’s a nice howdedo,
To see fifteen elephants ruined for life
By a clumsy great driver like you.”

Said the driver, “There’s no need to mak’ all this fuss,
There’s only one hit as I’ve seen.”
Joe said, “Aye, that’s right, but they held on so tight
You’ve pulled back end off t’ other fourteen.”

Joe still walks around with his elephant troupe,
He got them patched up at the vet’s,
But Aggie won’t walk at the back any more,
‘Cos an elephant never forgets

Marriott Edgar

Marriott Edgar
Born: 5 October 1880, Kirkcudbright, Scotland
Nationality: English
Died: 5 May 1951, Battle, East Sussex, England

Edgar was a poet, scriptwriter, and comedian. He is best known for the sixteen monologues written for Stanley Holloway, including the ‘Albert’ series.

Nuova Stazione Centrale di Milano by Antonio Sant’Elia

Nuova Stazione Centrale di Milano by Antonio Sant’Elia

Nuova Stazione Centrale di Milano
1912
Futurism

Sant’Elia collaborated with architect Arrigo Cantoni in a 1912 competition to design the façade of Milan’s New Central Station building. Crowned by a central dome with two smaller domes accentuating the ends of the structure. The majority of the building is lined with rectangular grids of windows and tall pillars and sculptural decoration drawing the eye towards the central dome. Large curved doorways across the design allows for the flow of people entering and exiting the building.

Antonio Sant’Elia

Antonio Sant’Elia
Futurism
Born: 30 April 1888, Lombardy, Italy
Nationality: Italian
Died: 10 October 1916, Gorizia, Italy

Sant’Elia was an architect and a key member of the Futurist movement in architecture. However, as he left behind uncompleted works of architecture he is remembered for his bold sketches and influence on modern architecture.

Carpe Diem by Maurice Jarre

Maurice Jarre

Carpe Diem
1996
Film and TV

Maurice Jarre
Film and TV
Born: 13 September 1924, Lyon, France
Nationality: French
Died: 28 March 2009, California, USA

Jarre was a composer and conductor best known for his film scores, including Lawrence of Arabia and A Passage to India. Jarre received nine nominations for the Academy Awards, winning Best Original Score for Lawrence of Arabia in 1962, Doctor Zhivago in 1965 and A Passage to India in 1984. He is also the father of Jean-Michel Jarre

Weekly Prompts Wednesday Challenge – Saw

Inspired by and written for Weekly Prompts Wednesday Challenge – thank you, GC and Sue

Every year I meet up with one of my friends for a day out doing something totally bonkers. In 2010 it was Saw at Thorpe Park. The rules are simple, each year we take it in turns to choose an activity; it has to be out of the safety box and preferably totally insane. We have jumped out of planes, bungee jumped, and many other ‘you must be out of your tiny minds’ stuff. It was her year to choose what we did, she chose this and I actually hate rollercoasters, I am terrified of them so this was a real challenge. We did it, we didn’t die. Here goes…

The Scream by Edvard Munch, 1893. Multimedia on cardboard. National Gallery and Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway

Saw
Form: Paulo Comitatu Sonnet

The queues were so long that day
And we stood gulping fear
The screams all we could hear
Our dread hidden in cheer
The queue moved and its all one way
Committed to the ride
Waiting, no place to hide
Such fear, I think I cried
Our turn, darkness making us stay
A crack; a closing bolt
A power surging volt
We both felt the sharp jolt
Into the light and we are climbing high
My thoughts, ‘this is it we’re going to die!’

©JezzieGFarmer2022

Sylvan Sunset

A Garret Poet

Sylvan Sunset
Form: Triversen

Amid silhouette trees she stands,
Unseen and silent is her breath
While watching the sun go down.

Reflected rainbow skies recall
The ancient sylvan dream
While watching the sun go done.

In the stillness of twilight
The forest folk whisper their magic
While watching the sun go down.

The leaves answer on a breeze
Sharing their secrets of the night
While watching the sun go down.

And in the forest nymphs are walking
Hand in hand quietly talking
While watching the sun go down.

Beside the glistening waters
They sit beneath the willowy fronds
While watching the sun go down

©JezzieGFarmer2011

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