Continuing from the posts of January 16, January 18, January 20, January 22, January 24, and January 27. You might note that there are now more than 200 anagrams in this collection. Who would have guessed?
A blogsite offering entertaining oddities since January 2020 at the rate of 30x/month. There are now over seventeen hundred posts in these four years. Images -- poetic (including song-lyrics), photographic, and computer-simulated -- are drawn from daily life as well as from poems and wordplay grouped by topic on our parent blog "Edifying Nonsense". The poetry displayed is all original (as are the song-lyrics), although portions evolved through rigorous editing on a collaborative website.
July 4, 2021
JUL 4, anagram swarm: 'ELECTION FRAUD' #4
July 3, 2021
JUl 3, sleek Greek prefixes: HYPER- and HYPO-
July 2, 2021
JUL 2, Canadiana: Eastern Canadian real towns
July 1, 2021
JUL 1, Canadiana: Canadian moose
Authors' Note: This verse was inspired by a character in a verse by Chris J. Strolin who railed against the use of the incorrect term 'Canadian goose'.
In fact, when Bruce was insightfully contemplating the introduction of moose into suitable environment in Newfoundland (NEW-found-land), the island was a separate British colony. As railway building had recently opened the island's interior, it was hoped that hunters would be attracted in search of a species in decline in the US and parts of Canada.In 1904, four eastern moose from New Brunswick (that subspecies is known as Alces alces americana) had been set loose on the island. Ultimately Newfoundland, including its burgeoning population of moose, joined the Canadian confederation in 1949.
The rest is history, eh? Newfoundland now (2023) has the densest population of moose in North America, accounting for 150,000 of the continent's million remaining large ungulates.
You can review poems, pictures and diverse nonsense related to Canada on the post "Canadiana" on our full-service blog "Edifying Nonsense".
June 30, 2021
JUN 30, numbers and counting -- zero
JUN 30, numbers and counting : Zero (0)
June 29, 2021
June 28, 2021
JUN 28, classic palindrome: 'sex at noon taxes'
You can review a collection of illustrated verses on this topic by proceeding to 'Reversing Verse: Limericks About Classic Palindromes' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'.
June 27, 2021
JUN 27, sleek Greek prefixes: CHIRO-
Clicking HERE will introduce you to our entire collection of verses about the Greek prefixes!
June 26, 2021
JUN 26, mammalian wildlife: the concupiscent rabbit
You can review the whole collection of illustrated verses about mammals (both domestic and exotic) by checking out the more extensive post on our full-service blog "Edifying Nonsense". Click HERE !
June 25, 2021
JUN 25, wordplay maps: new world palindromes (#47,#48)
June 24, 2021
JUN 24, photo-collage: unusual sightings, Muskoka waterfowl
June 23, 2021
JUN 23, funny bones: the prosthetic hipster
June 22, 2021
JUN 22, humorists' scurrilous talk: 'giving a shit'
June 21, 2021
JUN 21, reptiles: broad-headed skinks
another individual, spotted at Caw Caw Plantation |
June 20, 2021
JUN 20, singable satire: the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band sings about canoeing, "LOST COUNTRY"
Young canoeist in the bow, Sunset on Bass Lake, Ontario |
SONG-LYRIC UNDERPINNINGS: On our song-blog you can find an earlier concoction entitled "Canoeing Lesson (Canoe, Canoe, Canoe, Canoe, Canoe)", based on the original song "I Do, etc." by ABBA, 1975. This earlier song also builds on Berton's concept of the relevance of canoeing to Canadian identity.
As is usually the case with song-lyrics, we have simultaneously provided suggested chords for ukulele, guitar or whatever-stringed-instruments for the parody and for the original lyrics on our music-buff site "SILLY SONGS and SATIRE". To access ukulele chord-charts to help you accompany "Lost Country" on your favorite instrument, click HERE.
"LOST COUNTRY" (Canadian Canoeing Nostalgia)
(to the tune of "Lost River" by M. M. Murphey)
A Canadian's someone who
CHORUS: Oh, lost country, now I'm paddlin' back
Now at heart our Rose did hate
Tryin' to make the boat go straight.
Paddlin' lessons were a battle
'Til some tricks she learned (don't tattle!)
In the stern she could discern
That instructors might well yearn
To teach Trudeau's stroke, fiddle-faddle
While she straddled their paddle.
Repeat CHORUS
June 18, 2021
JUN 18, birdlore: red-winged blackbirds
June 17, 2021
JUN 17, palinku (poetic novelty): ponderings
In this post, we continue with a novel form of poetic wordplay. Inspired by Japanese haiku poetry, and by European-language attempts to convey its essence ina cross-cultural context, this new form is used for a terse verse with a total of 17 syllables displayed on three lines. Unlike its 'classic Japanese' analogue, this concoction does not mandate the precise distribution of the syllables among the three lines, but does stipulate that each word in the poem be included in a palindromic phrase or sentence in English (i.e. one that can be read either forwards or backwards).
To help the reader discern the origin of the lyrics, each palindrome (generally occupying one of the three lines of the poem) has been color-coded.
June 16, 2021
JUN 16, amphibians: American toad
June 15, 2021
JUN 15, patients and maladies: eye discharge
June 14, 2021
JUN 14, poetic Panama palindrome parody: Sir, .. a Paris
You can review the whole collection of our illustrated verses on this topic by proceeding to 'Reversing Verse: Panama palindrome parodies' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'.