Showing posts with label fun poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fun poems. Show all posts

Friday, November 10, 2023

The Diabolical Drama of Darius (With Pictures) #8Sunday

 


Young Darius went on a date


With a succubus seeking a mate.

Image by John Hain from Pixabay

In a twist of the plot


He thought her brother was hot.

"Curses! Foiled again!"

With the lady, he did not consummate.

notes

This poem can be blamed on this prompt.


Write a character poem, they said.

It will be fun, they said.

Fun for me, sure. Maybe not for the people reading it.

Let me tell you about the poem.

One of the three stories I'm working on for this year's NaNoHellMo project is set on New Year's Eve 1999. The protagonist is a young man who has a history of dating the sort of gal who works at places with names like The Classy Cabaret. Hint: the name is the only thing that's classy about this cabaret. Darius decides he needs to change his ways in the new millennium, so he finds a nice young woman on a dating website. 

Darius makes two discoveries during the course of the evening.

First, his date, Briana, is a succubus.

Second, he's more attracted to her incubus brother Brian.

Apparently, this isn't an uncommon occurrence as the twins' mother, Lilith, admonishes Brian to stop stealing his sister's playthings. 

I can't share any snippets from the story because:

1) It's still in the train wreck stage.

2) I'm going to submit it for potential inclusion in the Digital Love anthology from Dragon Soul Press. If they don't want it, I'll self-publish it for Valentine's Day 2024. 

If you'd like to jump in the game and submit one of your stories to Dragon Soul Press, just follow the handy link. You'll need to be quick because the deadline is November 30. They are looking for stories between 3000 and 20,000 words.


This is a Lil DeVille story, so it doesn't hold back on the heat. 

Subscribe to Lil's newsletter here.




Most of the images used in this post were generated using QuickWrite.


Yes, QuickWrite is an AI.

No, I don't use it to write my stories.

I use it to do things like create the image in this post. I also use it to create filler scenes so I can move along in a story because it drives my obsessive ADHD brain loopy to just write "Put scene here." Then I come back and rewrite the filler scene. 

I've found QuickWrite to be a useful tool. Monthly access is $49.99. Lifetime access is $497. You can check it out here.














Saturday, April 29, 2023

Poetry Prompts and Inspiration Day 29 April PAD Challenge and NaPoWriMo

 


Serendipity! Owls and meat, all in one picture!


Today's April PAD Challenge prompt asks participants to write a sight poem.


Today's NaPoWriMo prompt asks participants to start by reading Alberto Rios’s poem “Perfect for Any Occasion.” 


Next, write your own two-part poem that focuses on food. At some point in the poem, describe the food as if it were a person. Give the food/meal at least one line of spoken dialogue.

My poem focused on the age-old "I tried to change my carnivorous ways" conundrum. The food does "speak," but I didn't describe it as if it were a person. I was going for carnivorous, not cannibalistic. 

I'm keeping it brief today as I need to hop on the Editing Express Elevator to Hell.

Going down!

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~


Hangry Wyrm
Free use image by Clkr Free Vector Images

"I don't like it when my food talks to me, Ornery. How about you?"


Ornery Owl (in Pit Master Mode)
Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors

"I prefer food that doesn't talk back myself, Hangry."



Tuesday, September 6, 2022

30 Days of Haiga 2022: Your Own Rainbow

 

text

no clouds in the sky

although there are no rainbows

we can make our own


notes

I created the Haiga using Pixlr.com and a free use image by Prawny on Pixabay.

https://pixabay.com/illustrations/dinosaur-tyrannosaurus-beast-spikes-5995333/

I also used the Tanka Tuesday prompt.

https://wordcraftpoetry.com/2022/09/06/tankatuesday-weekly-poetry-challenge-no-288-tastetherainbow-color-poetry/

You are welcome to use the Haiga but please credit Cara Hartley/Ornery Owl and provide a link back to this blog.

This is not the best Haiku I ever wrote. It will never be used an example of how to write a perfect Haiku. It may, in fact, be used as an example of how NOT to write a Haiku. However, even though it is not one of my better Haiku, it is one of my favorites. 

When I saw the cute monster while looking for pictures of rainbows, I knew he needed to be the star of my Haiga. He may not be the most monsterly monster. He certainly isn't scary. Still, I think he's one of the best monsters I've ever seen. He makes me smile and I hope he will bring a smile to anyone who sees him.

Love,

Ornery Owl


Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors


Thursday, November 19, 2020

Seagull Limerick

 

Free use image by Lars Nissen on Pixabay

the seagull is a baffling bird
that should not be taken at its word
it does not need to be
anywhere near the sea
even inland its squawks can be heard

~cie~


Today's prompt was to write a sea creature poem, so I got cheeky with it.

This poem was posted to these places:





The Icky, Sticky, Nit-Picky Legalese If You Please (Or Don't Please)



Creative Commons License


This work is the intellectual property of Naughty Netherworld Press/Poetry of the Netherworld.

Reblogging is acceptable on platforms that allow it. LBRY’s reblog function is called repost, which makes things confusing since reposting is considered a no-no on most platforms. It’s fine to share the post using the repost function on LBRY. It is not okay to copy-paste the material into a new post.

Sharing a link to the post is acceptable.

Quoting portions of the post for educational or review purposes is acceptable if proper credit is given.

Want more cheeky limericks?
Get 'em here!

Share my mood on LBRY.



LBRY is a decentralized content marketplace. I price the PDF versions of my work at approximately half of the Kindle price because I receive the entire amount rather than a royalty percentage.

Most of my work is free. A tip as small as 5 LBC (approximately $0.15) really helps, and it all goes to me.

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Friday, December 13, 2019

The Gothic Greek Giant: An Evocative Espinela

Image by André Santana from Pixabay
I don't know if he's very Gothic, but he is large and greenish.

I saw the Gothic Greek Giant
taking giant strides cool and slow
I don't know where he wants to go
laid back, but never compliant

although he is not defiant
the giant will never conform
he doesn't need to be the norm
he just wants to do his own thing
to paint pictures or sometimes sing
or just hang out and watch a storm

~Cie~



Thursday, November 14, 2019

November PAD Chapbook Challenge 2019: Day 5: Antonymic Bomb



adored abhorred
beloved bedeviled
cherished castoff
delightful devil
embraceable evil
fortunate fiend
great goblin
honored hated
idolized ignored
joyful jerk
kind killer
lovely leech
meticulous mess
nice neer-do-well
open obstruction
pleasant prat
quiet quarrel
righteous rogue
sweet scallawag
tidy tawdry
unforgettable understrapper
vital vampire
wholesome wagtail
xylographing xenomorphs
yeomanly yobbos
zesty zombies

~Cie~

Notes:
Today's prompt for the November PAD Chapbook Challenge was to write a pleasure and/or displeasure poem. So I tapped out this cheeky little number.


Wednesday, August 21, 2019

WEP Challenge August 2019: Red Wheelbarrow

Image by Gordon Johnson from Pixabay
The story's protagonist, Ed, is a little batty

Before we begin:
This is the story of Ed and his red wheelbarrow. The story is composed of a series of limericks about a vampire named Ed and his love for gardening late at night with his red wheelbarrow.

Here is what I want in a critique.

I want to know about technical and formatting issues and the sorts of things which would improve the story's readability.


Here is what I do not want in a critique.

"I don't like limericks or poems. I don't like silly stories. I don't like stories about vampires with red wheelbarrows."

If you hate vampires, red wheelbarrows, limericks, poems, or silliness, do us both a favor and don't read this story. I don't want you reading stuff you don't like. You aren't doing either of us any favors. If that's what you're here to say, please move on down the line to the next story on the list. 

If you're still here, I assume you want to read 1000 words about Ed and his red wheelbarrow. So, here you go.

There was a vampire named Ed
Who had a house with a garden and shed
He planted flowers at night
Underneath the moonlight
Hauling dirt in his wheelbarrow so red

Everyone thought Ed was up to no good
Hauling dirt and stakes made of wood
What could he be doing
Besides slaying and slewing
And not sleeping when folks thought he should

Ed planted colorful posies
Pansies, daisies, and rosies
He planted fruit trees
And big pink peonies
To delight every passerby's nosies

Halloween was Ed's favorite day
He put dried flowers in a bouquet
He picked pumpkins and squashes
And went out in his galoshes
To spruce up the yard the right way

Ed's house was festive and spooky
He was harmless, though a bit kooky
But everyone was afraid
So away they all stayed
Leaving Ed feeling lonesome and ooky

The next day, Ed found a letter
He hoped it would make him feel better
But the letter was mean
Called him a blood-sucking fiend
As Ed read, his cheeks became wetter

Ed knew he had to explain
He didn't eat people or even their brains
His blood came in sealed bags
Labeled neatly with tags
From biting he always abstained

So, one day in the middle of winter
Ed invited the neighbors to dinner
He served a nice stew
And apple pie too
As a chef, Ed was no beginner

Ed printed booklets to tell his story
He was a vampire but not so gory
He presented no danger
To friend or to stranger
And he didn't go hunting for quarry

I must drink blood, it is true
But no harm will come to you
I must garden at night
When the moonlight is right
I can't be out when it's sunny and blue

I drink blood which has been donated
Or proper payment negotiated
I don't sleep in a coffin
At least not very often
I'm friendly if a bit understated

I haul dirt in my wheelbarrow red
To make a good flowerbed
I mow my lawn in the dark
Sometimes walk to the park
I promise you've nothing to dread

I like to cook cakes and pies
When night falls and the moon starts to rise
But sometimes it gets lonely
Cooking for myself only
I'd love to share my food with you guys

A few centuries ago, it would seem
Ed was a chef for a queen
He tended her gardens
And signed all her pardons
Tucked her in and wished her sweet dreams

While visiting a strange land
Ed was attacked by a vampire man
Who drank up Ed's blood
And left him in the mud
Out in the barren wasteland

Ed bit the vampire while fighting
On that night so terribly frightening
Ed didn't die
And so, by the by
He awoke to a sharp crack of lightning

Ed knew he'd become a vampire
And the sun would make him catch fire
He found an old mausoleum
Where no-one could see him
In the daytime, he would there retire

At night, Ed went out and drank blood
But didn't drain folks or leave them in the mud
He couldn't go home
He felt sad and alone
His life had become quite a dud

Ed moved from town to town
Slept in any mausoleum he found
He slept in ship cargo holds
And castle strongholds
He traveled the globe all around

In modern times, Ed settled down
He was tired of traveling around
He didn't need to hypnotize
Unlucky girls and guys
When it was time to chow down

Ed found a house where he could stay
And get his blood the modern way
He bought his wheelbarrow red
And flour to make bread
And thought that things would be okay

If you're nervous I understand, you see
Said the booklet Ed passed out for free
I'm glad you've come by
Please have a slice of pie
And maybe a nice cup of tea

Folks soon discovered Ed was quite nice
His house smelled of sugar and spice
He was a genial host
To both the living and ghosts
And his pie had each guest enticed

Then there came a knock at the door
A voice said, "have you room for one more?"
It was a voice Ed had known
In his long-ago home
He almost fell in a faint on the floor

"My Queen, how can you be alive?"
Ed inquired his eyes wide with surprise
The Queen shook her head
"Not alive, I'm undead.
I wonder, will you invite me inside?"

Ed asked the Queen to come in right away
She smiled as she stood in the foyer
"I knew you wouldn't leave me alone
So, when you didn't come home
I went looking for you the next day."

The Queen said she met a vampire
Who drank her blood and threw her into the briar
But she bit him back
While he made his attack
When day came, she hid in the church with the spire

"I searched for you for year upon year,"
The Queen said, her eyes filled with tears
"It was bad luck, I think,"
Ed said, and gave her a drink
"For with you, I can never feel fear."

"Ed, you were a wonderful chef,
And as a gardener, you were the best
But I must tell you the truth
From the time of my youth
I loved you and none of the rest."

Ed married the Queen Christmas night
And everything was all right
Then when spring began
According to plan
Their garden was a glorious sight

There was a vampire named Ed
Who had a wheelbarrow painted bright red
He used to be lonely
But he has his one and only
And his neighbors think he bakes the best bread

Ed and the Queen now have a pet crow
And they adopted a werewolf, you know
Instead of howling at the moon
He sings a cool tune
And dogs follow him wherever he goes

 With love from Ed, the Queen, and their family





Friday, July 19, 2019

Carpe Diem Summer Challenge 2019: Ice Cold Beer (With Grover and Cactus Clem)

Image Source

When the contractors
Make the old place livable
We are moving in
My son will brew his own beer
We will enjoy with new friends

~Cie~



Notes:
The stars are finally right and the contractors are going to be able to start working to make the Grover Hotel ready for our move! 


My son is going to help the excavator pull down this rickety extension which a previous occupant erected on the property. It has no real support, and the excavator needs it out of the way to be able to expose the foundation for the structural engineer.
Once we are able to get settled in, among other projects such as growing both outdoor plants and indoor salad greens using hydroponics, my son wants to start brewing his own beer. Fortunately, we already have a couple of volunteer taste testers!



Ghost Town Grover was a miner during the Colorado Gold Rush. He was born in a covered wagon on the Oregon Trail on the fourth of July, 1840. He settled in the Grover Hotel in 1910. One night while he was out exploring the prairie grasslands with his shovel, inspired by a bolt of White Lightnin' to start a new gold rush, Grover was sadly mowed down by a train as he stood on the tracks gawping in awe at...


Nobody knows exactly where Cactus Clem came from or just what he is aside from, in Clem's own words "a cactus man, or maybe a man cactus," but the words "mad scientist" have been tossed about regarding his origins.

Image by ErikaWittlieb from Pixabay
A mural featuring Dr. Schitz graces the Research Laboratory at Hell's Pass Hospital and Research Center on the outskirts of Nightmare Heights

Although he was three sheets to the wind on the night in question, Grover distinctly recalls hearing "what I thought was a train with engine trouble," and then seeing "a blue box-lookin' thing set down next to the track, and three fellas got out. One of 'em had on a white coat, one of 'em had on the craziest-lookin' getup I ever seen, and I couldn't quite see the other one in the shadows."


The Story of Cactus Clem
by
Ghost Town Grover
So there I was, standin' there starin' at the weirdest sight I ever did see and swearin' off the White Lightnin' for good. The feller in the crazy clothes was English or somethin', and he said: 'are you sure it's all right to leave your experiment here, Dr. Schitz?'"
The feller in the white coat said: "ja, ja, it is desert and he is cactus. Not to vorry." This feller sounded a lot like my old friend Slim Svensson from back in the gold rush days, but it wasn't him. Slim wasn't no scientist, though he sure did like to blow things up!
So then them two fellers went back in the blue box and I heard that weird noise again and the box disappeared. The third feller was standin' there across the track, and he said: "Howdy, Partner! My name's Clem, and I'm real thirsty. Do y'all have anything fer a feller to drink?"
Well, I said: "c'mon back to the ole hotel with me an' I'll git you somethin'. I don't trust this here white lightnin'. It makes ya see weird things."
I started to cross the track, but then I got a load of Clem, and I stood there gawpin'. That was all the time it took fer a train to run right over me. When I come to, I was standin' on one side of the track and my body was layin' on the other. Clem was swiggin' down the last of the White Lightnin'. He looked at me and grinned.
"This stuff is purty good!" he said. "It really hit the spot!"
Well, I didn't have much to do fer a long time, 'cept haunt the ole hotel and hang around on the lone prairie with Cactus Clem. I learned that he was some kind of scientific experiment made by that nutty Dr. Schitz feller. Clem don't eat nothin', but he has to drink a lot. So I know he's gonna look forward to tastin' the homemade beer when the Ornery Old Lady and her son git moved into the Grover Hotel! Iffen y'all stop by sometime, you might be able to have yerself a beer too, and maybe play some cards an' recite some poetry!

Yer ole pal,
Ghost Town Grover


Monday, September 3, 2018

NaHaiWriMo 2018 #2: Creature from the Past



Images and verse copyright The Real Cie
Click to enlarge

Feel free to use and share my images with a credit to Cara Hartley or The Real Cie. A rose by any other name and all.

Prompt used:

Notes:
The word from hourly writing prompts was Trias, which relates to the Triassic period. I had taken this photo of (I believe) a prehistoric rhinoceros at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, so I did a little wordplay, using the word Juras in the final line. The finished product isn't very scientific, but it is pretty damn silly.
I'm honestly not sure what the technical name for this poem is. Haiku uses nature as its subject, and this skeleton is part of nature even though it currently resides in a museum. However, Haiku generally implies a Kigo, which is a word or phrase symbolizing the season of the poem. My first poem in this year's NaHaiWriMo is certainly a Haiku.
Senryu is described as being satiric or ironic and generally about human nature. This ancient beast may be natural, but it is not human.
Whatever this Haiku-like poem that isn't a Haiku is, it is quite ridiculous. We'll just call it Haibun and done.

~Cie~

Monday, April 30, 2018

Live Tiny, Die Never



The Tardigrade or water bear it is said
Can live in conditions that would kill others clean dead
It could go floating through space
Like dried-out old waste
And use a meteorite for its bed

~Cie~


http://www.napowrimo.net/day-thirty-4/

Thursday, October 19, 2017

OctPoWriMo 2017: Day 17: And The Dragon Chose...



And the dragon chose Cie
To briefly write his fairytale fantasy
Not realizing that she
Was not given to minimalism
When writing fiction
Or anything else either, really
When she handed him a 666-page manuscript
The poor dragon sighed
His fiery breath reducing
Her verbose prose to ash
Fortunately for Cie
She had the whole thing backed up on her Google drive
And scuttled off to print another copy
Reminding herself to bring back a bromide as well
To help the dragon
With his indigestion

~Cie~



Wednesday, October 4, 2017

30 Days of Haiga 2017: Day 21: Fruity and Nutty

Original Background:


Notes:
This Haiga was just plain fun and easy to create, and I do not apologize for its simplicity, silliness, or lack of a particularly meaningful message. I like it!

Thursday, September 7, 2017

30 Days of Haiga 2017: Day 3: Naming the Dog

Click to Enlarge


Notes:
The prompt was naming the dog
This was the first thing that came to mind
How could I resist creating something that was so much fun?
Fun and creating are two things that have been in short supply this year.

Friday, April 28, 2017

NaPoWriMo 2017: Day 28: All My X'es


During poetry challenges, X is a letter
Which I want to put in a shredder
It's difficult to find
X words to rhyme
And the problem never seems to get better

~Cie~

Who readily admitted defeat with today's NaPoWriMo prompt
I didn't even try


Monday, April 24, 2017

NaPoWriMo 2017: Day 24: Tripping Thru The Marginalia

All images found on this page.

Tripping Thru the Marginalia
With
The Real Cie and Blooming Psycho

"Come along, Bloomy," said Cie to her friend
"Let's have some fun till we reach the Marginalia's end."

"Sounds like a plan," said Ms. Psycho. "I'm there without fail."
"I hear that these monks are into hybrid cat snails."


"I see a wizard with a familiar of an unfamiliar race."
"I can't help but notice the balls on his face."

"This little gray fox looks terribly shy."
"Well, it's a good thing he has a shell so he can hide."

"Cat snails abound in marginalia here."
"This cat snail looks tough like it has not one single fear."


"Observe ye yon snail-monks who skate the rope tight."
"While escaping from snail-goats which give one a fright."

"The howling of dogs can be heard by the sea"
"The howling of dog-men is what frightens me."

"Did you see that clever dog playing the fiddle?"
"How he got up the tree is a puzzlesome riddle."


"I see yonder a bird-snail with long, stilt-like legs."
"She must bend down far to sit on her eggs."


"I must confess that I've read not one word of this book"
"This is because of the pictures at which we must look"


"Yet another cat-snail, this one looks quite grim"
'I'd not dare touch a hair of its chinny-chin-chin."


"Look here what I see, it's a forest of words"
"I believe in this forest there's not one normal-ish bird."


"Behold yonder fine cat-snail, she is so regal"
"A queen on her throne, feared by basset and beagle."


"Look ye up close at her marvelous sneer"
"Her red antennae and whiskers give me reason to fear."


"Look here at the cat-snail with octopus cat"
"I have not before seen a thing wondrous as that."


"A strange holy chimera holds up a stave"
"Regal is he, and surely no knave."


"Feast your eyes now upon the devil-dog-snail"
"It has foregone hind feet for a most admirable tail."


"I fear I cannot make head nor tail of this beast"
"Does it want to be friends, or does it wish us for its feast?"


"A goat-headed snail quoting philosophy"
"I hear not its words, but it still interests me."


"I fear we have wandered into a private marginalia space."
"Goat-snails giving rim jobs is not to my taste."


"Now, this is more like it--a cute cherub snail."
"I shall ask it if it may tell us a tale."


"This marginal snail-man looks quite pious to me."
"Then let us peacefully let him meditate prayerfully."


"The lair of the snail-deer is no cause for worry."
"Its countenance is pleasant and its ears are so furry."


"What have we here by the marginalia tree?"
"A troubadour playing for a horse-beast I see."


"To end with the marginalia sea-cow seems right."
"It's frightfully wrought but too cute to cause fright."

And now, my friends, we have ended at last
Pray, a round of applause for our most interesting cast!

The Real Cie
and
Blooming Psycho


Cross-posted to: