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Staying Dark
I pumped a plumber’s helper (lovely name)
upon my bathroom’s stagnant shower drain.
Two massive, stringy clogs belched up
both puma-black - though strange to say
when dried out in the bin they stayed
quite dark. That must be hair
from years ago: I’m now quite gray
with little left to shed. No lesson here.
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I had to read the first line a couple of times since in our vernacular, pumping a plumber's helper would mean getting exceedingly friendly with the tradesman's apprentice...
The black blobs do conjure up such an appetising image. Hair, once jettisoned from its bodily roots, is really a most unattractive thing -- but I do hope you manage to retain your dignified gre(a)y for as long as it takes for you to at least knit yourself a bonnet.
On a critical level (because I feel compelled to mention), this works well as a metaphor for the departure of youth. All those years down the drain, and the surface is stagnant. Cheery thoughts all round.
It could be worse
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(10-10-2016, 10:56 AM)Leanne Wrote: I had to read the first line a couple of times since in our vernacular, pumping a plumber's helper would mean getting exceedingly friendly with the tradesman's apprentice...
The black blobs do conjure up such an appetising image. Hair, once jettisoned from its bodily roots, is really a most unattractive thing -- but I do hope you manage to retain your dignified gre(a)y for as long as it takes for you to at least knit yourself a bonnet.
On a critical level (because I feel compelled to mention), this works well as a metaphor for the departure of youth. All those years down the drain, and the surface is stagnant. Cheery thoughts all round.
I believe Brit. Eng. for the item is "plumber's friend," same problem in other vernaculars and a syllable short to boot. In the States it goes by "toilet plunger," example of Am. Eng. being more graphic as is often not the case.
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(10-10-2016, 10:56 AM)Leanne Wrote: I had to read the first line a couple of times since in our vernacular, pumping a plumber's helper would mean getting exceedingly friendly with the tradesman's apprentice...
Amen to that
That's how I read it too...but it didn't sound like duke's brand of humour at all...
~ I think I just quoted myself - Achebe
just mercedes
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I could have sworn I read 'plunged' in your poem first time through.
The clumps of loss, a universal theme. A different way to measure time.
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Ooh, lovely! But yes, if you had to print it in America (or here, since we learned English from them Thomasites), you'd have to translate plumber's helper to toilet plunger --- but ooh, same meter! So perhaps you could spoiler in an American version, if you thought so necessary.