Simon Smythe
Simon Smythe
Oct 19, 2014

give n take

If you give them an inch
And they take a whole mile
Give of things squirlish
Unholy and vile

About This Poem

Last Few Words: squirlish had to go once I learned it had another meaning. there IS sometimes time for the ambiguous but perhaps not here in such a small blunt chunk of words belligerent.

Review Request Intensity: I want the raw truth, feel free to knock me on my back

Editing Stage: Editing - rough draft

About the Author

Region, Country: New Zealand, NZL

Favorite Poets: Leonard Cohen

More from this author

Comments

Barbara Writes

Short and to the point. Your rhyming is on point. I've looked up the word squirlish and haven't found a definition. Will you enlighten me?
Very tempting ideology. Esp. when ppl take your kindness and stomp on.
Welcome to Neopoet. Hope you find poetic happiness here.

Simon Smythe

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China Blue

is not in the dictionary ( try wikipedia you will find it there), it is a slang Barbara and in this case ruins the meaning of the poem( in my opinion)
which even though is very short could be something good , I suggest extending it

"having the qualities of a squirrel

Simon Smythe

nice research China Blue, the word squirly is southern New Zealand slang for upset guts and from there I got squirlish. I agree it doesn't work in light of it's actual meaning although considering nobody really knows I might get away with it. I did try expanding it when I first wrote it but found there was nothing more to say. thank you.
Simon
(the people are scratching)

Barbara Writes

To each his own writing style. As for squirlish, it's the first I've heard of this word. As for slang, many are using more and more slang theses days so i expect to see it in poetry more common.

Simon Smythe

Sguirlish is an NZ slang word describing a serious bout of bowel cramps.
"Aww Mum, I can't handle school today . . . I've got squirly guts."
I hope this helps - if nothing else it's onomatopoeic
- does it work?

lovedly

1325-75; Middle English squirel < Anglo-French escuirel (Old French escuireul) ≪ Vulgar Latin *scūrellus, *scūriolus, representing Latin sciurus (< Greek skíouros literally, shadow-tailed ( ski (á) shadow + -ouros, adj. derivative of ourá tail); apparently so called because the tail was large enough to provide shade for the rest of the animal) with diminutive suffixes -ellus, -olus

Related forms
squirrelish, squirrellike, adjective

Be happy Don't worry always remember
LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND now me

S

"squirrely" is a word I've heard applied to a nervous person.........stan

Ian.T

Ian.T

10 years 5 months ago

A Squirl, is
A flourish in writing from way back in the 1800's.
Not used much after 1900 so I suppose to be squirlish is to be adept in writing as if waving a quill at a piece of parchment lol
Hope this helps..
Your write had been edited before I read the item and is OK as is,
Yours Ian . T

lovedly

you are new
have u been inducted yet
ask your mentor to salvage you
you bet

squirl is like a squirrel's tail
have you observed one as yet
and so as I create new words
u might as well can
but once u have become
a self rated expert
o man
ask Stan