At the Tartan Bonnet
next to the Smithy’s stall,
a picture labelled monster
is hanging on the wall.
The photograph is fuzzy,
looks like a bunch of tyres,
held to a piece of deadwood
by nails and string, or wires.
The locals say that tourists
are gullible, rich fools,
that no sign has been noted
by scientific tools.
The view over the water
is really rather good;
another compensation
is finest ale and food.
But of a Friday evening,
a face at the back door;
she sups her twenty gallons
and swims away once more.
Comments
Lovely.
Lovely. It ignites a form of imagination.
Well thank you sir
Such ignition is what I think poetry is all about, the connection between writer and reader (not that this is limited to poetry alone, good prose will do the same thing.
Lol, I enjoyed this very much
Lol, I enjoyed this very much. Jx
Thank you
I can ask no more.
enjoyed
Lol - nothing more to say, except she will probably send the Tartan Bonnet broke with all she drinks - I can only presume she hasn't got a job to support her habit ?? (or if she has I'd love to know what)
Love judy
xxx
What can I say?
A drouth is a drouth, (pronounced drooth here in Scotland).
I loved this one...made me
I loved this one...made me chuckle
you chuckled
so did I as the idea of the poem crystallised
PS: I do wish the inbuilt spell checker would not keep flagging up my British English spelling.