Thursday, October 30, 2025

The Good Old Days 681 by Angela Lansbury

 In the good old days, yes, the good old days!

Were there really any good old days?

Or was there only one, when I had fun?

When restaurants and hotels had someone who got things done?


When I was single, I stayed home alone

And wanted to find a husband

And I looked everywhere, in a city of millions

But I found none, not even one


In the good old days, yes, the good old days

We started schooldays with songs of praise

We didn't know that three religions were certain God was one

And another group of millions said many more, and one said none


In the good old days, when were the good old days?

The days when life was simple and I was young

Heaven was in the sky, everyone went there

There was no hell, no-one would die, nor tell a lie


In the good old days, my mother said

You did not know what others thought

You only knew what you were taught

Sundays the shops were closed, yet no-one was bored nor fraught


My mother told me when she was young

Before she saw the news, before the war

The War was world war two, the other one was world war one

Paper was thick and heavy, Churchill and the British won


We did not know that France, Canada and the USA

All thought that they had made the difference

And won in Europe, or in Asia, which celebrated on another day

We thought that Jesus was alive, born everywhere, since he died, only on December 25


After the good old days, everything changed

We learned the calendar was run by the sun

Or by the moon, one year everyone lost a year,

The year without a sun, then everyone was really glum


Christmas could be the 26th, January 5th or 6th,

 Jesus could be born another year, another day

Or never born at all, some thought that way

And other people believed in conspiracy


That nobody had landed on the moon

You did not need a band, just one singer to croon

You had real strawberries! Only in June,

Then enlightenment, one's personal middle ages, came too soon


Some thought that the whole world was a myth

A dream, others debated philosophy

And said they thought therefore they were

But they never thought of you and me


In the good old days, people thought the world was flat

(It's really round, but), some people still think that

In the good old days, monsters were below your bed

Monsters grew, like migraines, and nightmares, only inside your head


You believed all that was said, and didn't know

That all the people in the history books told lies, and were dead

And most people fondly quoted never said 

What you thought (and everyone said) that they had said


The good old days, yes, the good old days

The days when innocent little children sang songs of praise

Children did not throw stones, and no-one lived alone

Then nobody had strikes, and everyone had bikes


Maybe the good old days will come again

When all our friends will be old men

And we'll talk about the good old days

Use computers, mobile phones, and watches to call our friends

And wonder how we coped, back then.

-ends-



Thursday, October 23, 2025

Dream Exhibition In Fancy Dress comical poem 680 by Angela Lansbury

 I had a dream about a scene

With booths from round the world

Where colourful clothes, masks, novelties

For free were flagged, unfurled


But most exciting of them all

Were sellers in fancy dress

And masks, like Trump, Madonna

Some wore more and some much less


The USA had dating booths

A bearded man of six foor four

Dressed up as a carrot

Said, 'You're the one I adore!'


I had so many offers

From weird, fun masked men for a date

I wondered would it really last

Which one might be my mate?


It was such a giggle

As I hopped from shop to shop

Til I hid in the toilet

And thought, this has to stop


Paired, dated in a restaurant

And that was really grand

But back in bed my date had

A lady in his left hand


I wasn't really bothered

I did not make him choose

He promised I was his great love

So I had nothing to lose


I was sorry when I woke

And found these scenes were a dream

My many men in funny, fancy clothes

Had not been what they seemed.

-ends-

I changed so long as I was chosen to He promised I was his great love.

I think this dream was inspired, after an evening of wine tasting, the wines free because all included in the price already paid. Then by looking at Indigo Moon patchwork clothes on ebay last thing at night. Also thinking about the ticket to the World Travel Market. Finally thinking about a Toastmasters Speech Contest where I was not a contestant therefore a performer or judge or audience member wooed by performing contestants voicing different characters wearing masks or hats or outfits.


Home Alone Without A Scone comical poem 679 by Angela Lansbury

 It's horrible to be home alone

When it's time for tea

And you don't have a scone

When you're in in a jam , wthout any jam

I gave a scream, I've finished the cream!


When you're alone, what to do about that?

I grabbed a pink jacket, black purse and white hat

I hurried down to the seven eleven

(In truth it was Tesco, which won't rhyme with heaven)


The man at the till gave a glum hello

And glum goodbye when I had to go

It's what you buy, not who you know

He's working, I should be happy at home

***

Then today it was tea for two

We had no scones, what to do?

What could we make? Not a pancake

We had pancakes yesterday, too


We found a crumpet

Too early to dump it

We know what to do to save

Heat it up in the microwave


By mistake we grabbed marmalade

Does anyone know why that doesn't go?

Maybe too sour when a crumpet is sweet

Hot crumpets with butter are great to eat



Add black currant jam

I lick my lips

It's on foodies' top ten list

With chicken and chips


The thought of food will banish sorrow

Think of what you'll eat tomrrow

If you can't, then think of today

If starving today, think of yesterday


When I die and come back

To say what I've seen

I'll talk about feasts of scones, jam and cream

Just like a cat with a smile at a dream..

-ends-


Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Homophones comical poem 678 by Angela Lansbury

 I phoned home with my homophones

Words which homo sapiens says the same

But spells differently, spellers hell

But great for teachers or you're into word games


Let us start with simple letter a

They English grey, USA gray

We pray we won't be anything's prey

But just be gay with friends who are gay


Hamlet said to be or not to be

He was not thinking of a bee

When we went out to have a wee wee

Some say pee, which sounds like pea


You need to see letter c at sea

C turns to s when you add e

I must confess I'm in distress

The English practise practice, a mess in the mess


The letter d appears in dye

You dye cloth black when soneone dies

We all say aye when we agree

And it looks good in our eyes


F and ph both sound the same

Steve, Stefan or Stephen is his name

After the feast of Stephen

Out with Eve on xmas Eve, even-ing


My friend Jorge like gorgeous George 

They gorge food on the gorge

The hair or the heir is in the air

Ere we're here on the weir.

-ends-

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There's the flee that flew

When I had the flu

The burnt hankies flew up the flue

There are two of them too

Yesterday was apple day comical poem 677 by Angela Lansbury on blogspot.com/

 


Yesterday was apple day

Apples today and yesterday

All October they're in the way

Falling on lawnmowers on the lawn.


Some on the tree, others fall down

And lie with bruised parts on the ground

The birds all like to peck around

We're last. We pick. Now its our turn


We chop the apples carefully

Make honeycomb, cut bad bits out

Eat gingerly bite small, full of doubt

The first bite goes to teeny worms


The apple staste a little sour

We used to use them after stewing

But they're sweet and brown after an hour

Which saves the cooking or chewing


We hate to throw apples away

Take bags to collect them every day

In autumn it's all work no play

When every day is apple day.


Why does an apple need a day?

Is the only thing my man will say.

The shops all like to make a day

For seasonal goods so customers pay.


So yesterday was apple day

We missed it, but we've apples today

This week, all days are apple day

For home-grown apples, hurray!

-ends-

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Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Easy Spanish words comical poem 676 by Angela Lansbury



Spanish - English 

preferir - to prefer


English - Spanish

to prefer - preferir


Spanich is easy

Easy is facil

It's easy to order

If you want a meal


A gato is a cat

A villa is a house

If the cat is the house

There will not be a mouse.


Hola is hello

A sombrero is a hat

Adios is goodbye

How easy is that!

-ends-

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The World Hides On My Plate comical poem 675 by Angela Lansbury

It's time for lunch, what can we munch?

Pull out the tubs, wash hands, don plastic gloves

We chop up the greens, big leaves aren't what they seem

Heated bread with small holes, dead, revived sausage rolls


 The world's on my plate - it was worth the wait

Red, white, orange, green, life couldn't be better

Soft white cheese from where? No time to stare. Guess -

Greek, Turkey, Lebanese, Israel, Feta


Where did we begin? White palm hearts from a tin

What shall I grab? Dad chooses the pink crab

Spicy tomato soup, gloop, gloop, gloop, gloop

Glass of fine rose wine, well past its time


I left room for mushroom, not big brown mushooms

Sliced up, and stir-fried, the small, button mushrooms

Last, strong coffee, no chokkies, nor toffee

Turkish delight? We might have that tonight.


For dinner, choose something solid to eat

Not just chopped up mush, a big piece of meat

'Don't cook too much!' That's no cause for sorrow

Leftovers hide in loved lunch tomorrow.

-ends-


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