Has Dinosaur Poetry Become Extinct?

Discussion in 'Tall Tales & Fabrications' started by Joe Riley, Jan 3, 2021.

  1. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    The Age of Dinosaurs
    By James Scruton
    There are, of course, theories
    about the wide-eyed, drop-jawed
    fascination children have for them,
    about how, before he's learned
    his own phone number or address,
    a five-year-old can carry
    like a few small stones
    the Latin tonnage of those names,
    the prefixes and preferences
    for leaf or meat.

    My son recites the syllables
    I stumble over now,
    sets up figures as I did
    years ago in his prehistory.
    Here is the green ski slope
    of a brontosaur's back,
    there a triceratops in full
    gladiator gear. From the arm
    of a chair a pterodactyl
    surveys the dark primeval carpet.

    Each has disappeared from time
    to time, excavated finally
    from beneath a cabinet
    or the sofa cushions, only
    to be buried again among its kind
    in the deep toy chest,
    the closed lid snug as earth.
    The next time they're brought out
    to roam the living room
    another bone's been found

    somewhere, a tooth or fragment
    of an eggshell dusted off,
    brushing away some long-held notion
    about their life-span
    or intelligence, warm blood
    or cold. On the floor
    they face off as if debating
    the latest find, what part
    of which one of them
    has been discovered this time.

    Or else they stand abreast
    in one long row, side
    by scaly side, waiting to fall
    like dominoes, my son's
    tossed tennis ball a neon yellow
    asteroid, his shadow a dark cloud
    when he stands, his fervor for them
    cooling so slowly he can't feel it—
    the speed of glaciers, maybe,
    how one age slides into the next.
     
    #61
  2. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    [​IMG]
     
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  3. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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  4. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Supreme Member
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    T-Rex Boxing
    by Mike Marshall

    In the jungle, the
    Prehistoric jungle, the
    Rexes box tonight

    [​IMG]
     
    #64
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  5. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    "I coulda been a contender!"
    [​IMG]
     
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  6. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Discover Prehistoric Charm with Short Poems About Dinosaurs
    [​IMG]

    "Dinosaurs, meaning “terrible lizards,” were a diverse group of reptiles that roamed the Earth millions of years ago. These prehistoric creatures have captured the imagination of people for centuries, and have been the subject of various poems and works of literature. From fearsome predators like Tyrannosaurus Rex to gentle giants like Brachiosaurus, dinosaurs continue to fascinate us with their size, strength, and mystery."

    1. Ancient Giants
    In eras past where giants trod,
    Majestic dinosaurs, unflawed.
    Their mighty roars once filled the air,
    In ancient times, both raw and fair.



    33 Short Poems About Dinosaurs
     
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  7. Mary Stetler

    Mary Stetler Veteran Member
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    Ya know? Just yesterday I was wondering, Has Dinosaur poetry gone extinct?
     
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  8. John Brunner

    John Brunner Senior Staff
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    Killing time 'til the nettle comes back?
     
    #68
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  9. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    “In days of old
    When nights were cold
    And school days were unknown
    The mildest roar of a dinosaur
    Would chill you to the bone!”

    [​IMG]

    “Triceratops is the tops.
    As when it comes to eating,
    he never stops!”
     
    #69
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  10. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Pete
    (An ode to my Pet dinosauris, in the Milpleistocene Era.)

    In thinking over the numerous incarnations of an
    Eventful, not to say long, existence, I pick upon
    The fact brought out in the following stanzas as
    Being the saddest memory with which I must contend.
    That I explain it in meter is my misfortune, not my fault.

    In Era Milpleistocene
    I owned a dinosaurus tame
    But ages gone, he passed away
    Now life without him's not the same

    I've owned a dog, I've tried a pig
    A dik-dik's sported 'bout my feet
    But no pet ere will take the place
    Of my own dinosaurus, Pete

    I called him Pete, for daily he’d
    Devour of oak trees quite a bunch,
    Then snuggling close beside me’d purr,
    “Oh, master, please rePete that lunch.”

    And I, an embryonic man,
    Was garbed in hirsute whiskers and…
    My costume elsewhere was quite vague,
    Unless it were a smile so bland.

    My life it was a simple thing
    I scarcely ever ventured out
    Without my dinosaur to keep
    Me from an ichthyosaur's snout

    We’d oft indulge in playful sport,
    I’d roll huge boulders on his head,
    And when in glee he’d turn him o’er,
    I’d beat his tummy to a shred.

    My feet they were prehensile then
    with them I'd gaily climb a tree
    Until from far above my Pete
    I'd hurl strange mouthings down at he

    Our atmosphere, volcanic gas,
    Beside which Bryan’s speeches loose,
    Emasculated, quite appear
    Like merest unfermented juice

    Ah! Evolution, though so great,
    Thou’st brought me sorrow, quite terrific,
    By taking from me my own pet,
    Of ages paleontolithic.

    I sit me in my study now
    My incarnations pass before
    In none was I so happy quite
    As with my Pete, my dinosaur.

    Spencer B. P. Bull
     
    #70
  11. Mary Stetler

    Mary Stetler Veteran Member
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    Brilliant, yet sad.:oops:
     
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  12. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Speaking of Dinosaurs, we now have a new, safer server! @Ken Anderson Thanks!:)

    [​IMG]
     
    #72
  13. Mary Stetler

    Mary Stetler Veteran Member
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    Speaking of dinosaurs, my daughter swears one of my chickens is a velociraptor, Black plumage, red eyes, yellow claws, thick legs--if it were 6 feet tall, I definitely would hide.
     
    #73
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