Dandelion Whine

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Fickle minds they have at fifteen
When even Lancelot du Lake
Can but trot swiftly in one ear
And out the proverbial other
Leaving nothing but a golden nugget
In his wake.

Swordplay holds little value
In the M-16 generation
How, indeed, can the graceful
Swish-clink of metal crossing metal
Compare to the super-sonic rat-a-tat-tat
Of a semi-automatic?

Passionate lips’ embraces
Hold no intrigue for the girl
Whose third base was stolen last night,
Only narrowly avoiding her boyfriend’s
Imminent slide into home
With a teasingly chastising no.

Mighty chain-mail warriors
Mean nothing to the
Flesh-hungered Die Hard fans
Muscle-meaty men define
Heroism in adolescent minds.
Does chivalry mean nothing?

It is frustrating fighting fire
With sonnets that squelch
The erudite light in their eyes
Which they voice with the
Lethargic yawn and roll of eyes
At words I would trace with my tongue

They are too ensconced
In the banalities of life
To dip into the inkwell before them
Preferring to concern themselves
With the who and where and when
Than the more meaningful, why.

Yet, despite their menopausal
Complaints of too hot, too cold,
I find myself giddily drunk
From their dandelion whine,
Though they do not care
For Bradbury in the slightest.



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3 Comments
AngelineAngelineover 20 years ago
This just flows

beautifully and yes you have that rat-a-tat onomatopoeia working along with all the other devices. I love poems layered with references and multiple meanings like this one--you can keep rereading it, finding new ideas to contemplate. :)

annaswirlsannaswirlsover 20 years ago
study hall?

As a former teacher of such creatures, I imagined you writing this while monitering study hall or lunch duty....you have a great perspective on the generation-- thanks for sharing-- I got a kick out of it!

RybkaRybkaover 20 years ago
Ray would like it

Nicely done and an interesting approach to the generational differences. - I like it.

One thing: "Passionate lips? embraces" does not sound right to me.