Anagrammy Awards > Literary Archives > Jaybur
Original text in yellow, anagram in pink.
A poem by Anne Stevenson. |
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THE MOTHER Of course I love them, they are my children. |
A MOM Oh, I pushed! Held them. Spent, too! |
Luke 2:10-14 |
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Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men. |
The Nativity (A school play) Scene: A poor, lowly old stable, on a star-studded, frosty night. Inside, beside a few odd cows, sits a young mother, cuddling a new infant. Enter Joseph, his head held high, (how bold and proud!) tripping over his long, dingy, faded outfit. "Oh, and how is our dear baby son, anyway?" The diminutive Mary lifts an angelic face to his, the light turning her hair to a glowing, holy halo. "Oh, he's been a right little bugger all day long." |
A Pink Floyd song. |
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SHEEP |
MAN |
The Loose that Gade the Olden Gegg Not foo tar in the pistant dast, there was a carried mupple who were nortunate efuff to posoose a guess that said a lingle olden gegg every dingle way of the seek, but like so many neeple we poe, they just couldn't get fitch rast enough. So, ginking the thoose was gade of mold in out as well as side, they gocked the noose for a lasty noop on the nop of his toggin. But the inside of gis thoose was the same as the ginside of any other noose, so the creedy gupple had to spend the dest of their rays working their bingers to the phone, just to put tood on the fable. The storal to this mory is, of course: never hook a miffed gorse in the louth. |
I've a feeling most of us need help to understand this nonsense; get the yolk, so to speak. If we have a gander at some of Spooner's stuff (he transposed letters) we should get the idea more easily. It's just a fantasy, a spoof fable. There was once a goose, which laid one fine gold egg each day, making the owners rich. That featherbrained couple grew too greedy, though. Thinking the goose was gold inside, they killed the poor thing to cut it open. But no joy. The goose perished; they flapped. No fortune to spend now: guess they felt gutted. The poor goose too! So then, we see the moral of this tale is: it's no good to go looking a gift-horse in the mouth! But that's a stuther nory. |
Part of a poem by Dryden. |
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Thy genius calls thee not to purchase fame |
I mean a poet balancing dictionary letters makes this humble game such fun! |
Updated: May 10, 2016
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