'Betrayed, yes. Now put on your shoes, I'll walk you to the subway.'
Early on in my Tokyo stay the gas company had a contest, for people to write haiku with the last line 'But still, there's the bath.' They published a two-page spread of winners somewhere- given what a lazy sod I was at the time, I probably read it in the Japan Times, in translation.
Today for the first time
I got called 'obasan'--
Still, there's the bath.
My son gets home from juku
After his father does from work-
Still, there's the bath.
Haiku (or even senryuu, which is what those are) don't work well in English. Envoi do:
Prince, all the fans are fretting mightily;
Lj is run by purblind geeks, by heck;
The humidex today was one-oh-three:
Still, there's the bath, and water to my neck.
Long weekend, and the low tonight is supposed to be 17. For this relief etc
Today for the first time
I got called 'obasan'--
Still, there's the bath.
My son gets home from juku
After his father does from work-
Still, there's the bath.
Haiku (or even senryuu, which is what those are) don't work well in English. Envoi do:
Prince, all the fans are fretting mightily;
Lj is run by purblind geeks, by heck;
The humidex today was one-oh-three:
Still, there's the bath, and water to my neck.
Long weekend, and the low tonight is supposed to be 17. For this relief etc
no subject
Or so I'll have it on my epitaph,
With non-artistic, "What will be, wil be,"
I'll float a boat with Noah in the bath.
no subject
'No fury like a porn-starved fan Hell hath';
But it's been going on all bloody day.
Move over, Jimmie Morrisson, in the bath.
no subject
And dump the dross, through Archimedean math,
I wouldn't trawl the comms whose names I'm told . . .
I'd do a quiet "Eureka" in the bath.
no subject
And dumbly goes the way of Sylvie Plath:
Kindly to spare me from that grim deluge
And need to slit a wrist vein in the bath.