A Potpourri of Poetic Curiosities
Viewing comments for Chapter 61 "Bee allergy"A collection of poems showcasing unusual words
13 total reviews
Comment from Pearl Edwards
Great little limerick, with the right flow and a chuckle for the reader.
Great P words too Craig - proboscis and pantagruelian - well done with this, leaves me smiling.
cheers,
valda
reply by the author on 05-Mar-2018
Great little limerick, with the right flow and a chuckle for the reader.
Great P words too Craig - proboscis and pantagruelian - well done with this, leaves me smiling.
cheers,
valda
Comment Written 05-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 05-Mar-2018
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Thanks for the fun review, Valda. If it were a true story, it wouldn't have left me smiling, I assure you! Cheers, Craig
Comment from Sandra du Plessis
A very well-written poem. Yes, we should be careful to smell the flowers when they are in full bloom, there may be a bee there that would not like to be disturbed and the first instinct they have is to sting whatever seems to them as a threat.
reply by the author on 03-Mar-2018
A very well-written poem. Yes, we should be careful to smell the flowers when they are in full bloom, there may be a bee there that would not like to be disturbed and the first instinct they have is to sting whatever seems to them as a threat.
Comment Written 03-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 03-Mar-2018
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Thanks for reviewing, Sandra. I'm very allergic, so I'm not going to stick my nose inside a flower without having a very good look first! Much appreciation for your kind comments. Craig
Comment from Phyllis Stewart
LOL! Good one, Craig. Great word, and you used it perfectly. Love the the rhyme of hibiscus and proboscis, the second of which you don't often see in poetry. And finally, "antihistamine" is a long word, which balances the poem's side-side weight while adding a sturdy base. Yep, I do notice weird things like that. :)
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
LOL! Good one, Craig. Great word, and you used it perfectly. Love the the rhyme of hibiscus and proboscis, the second of which you don't often see in poetry. And finally, "antihistamine" is a long word, which balances the poem's side-side weight while adding a sturdy base. Yep, I do notice weird things like that. :)
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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Thanks very much for the perceptive and very kind review, Phyllis. Much appreciated, as always.
Craig
Comment from Gloria ....
What a most entertaining Limerick, Craig. It must be a little bit scary to be allergic to bee venom. But the foul language is a must in such situations.
Excellent and most creative working in of the word of the day, pantagruelian. It's another one that flows nicely.
Great job.
Gloria
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
What a most entertaining Limerick, Craig. It must be a little bit scary to be allergic to bee venom. But the foul language is a must in such situations.
Excellent and most creative working in of the word of the day, pantagruelian. It's another one that flows nicely.
Great job.
Gloria
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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One day (not today) remind me to tell you about when I had to do a service call to a bee factory, and they were quite literally buzzing around the office in their hundreds. I should have charged triple-time, at least!
Many thanks for the lovely review, Gloria. Cheers, Craig
Comment from --Turtle.
Hi, Craig...
Read through this limerick. I enjoyed. Easy to imagine the events unfolding, from flower to colorful ouches to hopeful solution, with the pleasing complication in the words, sounds, and rhymes.
I like that you chose a limerick for a word that has comical undertones, even as the situation might not be exactly funny to the one experiencing the sting. Oddly, I imagined a butterfly and a bee fighting over a flower, but appreciatedIt that a nose was attributed to a proboscis in relation to it being stuck in a flower.
Fun to read.
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
Hi, Craig...
Read through this limerick. I enjoyed. Easy to imagine the events unfolding, from flower to colorful ouches to hopeful solution, with the pleasing complication in the words, sounds, and rhymes.
I like that you chose a limerick for a word that has comical undertones, even as the situation might not be exactly funny to the one experiencing the sting. Oddly, I imagined a butterfly and a bee fighting over a flower, but appreciatedIt that a nose was attributed to a proboscis in relation to it being stuck in a flower.
Fun to read.
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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That could work, too, Turtle. Thanks so much for your most welcome comments. Craig
Comment from Jannypan (Jan)
Craig,
This was a fun limerick. Good job on the style of limericks. I like the unusual rhyming with proboscis. Where you live, it will be soon be fall. right? Thanks for sharing. You are doing great with your challenge. Jan
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
Craig,
This was a fun limerick. Good job on the style of limericks. I like the unusual rhyming with proboscis. Where you live, it will be soon be fall. right? Thanks for sharing. You are doing great with your challenge. Jan
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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It's fall now, Jan. 1st March is when it starts. Now go get some firewood collected and the place in some order outside, before the chill sets in :) Many thanks, Craig.
Comment from Joy Graham
Ahaha! I like your limerick with the big words to go with the big allergy :) It makes me think of that movie where Martin Short swelled up from an allergic reaction. I'm suffering from memory loss as to the name of the movie. My daughter also had a head swelling reaction to horses. In movies it's funny, but when it happens to somebody you love it is not funny.
Joy xx
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
Ahaha! I like your limerick with the big words to go with the big allergy :) It makes me think of that movie where Martin Short swelled up from an allergic reaction. I'm suffering from memory loss as to the name of the movie. My daughter also had a head swelling reaction to horses. In movies it's funny, but when it happens to somebody you love it is not funny.
Joy xx
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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No, allergies are not funny. If I get stung yet again on the foot, it probably means a week or two being quite inconvenienced. Elsewhere, it could be very, very nasty. Thanks heaps, Joy :) Craig
Comment from kiwigirl2821
Hi Craig. I heard those nasty foul words all the way over here and I laughed, sorry but I did! The idea of you and a "Pantagruelian nose" gave me a burst of giggles.
The closest I've ever come to a bee sting was in the 6th grade, 12 years old and I was climbing up a very tall tree to be alone at the top and breathe some fresh air away from the siblings lol. What did I do, yep stuck my hand directly into a hornets nest and multiple stings later, ice and a few antihistamines later my mum wiped my tear streaked howling face dry and patted me on my bottom and said go play!
Great one today mate! xoxo deborah
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
Hi Craig. I heard those nasty foul words all the way over here and I laughed, sorry but I did! The idea of you and a "Pantagruelian nose" gave me a burst of giggles.
The closest I've ever come to a bee sting was in the 6th grade, 12 years old and I was climbing up a very tall tree to be alone at the top and breathe some fresh air away from the siblings lol. What did I do, yep stuck my hand directly into a hornets nest and multiple stings later, ice and a few antihistamines later my mum wiped my tear streaked howling face dry and patted me on my bottom and said go play!
Great one today mate! xoxo deborah
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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Awwww you poor thing. I suspect that may well have been the death of me. One sting, and my foot is the size of a football, and I can't walk on it for a week or two (the foot is the only place I've been stung, several times). I imagine if I got stung in the wrong place, I might not be around to write poems about it lol
Thanks for the great review, Deborah.
Craig
Comment from Teri7
This is a very cute limerick type poem you have penned that is so full of the truth for so many! You used very cute words and very cute imagery from your words. Blessings, Teri
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
This is a very cute limerick type poem you have penned that is so full of the truth for so many! You used very cute words and very cute imagery from your words. Blessings, Teri
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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Thanks again for the lovely comments, Teri. Much appreciated - Craig
Comment from Dolly'sPoems
This is hilarious! You always make me laugh! The first line would be better without the (a), loved your Limerick-style poem introducing another word! Love Dolly x
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
This is hilarious! You always make me laugh! The first line would be better without the (a), loved your Limerick-style poem introducing another word! Love Dolly x
Comment Written 02-Mar-2018
reply by the author on 02-Mar-2018
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Thanks bunches for the lovely review, Dolly. I always like reading your comments. Cheers, Craig