Has Dinosaur Poetry Become Extinct?

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

  1. Shirley Martin

    Shirley Martin Supreme Member
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    I put this video on YouTube. let's see if I can post it here. Wish me luck. :)

     
    #16
  2. Shirley Martin

    Shirley Martin Supreme Member
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    The boy talking was Bubba. We took him to the NC Zoo. They had a outdoor dinosaur exhibit. He saw another dinosaur with a baby and he was rushing to to go see it.:D
     
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  3. John Brunner

    John Brunner Senior Staff
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    @Shirley Martin

    Looks like your vid has not been set to Public so that anyone can watch it.

    I've not uploaded a You Tube video. Perhaps others can tell you how to change this setting for your future reference...it's gotta be a basic thing.
     
    #18
  4. Shirley Martin

    Shirley Martin Supreme Member
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    Can't y'all see it?
     
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  5. John Brunner

    John Brunner Senior Staff
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    NOW it's here.

    Before it looked like one of those years-old posts where the vid had been deleted. I tried to paste the url into my browser, and You Tube told me to log in to see if you have specifically granted me permission to view it.

    That's pretty cool for the zoo to put up a dinosaur exhibit.
     
    #20
  6. Shirley Martin

    Shirley Martin Supreme Member
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    I went back and changed it. I hope I did it right. It's the first one I ever put there. I checked for kids because I thought the kids would like it.
     
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  7. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    [​IMG]
    Praise
    “Trilobites the Dust,” and so do the rest of a cast of extinct creatures in this sequel (prequel?) to Last Laughs: Animal Epitaphs (2012). In chronological order from the Paleozoic to the Cenozoic eras, dinosaurs, prehistoric, reptiles, and early mammals offer memento mori in pithy verse.

    Iguanodon, Alas Long Gone,” for example runs: “Iguano dawned, / Iguano dined, / Iguano done, / Iguano gone.” With similar brevity, “Plesiosaur Sticks His Neck Out” of Loch Ness and has it chopped through by a Pict (a foot-note admits the anachronism), and unknown agents leave “Pterrible Pterosaur Pterminated.” In later times, a saber-toohed cat (“Tiger, tiger, hunting bright / near the tar pits, late at night”), a dire wolf, and a woolly mammoth are all depicted trapped in the gooey much. Each poem comes with an explanatory note, and a prose afterword titles “A Little About Layers” discusses how the fossil record works.

    Timmins reflects this secondary informational agenda in his illustrations without taking it too seriously – providing a spade-bearded, popeyed paleontologist who resembles a spud in shape and color to usher readers through galleries of fossil remnants or fleshed-out specimens meeting their ends with shocked expressions.

    The poetry and prose form more of an uneasy détente than an integrated whole, but the comical pictures and the wordplay in these dino demises provide sufficient lift.
    Kirkus Reviews
     
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  8. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast (link)
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    Here’s Douglas Florian, who is pictured outside his studio on West 52nd Street in Manhattan (“also known as Swing Street,” he told me, “because the jazz musicians used to record there”) and whom I’m happy to welcome to 7-Imp this morning for a breakfast chat.

    [​IMG]
    “I’m higher than five elephants. / I’m longer than most whales. / My giant neck is balanced by / My forty-three-foot tail. / A tail that is my weapon. / It swings from side to side. / From nose to tail I’m ninety feet— / Hey kid, ya wanna ride?”


    [​IMG]
    “What’s Minmi’s BIGGEST claim to fame?
    It has the smallest dinosaur name.”
     
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  9. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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  10. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    Excerpts of a poem by Spencer B. P. Bull (1889-??), Buffalo Evening News, March 10, 1910 :D
    FULL POEM

    Pete

    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

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

    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

    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.
     
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  11. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    I have filled the missing gaps with Replica Verses to make Pete's story complete.
     
    #26
    Last edited: Jan 8, 2021
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  12. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    Thanks, Joe. .. I got lazy.

    I wondered if he was talking about William Jennings Bryant's speeches. A strange thing to drop in, if so.
     
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  13. Shirley Martin

    Shirley Martin Supreme Member
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  14. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Dinomania: the story of our obsession with dinosaurs
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    "There is certainly nothing new about the instinct to marvel at giant fossils, nor to dream of putting flesh back on their bones. At the height of the Roman empire, during the reign of Tiberius, a devastating earthquake – “the worst in human memory”, according to Pliny the Elder – exposed a series of colossal skeletons".

    "The locals, convinced that these were the remains of ancient heroes, were reluctant to desecrate their graves; but knowing of the emperor’s interest in such matters, they reverently sent him a single, massive tooth".

    "Tiberius, eager to see with his own eyes just how large the man from which it came would have stood, commissioned a mathematician to calculate the hero’s proportions, and then to build him a scale model. The tooth – which we are informed was over a foot long – was not, of course, human, but most likely from a mastodon".
     
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    Last edited: Jan 9, 2021
  15. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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