G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 A is for AtlantaAaah, here's the rest:[url]http://mets2005.myblogsite.com/blog/_archives/2005/5/24/881652.html[/url]
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 C is for CarterKnown as "The Kid"Played with a smileThat he never hid.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 D is for DarlingSmart as can beLadies would screamAs he worked 1-2-3.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Author Posted September 2, 2005 Is this more Nashy?D is for DarlingToo much did he thinkTill his sinker would riseAnd his riser would sink
Guest Bret Sabermetric Guests Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 The form and content are both great--if I were to tinker with anything I'd start trying to fix the inversion in the 2nd line, which sounds too artsy-fartsy for my taste. I'm probably going to make this worse, because I'm dropping the witty chiasmus in your final two lines altogether, butD is for Darlingwho thought so damned muchthat the weakest of battersbecame, to him, clutch.Not very good, but I guess I will almost rather have a worse poem than one that employs an unneeded inversion. Maybe that's just me, but so many would-be poets rely on it heavily, and I never want to see one again.
A Boy Named Seo Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 D is for DarlingFrom Hawaii he hailsThought way too muchWe can blame it on YaleDoes Hawaii screw it up? Or the tense in hails/Yale? Who and what?
Guest Johnny Dickshot Guests Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 D is for DarlingStolen from TexasIf arms were like carsHe'd be a new LexusArm like a LexusHead like a PintoA darling collisionThey often got into
metirish Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 Good stuff guys..A is for AlexanderThe great he was notTraded to the CubsFor Turk and a guy named Rojas
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 "Scansion" and "chiasmus" in the same thread? Is this an ENG 388 class?Irish, I like the sentiment, but "not" and "Rojas" definitely do not rhyme.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 B.B., Blaine BeattyBilly Beane and Bob BailorDouble-B MetsOft' fail, sorry sailor!Bruce Berenyi, Bruce BochyAnd Bruce BoisclairBruised hearts of Met fansDumb 'nough to careBohanon, BuchananBrians, theme bothBrett Butler, Billy BaldwinRarely did show'thDouble-B's back in timeGoing back to the 'hoodWith Bobby BonillaSuddenly lookin' good
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Author Posted September 2, 2005 Some of these entries are exceeding Nash's four-line standard.Anyway, here's my attempt at Bonilla:B is BonillaWith plugs in his earsHe knew that the boosWould drown out the cheers
metirish Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 A is for AlexanderPlayed second base quite wellTraded to the cubsFor Turk and a guy named Mel.
Guest SwitchHitter Guests Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 A is for AshbyNo-hit battery mateFirst Astro to homerFrom both sides of the plateOh, wait......(Actually, I did a whole Astros alphabet when I read Nash to my kids at bedtime and they asked, "Which ones of those are Astros?" and I had to tell them that none were. This is an excellent thread.)
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Author Posted September 2, 2005 ="metirish"]A is for AlexanderPlayed second base quite wellTraded to the cubsFor Turk and a guy named Mel.I think to get the right sound, you need to limit to five (maybe six) syllables per line.Maybe...A, AlexanderPlayed second quite wellSwapped to the CubsFor Wendell and Mel
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 Sorry, Annie, but since you started it:A is for AurelioGave up the first runCalhoun let two more inAnd their season was done.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 Are we going to choose one quatrain for each letter to use in a Mets Nash poem? If so, are we going to choose from among our submitted entries now or later?
Guest SwitchHitter Guests Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 We're going to let Bret choose.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Author Posted September 2, 2005 Later. For now, let's keep piling them up.F is for FlynnHis glove, though a goodieWas exceeded by farBy his love of Woody
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Author Posted September 2, 2005 E is for EverettWas rough with his kidHe said he didn't The Mets said he did
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 E is for ElsterMuch talent untappedHis biggest mistake?He wouldn't adapt.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 F is for FrancoThe better of twoHe gave us a showWhenever he threw.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 G is for GoodenKnown as Doc KA spectacular kidLet his skills waste away.
A Boy Named Seo Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 Mr. Q,Here's my revised homework. Mex/vexed? The tense would still be jacked up, though. Bah.---B is for BensonAn 'Ace in the Hole'His fastball's from PittsburghHis wife's off the poleB is for BellYacht sits in the soundFrom fast start, to slump,To 'Operation Shutdown'A is AlfonzoChic in thirteen6 hits ag'in HoustonThe best Avi'd seenA is for AllenWho'd drink til he's wreckedGot shipped to St. LouieFor an 8-ball-whacked MexD is for DarlingFrom Hawaii he hailsThought way too muchWe can blame it on Yale Now can I go to recess? I better get a 'B' or mom'll be pissed.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Author Posted September 2, 2005 D, Doc and DarrylThey filled us with hopeThen brought us all downBy doing the dope
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 H, for HernandezThough there have been threeMex was the bestWe all can agree.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 I is for IzzyWho once pitched at SheaThe trade for Bill Taylor -The end of Gen K.
Guest Bret Sabermetric Guests Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 ="A Boy Named Seo"]D is for DarlingFrom Hawaii he hailsThought way too muchWe can blame it on YaleDoes Hawaii screw it up? Or the tense in hails/Yale? Who and what?Well, you're doing the inversion-in-the-2nd-line thing again.You would never (as in literally never) say to someone "From Santa Monica I hail", would you, Seo? I'll bet your fee for uttering that sentence with a straight face is pretty high.So why put in it in verse? Because it somehow seems "poetic"? Poets last tried a straight-on, no-irony inversion sometime in the late 1930s, but word is sometimes slow getting out.Now then, "Hails" and "Yale" doesn't work, but it hasn't anything to do with the tense. (Verbs have tense--"Yale" is a noun.) It doesn't work because you've got that nasty "s" on the end of "hail" and nothing is going to make "-ails" rhyme with "-ale," nothing.So you've got a couple of options: you can try a different rhyme:. (Example: Fernandez was known as 'Sid the Squid,'Though he looked more like "Sid the Whale" Like Darling, home to stubby SidWas Honolulu, though not Yale)Or you might try an elision (a phrase that omits an easily understood word) that would use a possessive form of "Yale"--for example: "Ron was Hawaii's pride, and Yale's,But spent one night in Houston's jails."(though in that particular example, "jail" makes better sense than the plural, but you get the general principle.)Or you could embed the possessive foem in an enjambment (a construction that has one leg at the end of one line and the other leg at the beginning of the next one):Darling outpitched Franco, Yale'sBest besting St. John's nine.An Ivy Leaguer rarely failsTo set the pearls before the swine. Actually, I don't remember if Darling or Franco won that duel, but this is purely to illustrate verse, not history.And they're closing up the library here, so I'll have to continue this at some future seminar. I hope the Old Mole can join in at some point--I always learn stuff from him.Anyway, if this process seems complex, well, that's why poets make the big bucks.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 J is for JohnsonHoJo to mostKept us aliveWith Darryl a ghost.
Willets Point Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 K is for KelvinA name thats quite oddYet two Mets are called thisJust one less than Todd
A Boy Named Seo Old-Timey Member Posted September 2, 2005 Posted September 2, 2005 You would never (as in literally never) say to someone "From Santa Monica I hail", would you, Seo? I'll bet your fee for uttering that sentence with a straight face is pretty high.Sorry, I watched Empire Strikes Back last night. I'm scrapping the Darling one and starting over. I suck at this.D is for Darling Smart, handsome palReadied at YaleFor Shallow HalBy the way, I embedded the possessive foem in an enjambment just once and I learned my freaking lesson. I won't do that again.
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