When he swears when the champagne cork hits him in the eye,
my brother’s new fiancee utters a “My, my!”
then swipes the bubbles from her upper lip with polite tongue.
(She’s squeamish about swear words and she calls the cork a “bung.”)
Her brow furls with referrals to anything unsavory.
(She prefers her history minus genocide or slavery.)
“If you can’t say something good, then don’t say anything at all.”
she says, and then says little but “Oh, really?” and “Y’all!!!”
She’s a proper southern girl with mild disposition.
She would not think to put you out or cause an imposition,
yet when I ask if she is hungry, she admits, “Yes, just a bit,”
and when I put the tea cake out, she eats three-fourths of it!
She never wastes her precious time when visiting by sitting
and conversing with the family. Instead, she brings her knitting,
and bottom lip between her teeth, she counts her knit and pearling.
concentrating on her knitting needles’ rhythmic twirling.
You might surmise she’s not my favorite, or second, third or fourth
girlfriend he has brought home from East and West and North.
This Southern girl sticks in my craw, I just cannot get used to her.
And you can bet I’m dreading the day my bro’ gets fused to her.
Prompt words on this Solstice morning are: hunger, disposition, squeamish, bung, referral and knitting.
You brought all those words together to create such a lovely poem.
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Thanks, Harlyn.
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You’re welcome
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Everyone has one of those
Sent from my iPhone
>
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Once again you amaze with what you get out of the prompts
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Thanks, Derrick. This one was stretching it, a bit.
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