2018-08-26

Justin Thyme


Junior agent in the Temporal Corps,
Justin felt nothing at all counted more
than preserving safe the continuum.
One day, while clearing the residuum
from a failed time-travel experiment
and checking again a key measurement,
he was shocked to find that a Time Scout crew
had gone missing in 1492.
Eight Scouts and their leader were out of luck,
having dropped through a time rift, then got stuck.
Their temporal van could never get back
unless someone found out and fixed the crack.
But Justin thought quick. To close up the slit,
he took out some thread from his sewing kit,
soaked it in an Einstein tachyon gel,
then sewed up that rift, securing it well.
The News of the Corps then led the headline,
atop page one, "A Stitch in Time Saves Nine".



This poem is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 License.

This is my first intentional attempt to write a Feghoot poem, a shaggy dog story ending in a pun that makes sense only in the context of the story. And no, there is no such thing as an Einstein tachyon gel – but, if Star Trek can power a story by making up fake science, I can do it for a poem!

Granddad's Shop


My grandparents had some 
rigid access restrictions.
No children in their closet.
Parlor reserved for special days.
Don't go up to uncle Mick's room.
No touching the grandfather clock.
Out back, keep out of the garden.
Okay to use the board walk to the back alley,
but keep out of the garage.

Carte blanche in the huge sandpile,
but next to that was the wizard's cave,
completely off limits,
where Granddad worked magic.

Occasional glimpses through the doorway
revealed the loom on which he made
all of our town's rag rugs -- a necessity
for every child starting kindergarten.
In that shop, he could repair anything;
sharpen any knife, chisel, axe, sickle, or scythe;
conjure whole bicycles from random parts.
We rode those bikes, for years,
to school, paper routes, and baseball.

But no child got past the ward spell
on the door, until one day when
my junior high science project
needed his help.

Was there a disorientation spell?
I couldn't say what was in
the dim interior, whether
shelves, drawers, cubbies, peg boards;
likely a hundred tools and
thousands of nails, screws, nuts, bolts,
odd hinges, hasps, turnbuckles, grommets.
Other than his loom,
the only certainties are
the hand drill and soldering iron
he used, to teach me how to
make holes in a board and
affix copper wires to
flashlight bulbs and switches
mounted in the holes.

He taught me that I can do more than read books:
I can work with my hands, make things.

How patient and gentle
the crochety old man became,
working in his shop!



 

Copyright ©2018, Paul H. Harder II
This poem is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 License.

2018-08-25

Cents and Sensibility


Junior Smith has an odd savings plan,
yielding no interest. Still, the guy can
lay his fingers on every red cent.
Each copper penny that he has not spent
rests within the old urn by his bed.
Not enough cash there to go to his head,
but, over his lifetime, Junior has learned:
A penny saved is a penny urned.


This poem is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 License.

Logic Fault


A New England lawyer near Ivy League schools,
defender of hapless professors,
had clients who tended to break all the rules,
thereby much enhancing his treasure.
A mathematician without a degree
was one of his more daunting clients.
The judge found him guilty and wrote the decree:
“Deriving with no valid license.”


This poem is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 License.