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Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 12:52 am
by William
Minckey old friend, :D
I am touched by the fact that you read my post. I thought you (or was it your alias - couldn't be an alter ego, two wouldn't fit on one site ;-) ) had barred me from your company.
Oh the joy of being in your (metaphorical) arms again. :)
What a great name for a village pub -The Minckey Arms. Must suggest it to my local landlord. Of course I dare not venture inside lest I fall off the wagon ;-)
All is well with the world again and God/G~d is in His heaven (or at least He's back here on the forum). We can all sleep soundly on our chaise longues.
God bless,
William

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 2:30 am
by mickey_one
William, I have now made you a "foe" which means I can no longer see the contents of your posts

michael

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 10:33 am
by William
Dear old Minckey,
between all his alter egos making foes of people he'll soon be out there with only the ladies for company. :lol:
But that appears to be the way he likes it, a minckey whale in a little pond doing his fabulous tricks. :shock:
See how he jumps! :roll:
Won't one of you ladies of the canyon give him my very best and tell him (the real)Jeffrey (Lord Archer) also sends his regards.
God bless,
William

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 5:24 pm
by Sideways
damellon wrote:Because I value courtesy, I have taken the time to read these l-e-n-g-t-h-y contributions. I wish I hadn't.
They have contributed nothing to an appreciation of Andrew's poem, in praise of which I would like to say, buttons and their undoing, do it for me, every time. :D

Dear Damellon, buttons done can be the undoing of an ironer who is operating below form! I once pressed off an entire cardigan button and my client was furious! We can laugh about it now but at the time I thought I would lose the contract.

Sue

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 5:25 pm
by annie blue
OK! Enough already! Everyone forgiven. Sunday and Monday were pretty down days for me and probably the reason for my reaction. Greg, you are forgiven most of all - even though you didn't really do anything. Just reading your mouse posting - all be it very long - made me laugh and almost cry at the same time. Before Mr Annie b number 2 and I were married, there was a mouse killing incident with us too. Accidently, whilst try to coax the little thing out from under a chair, said chair fell on said mouse and ended it's little life. We both cried for ages before putting him to a decent burial in an egg box. Mr Ab2 is now ex but still best friend and was forgiven years ago for mouse murder.

Any road up, I'm a lot happier today after meeting Sam Baker yesterday evening and looking forward to seeing him sing his wonderful songs tonight. He's fantastic!

http://www.sambakermusic.com

William, you have sent me a pm but I can't see anything. Clues please.

Greg again, I think that your idea about Andrew's poem is lovely. Catholic teachings never leave you do they, unfortunately.

I'm still not sure I want to come back into this thread for good. I have found much cheerier threads elsewhere in the forum. Although that doesn't mean I don't like you. It just means my time here is over and bizzaro thread is good. I did enjoy it but it got a little tainted along the way.

Catch you in another thread maybe? :) (That's a smile Gregory that's meant warmly. Nothing sinister ;-) )

Gross overuse of the word 'thread'? I don't care. I'm happy.

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 6:35 pm
by Manna
~Greg wrote:(Forgive me if somebody else has realized this already.)

It's that the poem is simply about Andrew and his wife.
Nobody else. No adultery. It's all pretend.
They are role playing. Exactly the way that
all the best Catholic marriage manuals recommend,
in order to help keep a marriage lively.
The poem is 100% playful and completely innocent.
you are forgiven for this too, G.
mostly because you said it more eloquently than I did.

:razz:

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 8:35 pm
by Jimmy O'Connell
Where there be threads of immense
and contentious length
there also be one Mickey_One, Minckey and MultiplePersonalityPersons...

welcome back... I was wondering where the sh*t st*rr*r s*pr*m* got to!!!

Jimmy

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 10:45 pm
by ~greg
Manna wrote:you are forgiven for this too, G.
mostly because you said it more eloquently than I did.
No, not more "eloquently".
Just a little more tactfully.

You said:
The Beatles song is about a long-lasting relationship,
and the way it plays against the poem for me here is that you want this to be a play
between you and your long-time-lover.
To pretend with her that you're having an affair.
For instance, sometimes I'll flirt with my husband...
Which was like "trying to put out fire with gasoline".
(Which makes no sense at all at today's prices.)

(Or like trying to force someone to suck the rim of a salted margarita glass
when you know perfectly well they have an ulcerated lip sore.
Or like adding salt on somebody's salt-cured anchovies (either seriously,
or just in jest.) Or like trying to put out fire with salt.
Or like trying to put out salt with fire.
Or like anything, really, that doesn't work very well,
or that doesn't make much sense. Or that isn't very nice to do.
In other words.)

Because Andrew had said he that has a wife, and kid,
and that he has even read this poem in front of them!

And let us be honest, and serious, about this!
"long-time-lover" -- does not mean "wife"!

Oh, to be sure, it could have included that possibility,
- if you had left it at that. And would that you had!
But there was no way it could, after you went on
to contrasted it with your own personal higher morality!
Your "husband"!

What you were doing there was rubbing it in, plain and simple.
Just like Gandhi rubbed salt in the British authorities' faces.
You were, in effect, supporting Geoffrey's contention!
Which, in the context of this thread, amounts to war-mongering.

I, on the other hand, was trying to pull everybody back from the
precipice at which it seemed to me they were hurling themselves
as if there was no salt left in their diets.

I was trying to give Andrew the benefit of what little doubt there was left.
That he really did mean his wife. And that she, only she, is his
long-time-lover.

I was trying to give this thread a little separate peace around here!

~~~~~~~~~

Incidentally, the poem reminded me of a not-too-bad movie,
--"Same Time, Next Year" (1979),
with Ellen Burstyne and Alan Alda.
The picture opens in 1951 at a resort in northern California.
Burstyn, a 24-year-old Oakland housewife, and Alda, a 27-year-old accountant
from New Jersey, meet over dinner, get along and have a fling.
The next morning they wake up in the same bed, talk about what's happened,
realize that while they're both happily married with six children between them,
they're in love.

They make a pact to meet at the same resort every year,
which is just what they do and is just what the film is about.
We see the two every five or six years as they adjust to the changes time brings.

What always remains through the years is the deep affection the two share.
It's nice to see a film about two people who like each other this deeply.

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:12 pm
by mickey_one
Jimmy O'Connell wrote:Where there be threads of immense
and contentious length
there also be one Mickey_One, Minckey and MultiplePersonalityPersons...

welcome back... I was wondering where the sh*t st*rr*r s*pr*m* got to!!!

Jimmy

This thread is kept alive by the intelligent writing of Greg, Geoffrey and a few others. . Before I stopped William's posts from showing on my screen I saw he had descended to playing with my name and I thought that was a clear sign of how puerile this thread had become. I don't remember any of your poems Jimmy but I had a general impression that you were perhaps a little more intelligent. At the receiving end of such kiddy-jibes it 's just the equivalent of reading really bad nursery rhymes but what is it like at your end?

Does Jimmy O'Connell sit at his keyboard and think, "hmm, I could call Mickey "monkey" or "muckey" or "mokey", or I could borrow from William and call him "Minckey"".

How does your "thought" process work? I am genuinely curious that you have no fear of ridicule. I perversely admire you for not caring about your lack or originality and your absence of wit.

michael

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 1:01 am
by Jimmy O'Connell
Thank you, Michael.


Jimmy

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 1:56 am
by William
Jimmy,
it must be simply awful to be the butt of minckey's insight and scathing wit (excuse me while I puke). But to be the object of his admiration - now there's a fate worse than being listed foe. I hope the pain doesn't last too long. :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Dear MICHAEL
(Ladies of the Canyon please pass this message to the man of delicate disposition, who has made me his foe!) let me give you the respect you crave.
You have graciously dished out insults, slights, pseudo-witticisms, snide comments, barbs and assinine remarks for years on this site.
You have generously and without a thought for yourself shared your insights and photographs.
You have taken umbrage on behalf of those you deemed incapable of taking umbrage themselves.
You have been condescending and insulting by turns.
You have selflessly promoted the every utterance of any damsel you deemed to be in this dress.
For all of these we thank you and bless you - peace be upon you.
But now you go and spoil it all by not taking a little gentle razzing, as they call it here, from Jimmy and I. :razz:
You are in danger of becoming one of those judges, sitting pompously on the bench - dishing out the wit and wisdom of the club but unwilling to hear a word from the common man. :roll:
As yet, you have no place in your heart for those who don't share you self-admiration.
I pray (nightly and early in the morning) that you discover a sense of equality, fraternity and humour. ;-)
God bless,
William

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 2:46 am
by Manna
If I put out anyone's gasoline sores with flaming margarita salts, then I most almost sincerely apologize.
The folly in your argument (being ever-so-careful here, just for you. again- :razz: ) is that "For instance" = a phrase that translates from English to English as "in contrast to..." It does not. It leads into an illustrious illustrative example.

(FYI: I am over-caffinated!!!)

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 3:16 am
by ~greg
Manna, if that's really her name, wrote:It does not.
Yeah, sure, if you want to be picky!
One would only expect that of a banjo player.

I myself prefer to play plucky, high above that kind of thing.
I will always play the heavenly harp of peace.

May God give you a good goosing my child.
:razz:

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 4:30 am
by ~greg
(FYI: I am over-caffinated!!!)

Sorry, I don't know of any true caffeine antagonist. I wish I did.

Try warm milk. Or cocoa.
(Dutched tastes best, but it's lower in antioxidants.)

Try cozy Chamomile.

(but note! : alcohol
does not help at all with tachycardia)

Re: Before You're Sixty-Four.

Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 4:42 am
by Geoffrey
While watching a romantic film a few days ago I noticed that the scene went blurry soon after a couple in a bedroom started kissing. Then waves were seen running up and down the sand to the sound of fitting orchestration. In between sips of lemonade I realised that he was now humping her. Those ocean ripples lapping on the beach symbolised shagging. This image is what inspired Andrew to write: "You were nearer and dearer to me than breakers crashing on the shore." It is the joy of sex, especially orgasm, that tempt people into being unfaithful to their partners - and in a brief encounter love is not involved. This is where Leonard's line: "Between the spurts of come, you launched your tidings of regret," comes in - as Andrew and I touched on recently in this thread. Not without reason did Leonard write 'between the spurts' and not 'during the spurts' - as if talking about a champion swimmer breathing between strokes. There is no greater pleasure for a man than feeling ejaculate being propelled up his urethra canal. His climax is a series of sudden emissions, or 'breakers crashing on the shore' as Andrew would deviously say. 'Tidings of regret' can only be launched BETWEEN the spurts, because the 100% ecstacy felt DURING the spurts prohibits reasoning. Flying in a Cessna seaplane over the fjords yesterday I looked down at the villages between the mountains. I thought to myself: "That's where intelligence exists - between the peaks!" As a lifelong student of psychology I know that whatever a person writes, whether it's 'ripples breaking on the crag' or 'nipples shaking on the hag' - their personality is laid bare. To me they are naked.