The literary community is abuzz over the discovery of a heretofore unknown collection of poems by the English poet William Wordsworth. The cache includes early verses, giving scholars new insight into the poet’s youth. As early as his fourth year, Wordsworth penned these immortal lines, “Lo, on my birthday/My father gave me a small wooden horse/ Which he had made out of clay/I was hoping for socks.”

At 21, Wordsworth received his degree from Eton, but considered it a waste of time. “The manners of the young men were very frantic and dissolute at the time,” he wrote. We now know that Wordsworth was referring to a specific incident in which a group of fellow students “beat me about the head with a frozen whitefish.” Grief-stricken, Wordsworth avenged them by locking himself in a broom closet with a dozen cupcakes and a box of buttons.
Soon thereafter, he wrote the Romantic poem “My Spectre Around Me Night and Day.” This achievement, though remarkable, has puzzled scholars since the identical poem had been written some years before by Robert Burns.
In 1791, Wordsworth met the woman who was to become his wife, and later, the inspiration for his poem “Eyesore.” Historians know that they courted for two years and that Wordsworth arrived at the wedding with a pair of tap shoes and a sack of Belgian waffles. Afterwards, he penned this poem: “Thy eyes are as the blackness of pitch/Thy hair glows like the exotic silks of Asia/Thy frame often blocks out the light.”
Another fascinating poem contained in the cache includes “Reflections on a Painting by Someone Named Dwight,” which begins with the lines: “There was a roaring in the wind/The rain came heavily/But now the sun is rising bright/Two dogs through the garden, no mayo.”
Self-doubt plagued him during his entire life. Not only did he consider himself a dismal failure as a poet, he was incapable of appreciating upholstery. This flaw, along with Wordsworth’s habit of offering advice to sofas, inspired his colleague Percy Byshhe Shelley to call him “a man who cannot cook soup.” In response to this heinous insult, Wordsworth likens his friend to “that substance so dear which oftimes resides in compost.”
But in all of Wordsworth’s random musings, we find one that truly reveals the poet’s genius: “The earth moves when I touch thee/The mountains rise up volcanic when you sing/Together we walk along the meadow fence/Come, let us delight in the taste of mittens.”
Most exciting of all, we now know conclusively that Wordsworth stopped creating poetry after his death in 1850. His last poem, “On the Importance of Drapes,” contains these immortal stanzas, “Woe is me for I shall succumb/To the earth beneath which I shall be silent for eternity or longer/ Perhaps I should bring a sandwich.”


Salon.com
Comments
r
Rated with hugs
(r.)
Enough already with the masturbation talk!!!!
They can be set to music and and are considered to have dignity of style.
I learned that this morning after wandering away from your post.
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once it came to me
that poetry won't pay the bills."
my beloved, long lost friend
please rescue me from blumenthal
and save my big rear end.
to save you from such calumny.
But 'fore I dive into the fray,
what, pray tell, is in it for me?
She'll make you cower
Her breath is sour
no huff, no puff
are you saying my "fray"
is not enough?
Think you so of one so dear?
She's kinda hot from what I hear.
my friend Brawer,
for coming in
to defend my honor?
Meanwhile blu,
I'm hot like sauce,
but that could just be
menopause.
have not brought in a lousy dime.
If my verse does thee defend,
what's my profit in the end?
Jeff Brawer my OS hero,
and oh, to share of our pure milk
and know that blu gets zero.
If I could, up I would cough it.
dear lady, I am here to aid.
But if in coin I won't be paid,
can I take my fee in trade?
R
when we speak of trade and barter
Come hither looks can plant a seed
and I'll throw in a sexy garter.
'Tis surely one of my best deals.
But if you wish my finest verse,
please wear La Perla and high heels.
that thy surname rhymes with devour
The same's not true of blumenthal
nothing rhymes with him at all.
As for La Perla, please be sure,
mine's mostly white, my pearla's pure,
O'Really's good, among the best
cartouche in heels is the real man's test.
Oh yes, that rhymes with Blumenthal
Are just being silly
He, noble knight, she, purest pearl.
cartouche is surely not a challenge
for such as I and Milton Berle.
Blu's poetry sheds no tears.
As I look upon this wasted hour
I'm left but with numb rear.
But please be cautious
This signals Brawer's doom
You've made us nauseous.
I'm going to lunch
I'll be in Boston within the hour.
The only thing deeper or more diviner
is down in Chile where there's still some miners.
I hope you two have foon.
I heard my wife upon the stair.
I must be off; it could be worse.
I leave you with more Wordsworth verse:
"For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
I splash some water on my face
and then go out for Chinese food."
for which the price is high
since no one can afford what I would charge
I'll keep the single guy.