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Friday, February 24, 2006



The end of the show...

Toombes! Great show! Splendid elocution too, just!
Why thank you Beeties, I do my best and to the 3rd degree.
Quite an audience tonight, rather spiffing in these ages?
Yes, yes, by far. And a rousing lot they were, raised my ego a tad! Haha!
Rather! Rather! Oh it's quite a life isn't it?
Well, we thespians tend to think so too.
Did my lighting shine in a way that pleased you?
Well of course! You are quite the lighter! Ha!
I am humble in my glee!
I must be off dear friend and lighter of all, I have a dinner engagement with Glenda Punts.
Ah! Ah! Mustn't keep the luverly Miss punts waiting. Make haste with you!
Good bye Beeties, enjoy your all.
That I will, I will for sure! Tarrah!

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Plastic Ramsbury

...with this rather sharp sword I name thee Bernard the Great...
Oh, terribly sorry, slipped!
Are you ok?

Sunday, February 12, 2006


Well, here we are.
February 12th and all seems well.
But I feel a certain foreboding about things.
The future is clouded with tentacles aloft.
I worry about it.
Throw me some kind of lifeline,
and I will grab it if I can.
Give me a Badger or two first!
Haha!

Fundackles!
And give me hope, Spoonbill.

Come crying to me dear son
I will heal your sorrow
Let it pass while I hold you
And soon you will feel joy
It is just a dream

Friday, February 03, 2006



Trad Noms had a gait known by many.
It was a gauntly kind of gait, interspersed by fits of jerkiness.
You could see him coming from quite a way off, even if you couldn't make out his face. The gait gave him away you might say.
He walked with pride though, his gait a source of pride for him.
Known not only for his gait was he though.
Every Monday and Friday he would make his way to the public library where for several hours a day he would read cross-legged, always in the same spot.
Oh yes! He was a great lover of the printed pages. The words captivated him so much that he often read out loud, or to be precise, read out whisper with obvious delight in his intonation.
A delightful scene to see!
He read poetry most often as far as I know. Tennyson, Pushkin, Burns, to name a few.
In fact his love of poetry rubbed off onto mine self I admit. Keats is my favourite, most splendid prose write did he!
Yes, Trad Noms was a special chap indeed.
Now, he has gone. Taken away by time and returned to the earth. I don't know where he was buried but I imagine Dandelions growing in their brightest glory at his grave.
Some live exciting and powerful lives, some not.
Some live a life anonymous, some not.
Trad Noms lived a life full of inner happiness and contentedness. His love of the prose infected others around him in a way not direct like a scholar, but with the pure infectious fervour of a lover of all things.
I am not a Trad Noms that is for sure, not many are. But they turn up from time to time and I am always looking.
I wonder if Keats was one...I somehow imagine not.
Hurrah!

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