Circa 1994
There's nothing the matter with me!
I only got stung by a bee ‑‑
My eye is shut tight, but I still see all right
If I squint with the other the
least little mite,
So there's nothing the matter
with me!
There's nothing the matter with me.
O, I swallowed an ant with my tea,
But viewed from a properly
personal slant,
Though unpleasant for me, it was
worse for the ant!
There's nothing the matter with
me!
I’ve been hearing some strange
tales from fellow members of the golf club. One friend had to contend with a bat that
somehow got into her house--down the chimney, perhaps. She managed to shoo the
creature into her screened porch and then shut the door. I'm foggy about the
details of what happened after that, but the bat ended up on the floor a couple
of days later, quite dead, poor thing.
Another friend noticed a
raccoon foraging in her yard. Nervous about the safety of her four cats, Mary began
calling them into the house. They came in through the little swinging door constructed for this
purpose, and she put food out for them.
"Wait a minute,"
she said to herself. "How come I see three gray cats when only two them
are gray?” The third gray cat was the raccoon, who was
helping himself to a saucer of Friskies. Again, I'm hazy about how she persuaded the raccoon to leave, but he is doubtless waiting for another
invitation to dine with Mary's cats.
Today's story capped them
all. Nancy and her family were having a picnic in
her yard. When her granddaughter ate only half of her sandwich, Nancy decided
to eat the other half. She felt a terrible pain starting at the roof of her
mouth and continuing down her throat. It felt like a sharp piece of metal.
Nancy said to her daughter,
"I feel as if I swallowed the blade of a knife.” She put her finger down her throat, choked up the
bite of sandwich, and behold--a live and very confused bee was sitting on the
lettuce and tomato.
My friend hastily took three
antibiotic pills, which she always has with her because she's allergic to bee
stings. Her throat was sore and swollen for a couple of days, but otherwise she
had no ill effects. I can imagine the bee's side of the story when he returned
to his hive. "I was minding my own beezness and enjoying a Bee-L-T when
all of a sudden this monster as big as a whale swallowed me in one gulp. I know
just how Jonah must have felt!”
Nancy's experience reminded
me of Mom’s "Picnic Fun."
There's nothing the matter with me!
My eye is shut tight, but I still see all right
There's nothing the matter with me!
Except for this bruise on my knee,
And the ivy, of course,
where I sat for a chat,
Was the poison variety. Other than that,
There's nothing the matter with me.
Except for this bruise on my knee,
And the ivy, of course,
where I sat for a chat,
Was the poison variety. Other than that,
There's nothing the matter with me.
There's nothing the matter with me.
O, I swallowed an ant with my tea,
So there's nothing the matter,
No, nothing the matter,
Ernestine Cobern Beyer
Stopped by to say hi and do a little reading before I had to get beezy at work...
ReplyDeleteHave some of your mother's wonderful Christmas poems up on my blog. Have tried to format the lines of the verses properly, but then my blog has a mind of its own and sometimes squishes them altogether.
Hard to bee-lieve, but it's true!
Love n *K*s always!
As you can see, Rhapsody, my blog has a mind of its own too. No use trying to revise.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad you are continuing to honor my mother by
printing her "`Tis the season" poems. I'll soon be scheduling "Santa's Private Life," which features all of Ernestine's Christmas hilarities.
Hugs and kisses right back atcha!