Saturday, June 2, 2012

Poetry Humor



Hannah Arendt and the Duke of Kent

Hannah Arendt and the Duke of Kent
Were discussing English nobles
Said Hannah Arendt, there’s a natural bent
For people to act like Gobbles
The Duke of Kent was quite taken aback
And suggested tennis and tea
Said Hannah Arendt, you won’t get me
To engage in banality

Attacks on Sin

Attacks on sin
In poor syntax
Force sinners
To their grammars

The rightous to
The scriptures turn
To learn just what’s
Good manners

Twenty Third and ½ Psalm

The Lord is my shepard
I shall not want
At least if I get
A house in Larchmont
He leads me beside the still waters
Of  Long Island Sound
He restores my bank account



Song by Harry Belafonte

Day off
Day off
Daylight come and
I want to stay home

The Girl that I Marry

The girl that I marry
Will have to be
As soft and as sweet
As a zeppoli

The girl I call my own
Will wear garlic and spices
And smell of calzone

Her nails will be bitten
And in her hair
She’ll wear her hair curlers
And I’ll be there

Stead of sweets a
She'll eat pizza
And she’ll make
Her sauce with
Lots of meat-sa

A doll I can carry
The girl that I marry
Must be



To Pee or not to Pee

To pee or not to pee, that is the question
Whether tis nobler in the bath
To suffer the stings and arrows
Of outrageous bladder
Or push up arms
Against a sea of bubbles
And by arising end them
To wee, to seep, aye there’s the tub





THE BRONX BRAHMAS
(With apologies to Emerson)

By J.E. LeMoult


If the Red Sox think they slay
Or the other teams think they are done
They know not well the subtle ways
The Yankees have of making runs

Far outfield walls to them are near
Day games and night games are the same
Ruth and Gehrig to them appear
And one to them is game and fame

They reckon ill who leave them out
When they let fly the balls have wings
They quiet the doubters with their clout
They sing the song October brings

The strong teams pine for Jeter strong
And pine in vain to just break even
But thou, meek lover of the game
This year it is the Yankee’s season.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Churches in Greenwich Connecticut

When God first created Greenwich, He looked down and saw people who were happy, contented, rich and Congregationalist. This, for some reason, disturbed Him greatly. God got nervous when people were tranquil, so He said to Himself “Behold, they are one people and they have one church; and this is only the beginning of what they will do. Come, let us go down and bust their chops, and create new, contentious churches, so that they may give each other the business.”

So God descended upon them and put a bee in their bonnet, and the people of the Round Hill Church began to accuse each other of heresy and tastelessness. One issue divided the congregation. It was whether the precise temperature of hell was 673 degrees, as claimed by the Minister, Dr. Zebulon Tophet, or 95 degrees with 85% humidity, as claimed by the dissidents led by Moses Feake.

The dissidents opened their own church on an adjoining lot in 1782. Dr. Tophet hurled heated invective, vituperation, anathemas, and excommunications across the way, killing two dissidents and injuring one.

Meanwhile, God was busy helping people. It was His policy to hear all prayers. But God stuck to his policy of moving in mysterious ways. Thus, those praying for wealth, health and a new kitchen, failed to show proper appreciation when God gave them hemorrhoids. People continued to believe in God but thought He had an unlisted number.

For example, Elma Sloop prayed: “God Almighty, why haven’t I gotten the Merillat cabinets I asked for last year?” God spoke out of the whirlwind: “Where were you when I laid the foundations of your builder’s colonial? Tell me if you have understanding. Who brought in the plumbing and repaired it when the pipes burst? Who wired the houses so they could hook up seven T.V. sets and six stereos? Who? You? Nooo.” So Elma was chastened, and said “Lord, I know thou canst do all things, and thy reasons are hidden, so don’t worry about me, I don’t really need cabinets, and besides, there’s a sale at Sears next week.”

Over the years other churches were founded. The Episcopals opened Christ Church only to experience that inexorable plunge toward disorder and entropy governed by the second law of thermodynamics. Soon there were High Episcopals, Low Episcopals, and Medium Episcopals. They all disagreed about the same issue that divided the early Church Fathers, Jerome, Augustine, Ambrose and Harry, i.e., whether Christ is present in the bread or just the crust.

Eventually there were so many churches in Greenwich that residents had choices ranging from the Memorial Church of the Very Holy Ghosts, to Randy Tophet’s First Church of Rent-a-God. Randy’s church believes in a hired power. They just don’t buy religion. Randy’s congregation tries harder than other congregations and prays to “Number One.”

Finally, the atheists of town formed their own church, “St. O’Hare’s,” with the motto “Thank God we’re atheists.” Malcolm Feuerbach, minister of the church, was fond of saying that religious people were in for a big surprise when they died because they would wake up and find out that there is no God.

Friday, October 28, 2011

The Coming-Out Party

The Coming-Out Party was originated by the Sinoway Indians. Young Indian maidens of the tribe were stripped naked, smeared with buffalo grease, and required to dance before the young bucks of the tribe while the bucks beat their tom toms. In order to come-out, a pre-squaw needed a large escort, and could not hold a coming-out party without a lot of bucks.

Over the centuries the coming out party has evolved into a charming and graceful affair in which debutantes get to drink champagne, eat caviar, dance all night at the country club, and wear fashionable gowns which cover-up the buffalo grease.

The recent debut of Pricilla Papworth Longbottom is an example. Pricilla, “Pru”, did not want to have a coming-out party. She wanted to give all of the money to the poor people of Darien, Connecticut, and become a nun in the Catholic Church. Her father was pleased, but her mother, a pillar of the Round Hill Episcopal Church, took an overdose of Diet Valium, and spent six weeks in Greenwich Hospital. Finally Pru agreed to have a coming-out party, and Mrs. Papworth Longbottom came home well and ready to hire the caterers.

Pru looked lovely in her white gown with only a hint of buffalo grease in the cleft. She was escorted by Tip Wellsmith, son of the renowned proctologist, Skip Wellsmith, and by Rip Flosswhight, son of the financier and part time beer mug collector, Flip Flosswhight. Everyone danced under the tents to the music of Lester Lanin and his band.

Late that night Sister Mary of the Little Sisters of St. Myrtle parked her van at the dark end of the Longbottom driveway and stole up the road to the back of the house. The ladder was out of the garage, and Sister Mary pulled it up and leaned it against the house. Soon a dark figure descended the ladder carrying a bundle. At the bottom, Sister Mary said, “Jesus is happy tonight. You’ve made the right decision. Now you can spend the rest of your life working for God instead of idling your time in decadent high society.” Mr. Longbottom looked up: “I’ve wanted to be a Trappist monk for twenty years now. Thanks for the lift Sister. Those two women can have the Junior League, I’m off for Kentucky and a life of contemplation.”

Thursday, October 20, 2011

The People of Greenwich

Greenwich, Connecticut, is populated by rich, white, anglo-saxon protestants (WASPS). Some of these people are as rich as Croseus, but Croseus lives across the line in Stamford and cannot get into the Greenwich Country Club.

When I first moved to Greenwich from polyglot Manhattan, I said to myself, “Jack” (That’s what I call myself), “Jack, who are these rich Wasps to think that they are superior to everyone else?” I decided to research the question and consulted the leading authorities.

To my amazement, I discovered that I was all wrong. Rich Wasps really are superior to everybody else. They do deserve to live in the best houses, drive BMWs, and shop at Talbots. In every study, Wasps scored higher than other ethnic groups. One leading survey of the subject is the March 1998 Consumer Report’s rating of ethnic groups. Listing the groups in order of estimated overall quality, Consumer Reports puts Wasps first by a wide margin.

The only dissenter in this chorus of praise for Wasps was the consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who said Wasps should be recalled for an adjustment in their senses of humor.

Professor Malcolm Mullet of Harvard University is an anthropologist who has spent many years among the Wasps of Greenwich studying their fascinating customs and rituals. Dr. Mullet says that at first the Wasps were apprehensive and distrustful in his presence, but after years of growing familiarity, they came to accept him into even their most private ceremonies. What Dr. Mullet discovered is astounding and has revolutionized the outside world’s picture of these remarkable people.
In his report for National Geographic Magazine, richly illustrated with pictures of Wasps in their colorful costumes, Dr. Mullet investigates the central ritual of Wasp culture, the ceremony in which they gather to share food and the latest gossip of the tribe-- the dinner party.

The food is carefully prepared and served with a great flourish amid much favorable commentary. It is not, however, something any civilized person would want to eat. To the normal palate, accustomed as it is to the many joys of Big Macs, pizzas, Taco Bells, and General Tso’s Chicken, the ingestion of Wasp comestibles usually results in extensive gagging.

The marketing for these edibles is done at a local establishment by the women in fetching short cotton outfits called “tennis dresses.” Although no tennis is actually played in the supermarket, there is much lively conversation about it among the shoppers who gaily participate in the collective subterfuge that they are coming from or going to tennis matches.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Buying the Castle

A spectacular night of successive winners at Aqueduct Racetrack produced a most unexpected surplus on my balance sheet. Up to this point, I had lived the customary hand-to-mouth existence of a seedy counselor at law residing in New York City. But now, I was able to stop wearing the false beard and rubber nose employed to avoid the hectoring attentions of my many creditors. I looked forward to bright nights in the Big Apple, sampling the haute cuisine and premier vintages of the best restaurants, hitting the hit shows, spending weekdays at the track.

But my wife Grunhilda, descendent of Viking warriors, declared in the dulcet tones of Hulk Hogan that we were moving out of “this dump.” She asserted that the healthy air and wholesome atmosphere of suburbia would help clear up our son’s chronic facial boils and intractable juvenile delinquency. Bowing to the persuasiveness of her arguments, and to the fact that she could beat me in arm-wrestling, I agreed. We were heading for Greenwich Connecticut.

Greenwich is a town of about fifty-eight thousand people of whom fifty thousand are real estate agents. The other eight thousand spend all of their time being shown around by the brokers. It is Hobbs’ war of “all against all” with every agent prowling, protective, paranoid, angry, and armed to the teeth. Every morning the police find the bodies of brokers strewn about the streets of Greenwich, but that is mainly because most real estate agents are heavy drinkers.

Our agent, a burly female martial arts expert in pink blazer and black belt, met us at the railroad station in her armored BMW. She asked what type of residence we were interested in. Grunhilda and I answered in unison (C Flat Major) “something on the water.” After an appraising stare, our agent politely inquired if we meant perhaps something like a houseboat or Chinese junk. We responded that we would prefer something equipped with trees and grass. Disregarding the narrow possibility that I represented some derelict branch of the Rockefeller family, our agent queried whether we were prepared to pay the $10,000 per blade of grass commanded by waterfront property. As the blood drained from our faces, she suggested several alternatives; i.e. something with a distant glimpse of the water, which she labeled “indirect water;” something on a stream, namely “direct creek;” or something attached to the town water line, or “direct pipe.”

Our agent showed us an authentic castle which had been built by an eccentric earwax tycoon who had brought it over, stone by stone, from Nutley New Jersey. The bridge over the moat led directly into a room with a cathedral ceiling. Grunhilda was charmed, but said we would have to get rid of the stained glass windows, pulpit, and pews. We decided to buy it.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

An Outlaw Dog

When we lived in Greenwich Connecticut in the 1970s-1980s, we had a dog named Valentine. She was a mutt, and Greenwich is a pretty fancy town. We eventually had to get rid of her. This was my eulogy in the Greenwich News.

The long criminal career of Valentine LeMoult, my outlaw dog, is over. This will come as welcome news to the decent, upstanding citizens of Greenwich, but many a grizzled veteran of the underworld is blinking back a tear as he elbows up to a bar down by the railroad tracks.

Valentine was a legend in her own grime. In her early days, she traveled with Butch Beagle and the Sundance Hound. She was their gun moll and was known to have personally participated in knocking over banks of garbage pails. She once single-handedly held up traffic in downtown Old Greenwich for ten minutes while the gang made a getaway behind the GranCentral Market.

In her old age, Valentine limited her criminal activity to violation of a host of state and local ordinances. Gone were the glory days with the old gang. But like Al Capone, who was ignominiously defeated by the Internal Revenue Code, it was municipal ordinances which got Valentine in the end.

Valentine started out life as the afterthought of a dashing Labrador Retriever passing through to Dodge City and a pliant Springer Spaniel named Kitty, who couldn’t resist the smooth line of her vagabond lover. That was the last she ever saw of the Lab except for one postcard from Juarez, which said he was on the lam - or was it the lamb chop?

We first saw Valentine at the Stamford Pound where she was being held on charges of practicing dogginess without a license. She was named after the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. We had lived in New York City for 13 years and didn’t know that Greenwich had a rule requiring that all dogs be purebred with lineage going back to the time of William the Conqueror.

We asked the warden the make and model of Valentine. “This is a ‘Basics’ dog” he said. “You know, like the ‘Basics’ products you can buy in some supermarkets.” Well, we asked, is there a name for the breed? “Yes,” he said. “This is a pure Cur, of the hangdog variety.” Ah, we sighed. Of course. We could see that hangdog look, the drooping eyes, the drooling mouth, and fleas. We asked to see her “papers.” He produced a rap sheet showing 17 arrests and six convictions. “And at such a young age,” we said. “We’d like to bail her out.” “Okay,” said the warden, “but this dog is trouble. It’s your problem now.”

I can’t tell you the river of tears shed by my wife over the years because of the wild antics of our wandering acquisition. While we plugged away at the ranch, looking at the horizon for some sign of the fleas and ticks which usually preceded her arrival, Valentine was off with Butch and Sundance casing some veal joint or eluding the long arm of the law. We had both grown up in a frontier gold-mining town called Larchmont, New York, where dogs roamed free and every man packed a gun. We couldn’t bear the thought of locking up this emancipated scion of the wild sagebrush. But we both knew that Valentine would come to no good end.

One day, while pitching hay in the barn, I got a call from a lady in downtown Old Greenwich. “Do you own a small black dog with floppy ears and spots on its paws?” she asked. “Maybe,” I answered, “who wants to know?” “Well I’m a dog lover, first class,” she responded, “and everybody down here says this is your dog.” “Probably is,” I said, “what is the problem?” “The poor dog is lost and wandering around,” she said, deep concern reflected in her voice. “Well ma’am, I’m right grateful to you for calling; I’ll just mosey on down and get her.”

As I hung up the phone, I tried to stifle a laugh. Lost! That dog has never been lost. She could set up an information booth in Old Greenwich and offer tours of the town. She knows every street, house, back alley and garbage can in the area. She was on a first-name basis with the druggist, the barber, and the firemen.

But every dog has its day, and Valentine’s has come and gone. Her picture is still in every post office, and the “Most Wanted” television series recently did a special segment on her illegal exploits. One of our neighbors recognized her under her alias, Ma Barker, and threatened to report her to the authorities.

Our neighbor had good cause for umbrage. He had his house on the market for sale, and Valentine chose his yard as a temporary hideout. While lying low under his bushes, Valentine noticed that the house was not equipped with a bomb shelter and set about excavating holes to provide this luxury. Unable to erect a sign advertising her services - as roofers, painters and remodelers often do - Valentine left several of her calling cards around the property.

In her twilight years of fading beauty, Valentine would put on heavy lipstick, rouge and eye makeup, and hang out in the middle of the intersection near our house. Some friends, seeing her lying there motionless, feared (or hoped) she was dead. But no such luck. She was just regulating traffic.

My neighbor pointed-out that Valentine was in violation of Statutes forbidding “roaming upon the land.” Guilty as charged. But this dog didn’t just roam, she traveled, she explored, she set out in the spirit of Vasco de Gama, Marco Polo, Amundsen and Perry. She would have been the first dog to conquer Mt. Everest if she’d had a better travel agent. He also accused Valentine of violating the Statute which prohibits dogs from being a “nuisance.” Now this I resent. Even though she was old and arthritic, Valentine was never a mere “nuisance.” She remained an outright menace to civilized society right up until the end.

Well, Greenwich is a town that carefully cultivates its lawns and property values. It’s no place for a free spirit like Valentine. We’ve put her out to pasture. Happy trails to you, Valentine, until we meet again.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Things I Do In Stores

All of these Stories are True

Once when we were in the drug store, Julie was buying some makeup. When she came to the counter, I said to her in front of the man who was waiting on us: “You look good in makeup ever since the sex-change operation.” The man looked at Julie and said: “It must be fun.” Julie said: “It never ends.”

Once Brendan and I were in a men's clothing store and I asked the clerk if they had any shirts that were "extra medium." The clerk looked perplexed, and said "No, just medium." Brendan pretended he was not with me.

On another occasion, I was in a deli and I asked the girl at the counter if she could guarantee that the red-skin potato salad was made by authentic redskins. She was indignant and said "No, it’s made here."

On one occasion, we were in a shoe store and they said that if you bought a pair of shoes, you could buy a second pair of shoes for 1/2 off. I asked the clerk if I could buy only the second pair of shoes. She said "No, you have to buy the first pair first."
Nobody laughed.