Jump to content
The Education Forum

Tony Hemmings

Members
  • Posts

    8
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Tony Hemmings's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/14)

  1. 1st Feb ‘05 UNDERWEAR CONCEALED Frilly French knickers and racy cut bra Revealing the person you really are But the problem is always that’s nothing revealed, When everything under is sadly concealed. Fanciful feathery fashions are fine, Designed for the dollybird, diva divine, In satin or cotton, nylon or lace, Flimsy bits kept with elastic in place. A man and a woman have fantasy thoughts But what is inside the sweater and shorts? Hundreds of pounds are spent in a year But not in the light of day to appear. 2nd Feb ‘05 MICHAEL JACKSON ACCUSED Michael Jackson is top of the news - A trial by the Media which couldn’t refuse A sensational story before he is tried - Who on this earth is allowed to decide? A prodigy child of the song and the dance, A world of admirers was left in a trance. A magnificent mover and singer supreme, A career of a lifetime, a champion’s dream. A lover of children, accused of abuse – What will the public and jury deduce? But parading his millions in innocent white With impressions of grandeur, will only incite. 3rd Feb ‘05 HYPOCRISY ‘Gangsters and bribers, brigands and muggers’ Thus Kinnock described the House of Lords. With a bitter dislike for the Tory buggers, Preferring to pander to socialist hordes. He was living in Brussels and lining his pocket, And waving the flag for his paymaster mates. If you’re joining a club, you don’t want to knock it, So why should the lords have to open the gates? He said of the Lords that he wasn’t persuaded But lo and behold he has changed his mind. With a hypocrite now the House is pervaded, But how many friends is he able to find? 4th Feb ‘05 INSTRUCTIONS ON CLOBBERING YOUR BURGLAR To clobber your burglar, you must follow the course Prescribed by the Government on the using of force, By having the leaflet at hand by your bed, To read when you hear that ominous tread. ‘Reasonable force’ is the key to it all – Just enough power to cause him to fall – A nice little pat with a poker or bat, Exerting restraint on the devilish rat. Then call the police with your foot on his head, Be gentle or else he might sue you instead. Ignore the adrenalin pumping away, No anger, revenge - just calm on the day! 5th Feb ‘05 OIL PROFITS One million pounds in profit a day Shell has announced with a massive hooray But so does the government relish the news As number one payer of taxable dues. Shell and BP work the North Sea Oil With billions of barrels to bubble and boil – The blood of economies, priming the pump – Cut the supply and you’ll witness a slump. Britain’s no longer so self sufficient – An island alone in danger, deficient – It has to pay homage to Shell and BP To retain and secure its prosperity. 6th Feb ‘05 SIX NATIONS RUGBY Six nations are poised for this annual event With nationalist mania their favour to vent – A rugby spectacular, pitting their strengths, Prepared to resort to incredible lengths. A matter of history, battles of old, Nations in conflict, the children were told. “We a re the greatest”, everyone chants Whipping each other into a trance. The Welsh beat the English, a victory sweet, The Celts driving Saxons into retreat, The French beat the Scots in a dubious win, And Italy threatened the Irish chin.
  2. 25th Jan ‘05 COOL TO BE COLD A cold Winter’s morning, the wind from the North Piercing the children sallying forth, Dressed for the classroom, no sensible coat – No scarf, hat nor gloves – just nothing of note. Bare tummies galore and blue from the cold, On fatuous fashions the youngsters are sold – Exposing the flesh to the ice and the chill, No thought or concern of why they are ill. No wish to be called a sissy or wimp, Better the naked stomach to crimp - Hardly a sight to encourage the boys - A ridiculous trend that a girl enjoys. 26th Jan ‘05 BELSEN GRAVES In this grave ten thousand lie, Of Jews and Poles, they had to die – Ten thousand graves of thousands more, Six million was the final score. The world has witnessed genocide, For some the world has sadly died – Survivors came to see this place, With graves and memories hard to face. The Belsen graves are wet with tears, The mounds will last a thousand years, All full of piles and piles of bones, But souls will never turn to stones. 27th Jan ‘05 CHEVROLET COMES TO BRITAIN Britain is getting the Chevrolet, Chevy for short, hurray, hurray - An American favourite for fifty years, Cheap and efficient, the model endears. But gone are the days of a twenty foot long, And guggling gas which went for a song - Economy, safety, and price are the rage, And size for the parking and watching the gauge. Goodbye to the Daewoo, but made in Korea, The Chevy Lacetti’s about to appear, GM has arrived with the brand of its own, With not very long before it is known. 28th Jan ‘05 LAZY We live in an age when we don’t want to walk, And with tv and radio, not even to talk - With computers and phones we have no need to write - And we carry a card if the money is tight. By making one call, they’ll deliver the food, No need to go out if we’re not in the mood – We can buy from a catalogue, no need for a shop, And the Internet’s there for recording the pop, And providing the knowledge and all kinds of news, The weather and bargains to daily to peruse, So apart from the need for going to work, We can all stay at home to wallow and shirk. 29th Jan ‘05 ELECTIONS IN IRAQ The Elections have finally come to Iraq, But there’s always a joker to play in the pack, And Zarqawi is doing all that he can To frighten the voters and hijack the plan. The forces of reason just haven’t a chance With each of the parties taking a stance With violence and threats to pressure the vote And suicide bombers their trade to promote. Billions of dollars are pledged for a peace But Iraq as a nation has only a lease, Its natural wealth and land is for sale To terrorist groups, should democracy fail. 30th Jan ‘05 CARPE DIEM Everyone ought to be seizing the day, For life on earth is such a short stay. A third of our life is spent fast asleep, And another third lying around in a heap. Time to be working the body and brain, Keeping them healthy with knowledge to gain, To be a good citizen, helping the weak, The meaning of life in the world to seek. Exploring the limits of action and trust, Belief in the goodness of man a must, Extolling the virtues of work till you drop, Then after the day you are able to stop.
  3. 7th Jan ‘05 END OF WEEK 1 What a relief at the end of the week, The first of the year and looking so bleak – Nothing but terrible news every day, In the world and the office, but needing the pay. Starting the engine again from the cold, Blowing out smoke and another year old, Oiling the parts and the difficult boss, Cleaning the body and putting on gloss. Back to procedures and lousy routine, Churned all around in a washing machine – A disposable item to be shown on the books - To be an employee is not what it looks. 8th Jan ‘05 JERRY SPRINGER – THE OPERA Old Jerry Springer is stirring up strife On live television – a pitiful life Encouraging hate on the studio floor, With ‘f’ing and fighting like never before. The audience bays for the stooges on stage, Lunatics found for a war to wage. Smug little Jerry likes raising the stakes, And poking his oar in and cueing the breaks. Now there’s an opera made of his show, A fail for the ‘f’ing for fouling the flow. The composer, the singers and chorus were fine But the people and words were a decadent sign. 9th Jan ‘05 TWO BOILED EGGS Breakfast on Sunday, a serious treat – Two boiled eggs and the toast to complete The joy of the week, if you follow the rules With the proper ingredients and appropriate tools. Pepper and salt, the toaster and rack, Pricking the eggs to avoid any crack - Boil in a saucepan, five minutes precise, With a cutter, the top off the eggs to slice. Butter the toast, then fingers to make, In pepper and salt the tasties to rake, Then dip them right into the core of the egg, A magnificent taste for the world to beg. 10th Jan ‘05 DELUGE IN CARLISLE Not on the scale of tsunami, it’s true, But those in Carlisle had more than their due From a downpour of rain from the threatening moors, With global warming the probable cause. The city was flooded to more than eight feet. A flotilla of dinghies along every street Ferried the stranded to higher ground But sadly some of the residents drowned. Five thousand homes and businesses hit – Ten thousand people were cruelly split But draining the plains and planing the drains Didn’t help much in absorbing the rains. 11th Jan ‘05 BLAIR V BROWN PART 2 They conjure up tales of political lore, The media relish a personal war Of confident Blair and capable Brown Fighting it out but playing it down. Friendly but fickle, flirting with fate, They smile at each other but inwardly hate, But being PM, it is hard to forego The trappings of power when you’re running the show. Gordon, ambitious, with wearisome eyes, Hopes from the Left for a pleasant surprise, With kniving, conniving, the battle of ‘B’s Will rage in the virulent media sleaze. 12th Jan ‘05 UNIVERSITY STUDENTS University students are poor, Struggling to make ends meet, But the morals of many leave much to deplore – They plagiarize and cheat. Uncivil, unruly and impolite, With no time for ethics and rules, Unwilling to do what is decent and right, It’s not what they teach in the schools. These, the intelligent cream of our race, Should be lectured on how to behave As responsible students with manners and grace, About ethics and morals to rave.
  4. 25th Dec 04 SNOW ON CHRISTMAS DAY A falling of snow on Christmas day Much to the bookies sad dismay But not many ventured outside in the cold Preferring to sleep and presents unfold. This is a day to fully unwind Away from the pressure and daily grind With Christians to celebrate Jesus’s birth, The joy in his coming with pleasure and mirth. If we only had Christmas each day of the year When everyone hopes for and brings good cheer, Then peace on our earth would quickly prevail And Christ as our saviour would everyone hail. TSUNAMI IN INDIAN OCEAN The earthquake erupted deep under the sea, An explosion of massive intensity In the Indian ocean, just after the dawn, Not time to escape or even to warn. A wave of enormous proportions spread out To Thailand, Sumatra, Sri Lanka to rout. Nothing and no-one could alter its course, A steam roller wall of incredible force. The coastlines were totally wiped away Together with people perchance in the way. Thousands were plunged to a watery grave, Like pieces of driftwood unable to save. 27th Dec 04 DEATH AT CHRISTMAS So many deaths at Christmas time, Tsunamis, explosions and violent crime, African poverty, Middle East strife, Everyone has their own value on life. Christmas is more about birth than death With carols of joy from every breath So losses at Christmas have double the force, Families drowned in pain and remorse. Sad that our Christmas could not be of peace Free from disasters, a gentle release, But nothing could save the poor souls from the wave, A Christmas to ponder, the cradle and grave. 28th Dec 04 AFTER THE TSUNAMI Stories of death and disaster are told Courage with fortune or fate unfold - Maybe one hundred thousand are lost And no-one is able to count the cost. Bodies are lying all over the place, Buried in buildings without a trace, Left to decay for spreading disease, Bringing he countries close to their knees. Battered and blistered bodies are still, Malaria, cholera rampant at will – No water drink in the festering heat And not enough medicine the living to treat. 29th Dec 04 INTERIM WEEK An interim week for the country at large Moving along at the speed of a barge, Leisurely indolent, slothful and fat, An economy stalled, lethargic and flat. Most have got out of the habit of work, Enjoying the fun of the holiday perk, Putting up feet and nursing a head, Watching the tele and lying in bed. Britain reclining, declining in power, Increasing the national debt by the hour, Whilst hungrier countries slave away, Producing the goods and earning their pay. 30th Dec 04 OBSESSIONS Research says obsessions are out of control, Fanned by the media, taking their toll On the souls and the pockets of citizens fair, Consumed in the end by the wasted affair. Watching the football, match after match, Drooling about a celebrity catch, Fooled by the horoscopes, crystal balls, Glued to the soaps whatever befalls. Now the computer is sucking us in, Stealing our hours like a magnet within, Obsessed to the point of no release, Yet none will provide a morsel of peace.
  5. 15th Dec 04 BLUNKETT RESIGNS The media revelled in cutting him down, Quick to find fault in a man of renown, Scorned by the woman who gave him a child In a previous life when their passions were wild. A good man at heart but arrogant, tough, Happy to fight when the going got rough, Berating his colleagues when writing his book, Wanting, it seems, his own goose to cook. Encouraged, admired by his own PM, Immigrants, crime and terror to stem - A political maverick, lost in his prime, To be blind in his passion his solitary crime. 16th Dec 04 CRICKETING LOSS Cricket is part of the national domain, A subject of passion as much as the rain, Watched by an avid fanatical eye – A ball by ball drama for all to espy. All of the ages can follow the game, Never a match or a ball is the same, Once on the box for all to see, But now we are facing calamity. The Cricketing Board has succumbed to the guile Of monopoly Sky for making a pile At the expense of the nation, having to pay Four hundred a year for watching the play. 17th Dec 04 RETAILERS’ PANIC Sales in the retail sector are poor, Money is tight and stretched to the core With borrowing high, there’s trouble in store – With retailers now in an all out war. They’re cutting the margins and price to the bone, No interest on credit nor personal loan, Loss leader bribes for getting them in, Ads in the nationals with prizes to win. Too many shopkeepers, too many goods, Maybe they’ll never be out of the woods, With Internet shopping all of the rage, It’s the start of the end of the High Street age. 18th Dec 04 TURKEY IN EUROPE Turkey in Europe is part of the plan, Fifty more millions to add to the clan. Muslims to mix with the Christian brigade Or the start of a cunning reversal crusade? Christ was our countries’ exclusive belief But a century passed has turned a new leaf And Europe is now but a multiple breed Of origins global in colour and creed. Sixty years after the end of the war There’s peace that is safer than ever before And maybe the Turks will add to the mix, To the sloth of the countries a welcoming fix.
  6. 7th Dec 04 FISH STOCKS DWINDLE The waters round Britain are losing their fish - A serious threat to the fish and chip dish, The most popular meal in Britain's cuisine, So why should the Government intervene? The problem is trawling with nets far and wide, With gargantuan mouths for a harvest inside Of every conceivable fish in the sea From cod to a porpoise - sheer lunacy! Left to the gulls the forbidden catch, The trawlermen forced to forego their patch To give time to regenerate dwindling stocks, the boats and consumers stuck hard on the rocks. 8th Dec 04 CAR CLAMPERS As a clamper of cars, a profession to gain, Five hundred pounds for the skill to train In immobilization - a chain and a plate Securing a wheel and the vehicle's fate. Needing a hacksaw to open the vice, Most are resigned to paying the price For failing to follow the crippling laws And bowing to meters and feeding their jaws. To set the device is a simple affair Compared with the hazardous meeting and scare In being confronted with hate and abuse - So most of the course is in making a truce. 9th Dec 04 BBC REDUNDANCIES They are cutting the staff at the BBC, A radical step in adversity, Attacked by the Press for the licence fee, Unsure of its ultimate destiny. They have to keep up in this digital age, A war with commercial parties to wage In keeping the dreaded commercials at bay - Offering choice is the only way. Twenty-five thousand are paid to produce And deliver the programmes with no excuse, Not with a view to a ratings war - Simply a case of offering more. 10th Dec 04 A TRUFFLE OBSCENE Twenty-eight thousand pounds was paid By celebrities fooled, lamented, and crazed For a truffling treasure the size of a fist, But the ultimate outcome was not as they wished. The chef put the novelty out on display Like a gnarled potato, or a model in clay. Then put in the safe in the fridge to protect, Awaiting the moment of truth to dissect. But sadly the key to the safe disappeared. As the week went by the future was feared. When the key was unearthed the truffle had mould, And that was the end of their portion of gold. 11th Dec 04 STRICTLY COME DANCING The celebrity novice is learning to dance Careering along in a ballroom prance Following teacher with tentative toes Trying to look like one of the pros. But moving to music is not for us all - No bodily rhythm, not having a ball, Exposed and inhibited, stuck to the floor, Ridiculed judged with a pitiful score. To glide like a skater with style and panache, Or walking on stilts to wait for the crash - The pupil and teacher have miracles made, In pleasure and pain a picture parade. 12th Dec 04 BBC'S SPORTS PERSONALITY The top of the sports from the BBC, The annual theatrical jamboree, The moments of glory for viewers replayed, The best of our Britishers on parade. Gold Kelly Holmes was the star of the night - To come from behind was a glorious sight, Then Pinsent the rower with four golds in all And Freddie the Flintoff for bat and the ball. For Botham, the hero, a lifetime award And tennis's Federer, the winner abroad - There were Ryder Cup, Relay, Arsenal and Test But the team of the rowers were voted the best. 13th Dec 04 WHEN A BOY RAPES A TEACHER A teacher is raped by a twelve year old, A boy with behavioural problems we're told, At the end of a one to one class in the school - Hardly a case of just breaking the rule. Barely passed puberty but clearly obsessed, His body awakening put to the test - Only a child but destroyed as a child, Neglected and left to survive in the wild. Hard to believe at such tender an age, Enough to incur our society's rage At an act so outrageous, so cruelly debased, The result of his crime in fear to be faced. 14th Dec 04 PIGS ON THE RUN They are anti-social behaviour pigs, Out of their field to their newly found digs Of manicured gardens and looking for treats, Enjoying their freedom and roaming the streets. Frightfully bored they nosed under the wire, Leaving a telltale trail in the mire, Snorting and squealing like yobs in the town, The police and the villagers tracking them down. An ASBO was served on the farmer in court, Required to comply with the pigs' support, Not to cause havoc all over the place, As if they were humans to spoil and debase.
  7. 1st Dec 04 MURDER UNLIMITED Concealing a weapon, he knocks on the door, Ready to strike and push to the floor An innocent victim, easy to kill, Rich for the pickings, murder at will. Desperate, demented, high on cocaine, But callous and cool, like an actor to train, He offers a smile that pierces the heart Tearing his guise and his victim apart. With the flash of the tongue of a poisonous snake, He shatters his prey who thought him a fake - Murder most foul for meazly drugs Calls for the noose for the merciless thugs. 2nd Dec 04 3G PHONES Tomorrow the operators think you will own The third generation of mobile phone With multiple options to understand, Sound, picture, text, in the palm of your hand. Walking the streets with your eye on the screen, Scanning the messages scene by scene, Glued to the box like a video game, With never the chance to finally tame. A picture in thumbnail, miniature mad, Fiddling fingers to follow the fad, Talk to the camera with arm outstretched - Is the video age on our brain to be etched? 3rd Dec 04 GORDON BROWN, CHANCELLOR, FATHER They say there will be an election in May, And Brown, in his wisdom, is paving the way With a package of sweets, and electoral bribe For a family friendly welfare tribe. Paying for longer maternity leave, Encouraging couples now to conceive And flexible working as they progress, For parents and voters, the child to bless. Setting up schools for free nursery care, From morning till night, the baby to share – Gordon, the father, flexible, free, Staking his claim for supremacy. 4th Dec 04 WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE? Do we all have a genealogical trait To know of our ancestors rather than fate, To discover the reasons we are what we are? Better than reading the stars by far. These are the facts, the looks and the deeds, The National Archive giving us leads To past generations, for better or worse, Born with a silver spoon or a curse. Are we from modest and humble means, Tracing a line of conventional genes Or a mixture of questionable qualities cast, Totally different from centuries past? 5th Dec 04 NO PARKING SPACE Too many cars and not enough space, Temperatures rising for finding a place – Parking is nearing a national disease, Nowhere to go and exorbitant fees. Vehicles littered in overspill, Creating a wasteland, left in the will Of today’s generation, per person a car, A raging catastrophe threatens afar. The centre of cities have ground to a halt, And who is to blame? It is everyone’s fault. Too easy a transport for pleasure and work, Free buses and trains are the wonderwork. 6th Dec 04 WHICH PRODUCT? Which is the product you ought to buy, With so many brands for the stores to supply? Which is the best and which is the worst, A very good deal or a product accursed? A world full of bargaining ads to tempt, Decisions to buy or mind to pre-empt, Caught in the retailers’ tug of war, Fiercely competitive down to the core. Now Internet shopping is stirring the trade, With reductions in price the shops to invade. A nation of shopkeepers is waiting to die - The margin on goods are too high to defy.
  8. Tony Hemmings, 68, has been writing poems all his adult life, most personal rhyming couplets. He was contracted to write a weekly poem for Classic FM for Sunday afternoons for a short contract period. He has written a daily poem since Oct 11th 2001, always 12 lines in rhyme on all kinds of subjects as the mood takes him. He is now looking to publish all 1000 poems so far in the daily poem category and also put them daily onto a new website with an ISP. He has worked in the film and tv business all his life and writes his poems as a daily relaxation.
×
×
  • Create New...