Mix me a Metaphor
Bartender, bartender
mix me a drink
something refreshing
that might make me think.
I know, I'll have a 'metaphor',
on the rocks, long and cool.
Blimey barman, that's got a kick
it's veritable 'rocking horse fuel'!
© Justine Tennant 2006
mix me a drink
something refreshing
that might make me think.
I know, I'll have a 'metaphor',
on the rocks, long and cool.
Blimey barman, that's got a kick
it's veritable 'rocking horse fuel'!
© Justine Tennant 2006
Last edited by Virago on Sun Jan 08, 2006 5:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Hi Justine,
This is a nice idea but the punch line doesn't really work for me.
"rocking horse fuel" sounded a bit forced. Something simpler and more obviously "metaphorical" might be better.
Good to see more of your stuff though.
Cam
This is a nice idea but the punch line doesn't really work for me.
"rocking horse fuel" sounded a bit forced. Something simpler and more obviously "metaphorical" might be better.
Good to see more of your stuff though.
Cam
Thanks Cam. Interesting that you say it seems forced because this actually happened.
We saw the new year in with my sis and bro-in-law and some Guavaberry liqueur last night and my sister's description of it had me howling, so I couldn't resist committing it to paper!
Never mind, I'll keep it as a blog entry then rather than a poem...
We saw the new year in with my sis and bro-in-law and some Guavaberry liqueur last night and my sister's description of it had me howling, so I couldn't resist committing it to paper!
Never mind, I'll keep it as a blog entry then rather than a poem...
- twoleftfeet
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Presumably the mix is one of "rocket fuel" and "rocking-horse sh*t"?
Could this be called a Harley Wallbanger?
Could this be called a Harley Wallbanger?
by George, you've got it!twoleftfeet wrote:Presumably the mix is one of "rocket fuel" and "rocking-horse sh*t"?
Could this be called a Harley Wallbanger?
- dillingworth
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one minor problem - this is actually a mixed simile, not a mixed metaphor...
- dillingworth
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the way i see it, simile is an explicit comparison that flags itself up as such, using "like" or "as" - a metaphor doesn't draw attention to itself in this way and (i think) is composed of a tenor and a vehicle - the tenor being the thing being described, the vehicle being the thing it is transformed into in the metaphor - here the vehicle would be composed of rocking horses and fuel if it weren't for the "like".
that's my daily pedantry craving satisfied, then.
that's my daily pedantry craving satisfied, then.
dillingworth wrote:the way i see it, simile is an explicit comparison that flags itself up as such, using "like" or "as" - a metaphor doesn't draw attention to itself in this way and (i think) is composed of a tenor and a vehicle - the tenor being the thing being described, the vehicle being the thing it is transformed into in the metaphor - here the vehicle would be composed of rocking horses and fuel if it weren't for the "like".
that's my daily pedantry craving satisfied, then.
no, I agree, need to change the last line to get rid of the 'like'. I realised that recently. Easily done though. How about now?
- dillingworth
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that's better: now just add a colon after "kick" and you're immune from the pedants.