In anticipation of this deepest, darkest winter lockdown when scheduling the latest run of topics, I hoped yellow could be a theme the Dead Good collective might respond to happily. That turned out to be a good hunch, as this is the sixth blog in a week on the subject (and we haven't seen that kind of run in a while).
I've always regarded yellow as a special colour, light and fresh with positivity, warmer and richer than white, vibrant and bold. It floods the eye. It's the colour of sunshine (if indeed sunshine has a colour), of laughter (if indeed laughter ditto...), of happiness, honeycombs and gold, of jonquil and primroses, of sandy beaches, butter, canaries, emergency vehicles, bananas and custard.
It's the brightest (and best?) of the primary colours and a fitting counter-point to the blues. As with its near-neighbour on the colour wheel (the fabulous tangerine), in my view you can never have too much of it. Need I go on? I think I need not. What's not to love?
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Primrose Hill models yellow? |
Proceeding then, to a poem on theme, the catalyst for this latest piece from the imaginarium was finding a couple of post-it notes adhering (forgotten?) inside the back cover of a novel that I bought second-hand from an online bookshop during lockdown. Before I got to reading the novel, I spent time wondering what that other story might have been, the real-life one.
This, then, while not exactly another 'found' poem, does quote both notes verbatim as part of a more speculative 'so what might that all have been about and where did it go next?' exercise. I hope you approve.
On Yellow Post-it Notes
found stuck in the back of a second-hand book,
an intriguing list of things to do.
The first note reads thus: Lillywhites - suitcase,
Accessorize, bank, Boots No. 7,
penguin toy, Marble Arch M&S - tape measure!
There's no inscription on the title page
to give a clue to previous owner.
Now if it had been me: name, date and place.
That's how one could trace my movements
through half a century, homes, colleges, holidays,
even work assignments, if one chose to look.
But I digress. The title might provide an insight:
Mary Renault's 'The Friendly Young Ladies',
a Virago Modern Classic (147 to be precise).
A second note states: Sofa bed 174 (coincidence?),
H 85 x W 196 x D 97, seat H 45 arm H 61,
back rail 73, colour Jonquil, cushions extra!
What do I assume from those ageing sticky scraps?
Mission accomplished at M&S with tape measure?
Bijou metroland nest being fitted out for guest,
perhaps a child? Holiday or hospital visit planned?
Tiny bedsit being reconfigured to accommodate
another? Maybe the reader's new-found lover?
Unlikely that she owned a penguin as a pet -
herring would surely have been on note one if so.
Clearly a girl of sunny disposition on a budget
and a mission, but those forgotten posts - worrying.
I wonder did she ever get her Jonquil sofa bed 174?
Maybe she lost the book on the journey home,
encumbered by a suitcase and shopping bags,
dimensions disappearing down the Central line.
Or did she simply one day offload the book?
Plot not compelling? Shelves not broad enough?
Maybe the reminder of a relationship which didn't
measure up? Questions remain. There's no telling.
Thanks for reading my zany stuff. Stay bright, S ;-)
Such a fun, relaxing, thoughtful read - and poem. Loved it.
ReplyDeleteI see why you were so sad that I don't like yellow much (your comment on my blog of this week)!
ReplyDeleteI rather think she was leaving and planning on equipping a wee camper van..keeping things to a minimum and buying a bed to fit in the van !
ReplyDeleteLoved the poem... great use of words.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyable, Steve, though it seems not everybody shares your enthusiasm for things yellow. I recall Adrian Mitchell's sci-fi dystopia novel The Bodyguard (no, not THAT one, or THAT one), in which he notes that the European Riot Police (known generally as "the Yellows") had their uniform colour chosen because it naturally strikes mortal fear into people, and because (just nipping to the bookshelf here for my Picador copy) it was specifically chosen: "by a panel of neurologists, advertisers and witch-doctors who pondered its association with pus, with vomit, with mustard gas”. Funny thing is, I hardly remember anything else from that book - although it's not bad, and I enjoyed his poetry a lot - except that particular reference to selecting a colour as a weapon of mass destruction. YMMV.
ReplyDeleteWow, wonderful. ❤️
ReplyDeleteSuch wit, such style, such... yellowness. Loved it!
ReplyDeleteCracking blog Steve. Sorry fabulous tangerine wasn't the colour of the afternoon, any more than canary was. It was very neat what you did with that poem - deserved to get you a win. Still, it's only the cup - promotion is the real prize, eh?
ReplyDeleteFunny intro, great blog, groovy pic, loved the clever poem. You shine on. π
ReplyDeleteNice one! I know a great joke about being up Primrose Hill... :D
ReplyDeleteBrilliant Steve. I was half expecting a reference to Sunny Goodge Street - or even Sunny South Kensington - in your Yellow Post-It Note poem, which is fab. Well done (sunshine superman).
ReplyDeleteThat has brightened up my rather gloomy Sunday. Thanks Steve.
ReplyDeleteFab
ReplyDeleteH.M, HRH Laxmiben Hirani Author of Poems From The Heart Books 1 & 2.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful detailed yellow theme! Enjoyed it very much after a long evening of work my dear one! You brightened up my evening with a restful night's sleep.
What a pleasure to read. Loved the poem. π
ReplyDeleteA lovely blog and a delightful poem.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant seems a fitting description, such a warm and witty blog.
ReplyDeleteVery clever Steve. I laughed the Sesame Street spoof opening (very funny) and you make a good case for the colour of happiness. Your poem is a delight. Well done.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written. π
ReplyDeleteI loved this Steve. Quite often when I read your poems I think "I wish I'd written that!" and this was one of them. The idea was inspired, the execution deft. Making the title part of the poem was neat, the playful speculation was witty and kind of wistful, there was intrigue and innuendo in your clever wordplay and a return to the measurement imagery was killer, dinkum.
ReplyDeleteYellow is also a sacred colour in India for Buddhists and Hindus, the colour of sanctity and enlightenment.
ReplyDeleteI like yellow as a rule. It's a happy colour, as you say. The one time it irritates me is when I see a huge field of rape in flower. It doesn't look right - too intense and unvaried a block of colour in a predominantly green landscape. A field of sunflowers is an entirely different matter. I greatly enjoyed your speculatively sleuthing poem. :)
ReplyDeleteThat was such fun. I loved the blog, the (zany) study in yellow and the delightfully worked and poignant poem.
ReplyDeleteHow inventive, most impressed. π
ReplyDeleteTremendous blog. Loved the poem.
ReplyDeleteSome sunny fun. Well done! π
ReplyDeleteYes, I most definitely approve. An inspired idea and a nicely worked poem. I love some of those lines: bijou metroland nest being fitted out for guest... unlikely that she owned a penguin as a pet... dimensions disappearing down the central line (shouldn't that be capital C?)... and of course the (telling) final couplet. I was going to protest that you could have bought the book from me - only I don't have it in inventory; though I have some other more recent Mary Renault titles if you're interested.
ReplyDeleteI googled the Custard Frog Protection Society. It doesn't exist. There's not even any such thing as a custard frog! You are a cheeky blogger!! (LOL) But a very entertaining one. And what a great poem. Stay sunny.
ReplyDeleteJust a random yellow recollection. Do you remember the 'House' system we had at junior school? Red, yellow, green and blue for Hillary, Gordon, Rhodes and Scott respectively (unashamed of Empire!) and we were both in Gordon. I remember you won the poetry prize, stood you in good stead.
ReplyDeleteSuch a treat to read as ever. What a lovely poem. π
ReplyDeleteBrilliant yellow, Mr R. π
ReplyDeleteMost enjoyable. Elegantly and amusingly written and the poem was - as you billed it - engaging. Well done.
ReplyDeleteMellow yellow, like the cello! This colour has wonderful connotations.
ReplyDeleteIf you are into Yellow, then you will LOVE this:
ReplyDeleteROOKIE (Late 19th century: perhaps an alteration of recruit, influenced by rook). In Polish the word is either REKRUT (not that interesting), but also ΕΌΓ³Εtodzioby, which literally means yellow clothed, but looking at the etymology of the word in Polish, it is actually quite interesting:
SΕowo ΕΌΓ³ΕtodziΓ³b oznaczajΔ ce przenoΕnie 'niedoΕwiadczonego ΕΌyciowo mΕodzieΕca' nawiΔ zuje do wyglΔ du pisklΔ t majΔ cych tuΕΌ po wykluciu siΔ ΕΌΓ³Εtawe noski i upierzenie oraz Εapki, wymagajΔ cych opieki rodzicielskiej.
The word rookie, meaning figuratively 'inexperienced young man', refers to the appearance of chicks with yellowish noses, plumage and feet after hatching, requiring parental care.
Which brings us back to YELLOW
In Dutch, we call a Rookie "een Groentje" literally it means a Green π
Makes me think that also in English you of course have "Freshman"
And how did I get started on this journey?
Because I did not know the word CALLOW (I know, it is strange not knowing such an important English word; I guess I always used the easier Inexperienced), which in Polish is translated as Nieopierzony, which is 2 words put together: Nie (not) and Opierzony (feathered), again magnificently translated as unfeathered.
What an amazing vocabulary is out there...
Maybe my maybe somewhat inconsistent rambling can be an inspiration for a future Polish-inspired poem π
Speaking of which, once Corona is behind us, do please come & visit us in Poland... Would be great!
Very good Steve: witty blog and intriguing poetry. FYI some people write to me as Harry Lemon (sic)...thinking of changing it to Harry Lime (LOL). Keep up the excellence, always a treat to read you.
ReplyDeleteDid it ever occur to you that the person who wrote the post-it notes might one day read your poem about them? It wasn't me, but I thought how spooky would that be? I think it's a charming poem.
ReplyDeleteSplendidly sunny (a)musings, Steve. You make the case well and the poem is a treat. π
ReplyDeleteYou're right, an uplifting theme for a dark time. I felt warmed by the tone of the blog and especially your latest poem, which is lovely. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteBright, delightful wordsmithery and intrigue. I really enjoyed this Steve.
ReplyDeleteFabulous. All power to the imaginarium, lad! Yellow is the colour... π
ReplyDeleteBrikkiant yellpw
ReplyDeleteWhat an inspired idea for a poem, and a delightfully written blog. I loved it Steve.
ReplyDeleteSo very English, my friend, and yet no Yellow Submarine. It's not my favorite color, right now that's Democrat Blue (praise the electorate) but I dig what you've done with the poem, real neat. Stay well in troubled times. Tom.
ReplyDeleteWhat a delightful read. So much yellowness. I was taken by the idea for your poem and the way it unfolded, loved the measuring metaphor.
ReplyDeleteZestful blogging! I loved the concept and execution of your poem Steve, what a great idea. Also, did you read 'The Friendly Young Ladies' yet and is it any good (with a compelling plot)? I've read some of Renault's Greek historical novels but none of her earlier stuff.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you regarding the colour, and what an evocative roll-call: happiness, honeycombs, jonquil and sandy beaches (not to mention the Sicilian lemon). Great poem too, very nicely done. π
ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful. All your blogs are so well put together they are like works of art. Might I add egg yolks, mimosa and and saffron to your litany of lovely yellows?
ReplyDeleteIndeed. What's not to love? Fabulous poem that. π
ReplyDeleteDelightful blogging Steve. You have such a way with words. I loved the poem and the illustration. Agreed you can never have too much yellow.
ReplyDeleteYes that's very good... "a girl of sunny disposition on a budget and a mission", love the lyricism of your poetry Steve. π
ReplyDeleteThat's brilliant!
ReplyDeleteI think you have made a great piece out of this theme, such a warm and uplifting post and a beautifully crafted poem. π
ReplyDeleteBig Bird's Custard ;) Great blog and lovely intriguing poem. π
ReplyDeleteReally lovely Steve.
ReplyDeleteSuch a vibrant, immersive post. I loved it.
ReplyDeleteThat was wonderful!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great blog. I'm now a convert to yellowness, and that's a lovely poem.
ReplyDeleteWell I loved this witty and thoughtful blog and poem. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteYou asked for feedback and having read some of the comments I struggle to know what to add. You write with wit, style, imagination and this was a delight to read.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully done. As you said, what's not to love? ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
ReplyDeleteCharming, warming, spell-binding words. π
ReplyDeleteA suffusion! Loved it all Steve.
ReplyDeleteI read this and winter seemed a world away for a while. Thank you. I love the clever and connotative poem. π
ReplyDeleteI love it! What a great blog. What a lovely poem. π
ReplyDeleteFabulous, Steve.
ReplyDeleteYes very clever, but also such fun. It's a fine poem :)
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this. Such a vibrant post and clever poem. Just one technical question on that: isn't it convention to italicise the quoted parts (e.g. the notes themselves)? Just asking.
ReplyDeleteYou've converted me to yellow with your zestful post and that stylish photograph. (Primrose Hill is not real, I assume.) I thought the poem was clever and thoughtful. Well done.
ReplyDeleteOoh, such a lovely speculative poem. ⭐️
ReplyDeleteReading this was a tonic but it has made me crave spring and 'normal' life again. We've been down and dark too long. Keep sending the blogs along.
ReplyDeleteI found something in my bookshelf after reading your yellow post it notes poem. I bought Michael Zwerin's 'A Case For The Balkanization Of Nearly Everyone' years ago second-hand and there's a letter inside from the author to a friend, still there when I bought it. Zwerin is an interesting guy with an industrial and then a jazz background, worth looking up. The book examines independence driven parties and is quite prescient really... Thought you might be interested in what turns up in books;)
ReplyDeleteBrilliant blogging! π
ReplyDeleteOozes class and positivity. Your poem is delightful.
ReplyDeleteWriting inside books - exactly! That's how I win arguments with my other half about when was it we were in Istanbul? Did we really do Florence and then Rome, not the other way about? Neither of us can actually remember clearly 40 years on, but my books hold the proof. I thought this was a lovely blog. Thank you and well done.
ReplyDeleteA friend put me on to your blog site knowing yellow is my favorite color. I love what I've just read, all beautifully expressed. I don't know Primrose Hill (a model I suppose) but a zany gal by the looks of her. I did the math on that sofabed, it looked huge, then I saw cm (centimeters, right?) and so I get it now. I just wanted to say I think your poem is fabulous, so clever, very touching. What a joy to read. Thank you much.
ReplyDeleteExcellent that! A lovely read.
ReplyDeleteWonderful! Wittily written and what a delightful poem. π
ReplyDeleteI loved all of this and I'm dying to know was the novel half as good as your real life speculations?
ReplyDeleteLaudable yellowness. This was funny and thought-provoking. I love the poem, a neat idea and well done.
ReplyDeleteA stunning composition, such a great idea, some beautiful lines. I loved it all.π
ReplyDeleteApart from the glorious yellowness of it all (that others have praised) I just love the whimsical intelligence at play in your clever poem, willing to explore any possibility (e.g. that 'penguin toy' might be a toy for a penguin, like a wind-up fish or something; or the suitcase could signify a hospital visit as easily as a holiday). And the incidental connection between 147 and 174. And the idea of vital measurements 'disappearing down the Central line'. And all those inferences in the last stanza, plus the way the whole thing is lyrically driven. Magical, Steve.
ReplyDeleteThat's a fantastic read, funny and uplifting. So many good things in the natural world are yellow. To your list I'd add amber, candle-light, mimosa, sunflowers. The suggestion that laughter has a colour - brilliant. I loved the OTT yellowness of the illustration and as for your poem - fabulous. I can't wait for summer! Please let this be the year that we all escape into the colour of sunshine.
ReplyDeleteI once found money in a book I bought second-hand. It was a 10/- note (remember them? old brown things equivalent to 50p). I guessed it was used as a bookmark as it was hidden two-thirds through, so well tucked into the spine that it had stayed there. I figured the reader might have been quite well-off as the book's cover price new was only 5/-. I really liked your poem.
ReplyDeleteA lovely blog and a super poem. π Don't forget the radiant assortment of yellow spices esp. caraway, cumin, curry (garamasala), ginger, mustardseed, saffron and fabulous turmeric - good for health and vitality ;)
ReplyDeleteSuch a sunny treat in dark times and your delightful post-it note poem, so cleverly worked.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant blogging and poetry. I loved it all. π
ReplyDeleteA super blog Steve. Impressed by your the speculative poem. Well done.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely fabulous and what's not to love indeed. You've brightened up my day.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your blog. Found post-it notes a clever basis for a lovely poem. π
ReplyDeleteA novel angle for a poem. I really like the way you've unfolded the thought-process for us, brought your own personality into it as well as trying to gauge that of the book's original owner. It's a captivating work. Very well done.
ReplyDeleteFAB πππππ
ReplyDeleteReally well written. I love your quizzical and witty poem.
ReplyDeleteI'm horrified to find there is no such creature as the Custard Frog. There really ought to be, it's such a great name. I love the whole blog for its wit and your poem is a treat.
ReplyDeleteWonderful! πππ
ReplyDeleteSuperb. Such a sunny post and a beautifully turned poem. I love it Steve. Well done.
ReplyDeleteHow lovely, a London poem by a Northerner :)
ReplyDeleteYes, yes, yes, wonderful writing oozing charm, intrigue and wit.π
ReplyDeleteAll very good. I specially like the concluding line of your teasing poem: Questions remain. There's no telling. Exactly!
ReplyDeleteYour opening sentence sold me. What a beautifully written post this is and I love the clever poem - great notion. I'm a convert to the colour.
ReplyDeleteA delight for Xanthophiles everywhere. π
ReplyDeleteYou asked for comments Steve, but you've already got a ton of them. I don't know what I can add except to say how much I enjoyed this (goes for most of your blogs really). It was uplifting and the poem was captivating!
ReplyDeleteWonderful and witty writing exudes a feelgood radiance and that poem is fabulous.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic post and poem.π»
ReplyDeleteI'm way behind here, just followed your email link sent at the end of Jan! Blame lockdown paralysis. However, this was stupendous, such a delight to read. Thank you for the tonic. Stay sunny! π
ReplyDeleteMwynheais ddarllen!
ReplyDeleteYour sunny prose matches my mood perfectly. Spring it seems is sprung. As for your poem, very cleverly done and beautifully written sir. π
ReplyDeleteAfter I read your lovely poem I think of all the stores that has disappeared from our high streets in the last years or are endangered; banks too. Maybe Boots and M&S will be all that is left after online and pandemic.
ReplyDeleteI really like what you did in your post-it-note poetry, clever, thought-provoking and endearing writing. π
ReplyDeleteGenius idea for a poem and a lovely blog.
ReplyDeleteTerrific wordsmithery, entertaining and uplifting. I am a convert to yellow.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely top zany stuff, loved it all.π
ReplyDeleteSplendid blog and poetry Steve, and I'm with you on the writing name and date inside books (never thought of adding place though). BTW what's happened to your own book of poems that was promised back in the autumn?
ReplyDeleteRadiant writing.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant! I've bookmarked - look forward to reading more. Are you published? (saw comment above about a book...)
ReplyDeleteThis was a treat. Thanks so much for sharing.
ReplyDeleteCrocuses and daffodils, egg yolks and honeydew melons, taxis and... OK, I love yellow things too. What a delightful post and lovely poem. π
ReplyDeleteA most enjoyable read. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great blog and what's not to love about glorious yellow? I've just had my living-room redecorated in yellow (Forsythia on the tin) and it's transformed it.
ReplyDeleteIt was a pleasure reading your zany stuff (LOL). Yellow rules. Great post, fabulous poem. π π π
ReplyDeleteHave you seen the painting 'Pauline in the Yellow Dress' in the Harris Gallery in Preston? It's a beautiful picture and worth a visit. I loved your yellow blog and poem. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI love the poem. It's a clever idea and the thinking-out-loud nature of the piece is tremendous, witty and with great verve.
ReplyDeleteFluffy chicks, legal pads, taxi cabs, all kinds of yellow bring joy. Loved the blog and the poetry.
ReplyDeleteLoving your blog. It reminds of fields of sunflowers. π»π»π»π»π»
ReplyDeleteThanks for the links Steve. I get around to reading them all eventually. This one I love. It glows with style and wit and the poem is beautifully executed. Stay bright.
ReplyDeleteMarvellous! π
ReplyDeleteI love how you've pitched this. Yellow is definitely the color of laughter. Great poem too.
ReplyDelete"Yellow means yes" - The Roswells ;)
ReplyDeleteGenius post that! πππ
ReplyDeleteYes, definitely approve. You've made a lovely poem out of an intriguing find. Very well done.
ReplyDeleteI can only applaud one of the most delightful posts I have read in a long time. π
ReplyDelete"Yellow is the colour of my true love's hair..." Donovan ('Colours'), not blonde - just like your zany Primrose Hill. Loved the blog, the artwork, the poetry. π
ReplyDeleteSo good! I love the idea of imagining the 'real life story' accidentally seeded, and you speculate so entertainingly. π
ReplyDeleteThe business! π
ReplyDeleteA lovely sunny blog and a clever idea for an intriguing poem.
ReplyDeleteBellissimo giallo, what a fabulous post. Well done, Steve!
ReplyDeleteIn the 1960s, Coventry's fire-engines were painted a shade of yellow developed in conjunction with the local polytechnic. The theory was it made them more easily visible. Read all here: https://www.fire-engine-photos.com/picture/number40166.asp
ReplyDeleteCongratulations. That's one of the best blogs I've read in a long time (and I read a lot of blogs). You're bookmarked now :)
ReplyDeleteA delightfully pitched post and clever and thoughtful poem. I love it all. π
ReplyDeleteSo uplifting, a true delight to read.
ReplyDeleteWonderful writing. πππππ
ReplyDeleteVery nicely done! π
ReplyDeleteOK, sign me up as a xanthophile. What a tremendous blog.
ReplyDeleteSo very lovely blog and poetry.
ReplyDeleteFabulous writing. Loved the spoof 'dedications', your passion for yellow and the clever and touching poem - such a good idea. Well done!
ReplyDeleteThe sun shines out of this. I loved reading it and must congratulate you on the poem, such a neat idea, so well contrived. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteLovely. lovely, lovely. π
ReplyDeleteVery good. Found notes - great premise for a poem.
ReplyDeleteGood day sunshine! Wonderful blog and poetry. I love it. π π
ReplyDeleteYour 'zany stuff' was a pleasure to read, written with wit and style. The poem is clever and beautifully developed and how I covet that yellow bicycle! (Thanks sis foe the share.)
ReplyDeleteWhat a fabulous poem! πππππ
ReplyDeleteThat's it! Now I know! I'm a Xanthophile. π
ReplyDeleteFabulous writing, what a lovely poem.
ReplyDeleteAs you say, what's not to love in the brightest of colours? Also, what a brilliant idea for a poem and how beautifully pitched.
ReplyDeleteFunny and touching. I love this.
ReplyDeleteWhat a happy sunny read! Your prose is witty and eloquent and I just love the poem. π
ReplyDeleteBrilliant, sunny blogging, a total delight to read. Your clever poem is almost a yellow soliloquy. π
ReplyDeleteWhat a joy!
ReplyDeleteπππππ
ReplyDeleteYellow is my happy colour! Beautiful, funny blog.
ReplyDeleteSuch a great post. I loved it! π
ReplyDeleteA wonderful read. You are so inventive. π
ReplyDeleteSimply delightful and so imaginative, from the spoof Sesame Street opening to the wonderful poem. Star quality that. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
ReplyDeleteMaid Glorious! π
ReplyDeleteFabulous writing. The best opening paragraph to a blog I think I've ever read - a lovely take-off. Yellow is a favorite color, so that helps. The idea for the poem is inspired. I loved all of this. πππππ
ReplyDeleteEngagingly funny blogging. I loved it and the clever poem for its 'found' idea and resultant witty speculation.
ReplyDeleteSuch a delightful, witty and uplifting read. I was smiling to myself all the way through. And I loved the tone of your clever, speculative poem, so many great lines and touches. "Clearly a girl of sunny disposition on a budget and a mission..." is tremendous.
ReplyDeleteLoved this! So funny and sunshiney. π
ReplyDeleteWonderful! π
ReplyDeleteI liked very much. It suits my disposition. Loving your poem.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant opening! What's more, a funny and uplifting blog and a clever, intriguing poem. Bravo.
ReplyDeleteWonderfully witty blogging and superbly speculative, clever poetry. π
ReplyDeleteThat was brilliant, simply a delight to read, and what a clever idea for a poem.
ReplyDeleteIt was a joy to read such an uplifting post at such a dark time. Witty and wonderful writing and I love the poem. ππ»
ReplyDeleteTop top blogging! πππ
ReplyDeleteWonderful and wistful. π
ReplyDeleteWhat a delightful read, so sunny, positive, witty - and that's a splendid poem.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great blog and some winning sleuthing poetry.π
ReplyDeleteBrilliant writing, beautiful poem. I love it. π
ReplyDeleteA perfect delight, a joy to read. I have you bookmarked now!
ReplyDeleteSunny, speculative, sparkling. What a joy to read. πππ
ReplyDeleteI felt so happy after reading this. Dazzling prose and a delightfully clever and speculative poem.
ReplyDeleteGenius writing! Loved it.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful read.
ReplyDeleteGlorious blogging. What a clever idea for a poem.
ReplyDeleteBravo! My favourite colour and a great post. π
ReplyDeleteAn absolute delight.
ReplyDeleteBright and beautifully done. 5⭐️s
ReplyDeleteOoh. I lived this. π
ReplyDeleteUtterly delightful reading.
ReplyDeleteFabulous yellow blogging. π
ReplyDeleteSweetness and light. I love your poem.
ReplyDeleteA brilliant read for a golden October day. I needed cheering up and your wonderful post has done the trick. I just wanted to tell you. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI loved this.
ReplyDeleteOne for xanthophiles! What a terrific blog and poem.
ReplyDeleteFunny and fabulous. π
ReplyDeleteThis makes me happy. π
ReplyDeleteExquisite. Loved the Sesame Street take off.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant! A xanthophile's delight. π
ReplyDeleteWhat a clever idea for a poem. It's intriguing to find forgotten notes etc in books - has happened to me with library books as well.
ReplyDeleteJust a brilliant read! Yellow is my happy color. Thank you.
ReplyDelete