The Faux Pas
(Pentameter)
The
frivolity of youth is its charm;
Slowly
fades away with the aging soul;
A fancy
dress party raised the alarm;
The
harried Prince, some way, has lost control.
Skeletons
in the closet do have sway;
Secrets
are tied to the bones in the chest;
In
graveyards they no longer want to stay,
But invade
young minds that want to impress.
Constant
in battle are young rolling stones;
The
ancestral flaws they like to expose;
Hypocrisy
lies in these bags of bones,
So let’s
throw a party and wear their clothes.
The stage
was set for the ball of the year;
Tom, Dick
and Harry wore mask in the crowd;
Common
guys were not supposed to be there;
And their
ragbag clothes made a Nazi cloud.
The
commoners’ streets are not paved with gold;
So the
hair comes down in any spotlight.
Top of the
line, comes from a different mould,
So a faux
pas is very impolite.
In the lens, paparazzi shoot the Crown;
No vetted
shots, from them, for royal folks,
Who
throughout the country they bring renown;
This
mystic feeling, royalty evokes.
Mistakes
are made so old folks reprimand,
But with
every error something is learnt.
History as
a core, not taught in England!
So youth
do not know what folks Hitler burnt.
How well
one seeks to correct every wrong,
Indicates
the true measure of the man;
So you eat
humble pie, to make you strong,
And
reflect on the way it all began.
© Paterika Hengreaves
(Summer 2005/New Zealand)
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