My taste for women has never been affected in the least by the amount of alcohol in my bloodstream. It is, however, very easily influenced by other contextual things. But that’s always been a matter of kind, not degree, of beauty.
To get me so drunk that my idealism becomes that overridden, I’d have to be dead, and dead men don’t make good lovers.
The Porter says that drink is a great provoker of three things: Marry, sir, nose-painting, sleep, and urine. Lechery, sir, it provokes and unprovokes. It provokes the desire, but it takes away the performance. Therefore much drink may be said to be an equivocator with lechery. It makes him, and it mars him; it sets him on, and it takes him off; it persuades him and disheartens him; makes him ‘stand to’ and ‘not stand to’; in conclusion, equivocates him in a sleep and, giving him the lie, leaves him.
Or, from less secular scripture, there’s Mark 14:38 - “The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.”
Shall I compare thee to a Happy Hour?For thou art cheaper, and more dimly lit.Thy smell of cigarettes is twice as sour,And ‘pon thy seat a brace of men might sit.The neon signs which shine above the barAre pale ‘gainst thy burst-capillaried nose,And thy complexion? Pickles in a jarI glimpse upon thy cheek, and not the rose.Thy voice the broken jukebox, thy hair the ragThat wipes the spilléd beer from off the floorAnd yet I hear that ev’ry tongue doth wagThou swing’st as freely as the Men’s Room door.So, as I am myself no golden youth,
”Bartender, two martinis - sans vermouth.”
“BAR-keep, TWO mar-TI-nis, SANS ver-MOUTH” is a syllable short (again, that wouldn’t be fatal, but I think it works better all around the way I have it).
Oh, then I miscounted the lines (talk about working too late, or too early). Well, then, what about “juke” or “box”? A poetic shortening could be forgiven, and if memory serves the Bard did that often enough too.
I’ve considered “juke” rather than “jukebox”, but it sounds clunky. Just using “box” would be confusing, I think. I’ve also considered dropping the second “thy” in the line: “Thy voice, the broken jukebox; hair, the rag…” but again the improved scansion comes at the cost of overall euphony. Ultimately, I think the extra syllable (there’s a technical term for that, I believe, but I’ve forgotten it) is the least of all available ills.
Llewellenbruce over 14 years ago
A guy couldn’t get drunk enough to fall in love with Broomie.
GROG Premium Member over 14 years ago
No one’s ugly at 2 AM.
Sisyphos over 14 years ago
Maybe loitering is still illegal where this atrocity is being committed? Pity the guys who have to drink themselves silly to get out of the bar!
Yukoner over 14 years ago
After enough booze any girl can be good looking.
gjsjr41 over 14 years ago
“hic”
Rakkav over 14 years ago
My taste for women has never been affected in the least by the amount of alcohol in my bloodstream. It is, however, very easily influenced by other contextual things. But that’s always been a matter of kind, not degree, of beauty.
To get me so drunk that my idealism becomes that overridden, I’d have to be dead, and dead men don’t make good lovers.
Rakkav over 14 years ago
No, William, and something tells me I don’t want to.
lewisbower over 14 years ago
A 2 at 10 becomes a 10 at 2.
What did Billy Shakespeare say?
Drink increases the desire decreases the performance
something like that. Where’s ma memory pills, womin?
linsonl over 14 years ago
As a guy sitting next to me in a bar once said: “Everytime that bartender brings me a drink, she gpes and puts on some more makeup.”
olmail over 14 years ago
alcohol never affected my perception of beauty. however, my standards may have been altered a time or two.
fritzoid Premium Member over 14 years ago
Lewreader, it’s in Macbeth, II:iii.
The Porter says that drink is a great provoker of three things: Marry, sir, nose-painting, sleep, and urine. Lechery, sir, it provokes and unprovokes. It provokes the desire, but it takes away the performance. Therefore much drink may be said to be an equivocator with lechery. It makes him, and it mars him; it sets him on, and it takes him off; it persuades him and disheartens him; makes him ‘stand to’ and ‘not stand to’; in conclusion, equivocates him in a sleep and, giving him the lie, leaves him.
Or, from less secular scripture, there’s Mark 14:38 - “The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.”
fritzoid Premium Member over 14 years ago
Shall I compare thee to a Happy Hour? For thou art cheaper, and more dimly lit. Thy smell of cigarettes is twice as sour, And ‘pon thy seat a brace of men might sit. The neon signs which shine above the bar Are pale ‘gainst thy burst-capillaried nose, And thy complexion? Pickles in a jar I glimpse upon thy cheek, and not the rose. Thy voice the broken jukebox, thy hair the rag That wipes the spilléd beer from off the floor And yet I hear that ev’ry tongue doth wag Thou swing’st as freely as the Men’s Room door. So, as I am myself no golden youth, ”Bartender, two martinis - sans vermouth.”
Sherlock Watson over 14 years ago
Bravo, fritzoid; you are, to my knowledge, the first person ever to post a sonnet here.
fritzoid Premium Member over 14 years ago
Sherlock, I might be the first AND the second. I originally wrote this for a “Duplex” strip a couple of months ago…
Joe, I “repurposed” the verse from Mark. (I’m all about conserving resources.)
RinaFarina over 14 years ago
@fritzoid, congratulations. it’s a lovely sonnet, and sonnets are not that easy to write, considering all the rules.
fritzoid Premium Member over 14 years ago
The ninth line has an extraneous syllable, but W.S. himself was guilty of that on occasion.
Rakkav over 14 years ago
You could substitute “barkeep” if you wanted to tolerate the faux Old West flavor.
fritzoid Premium Member over 14 years ago
In the last (14th) line? It wouldn’t scan.
“BAR-keep, TWO mar-TI-nis, SANS ver-MOUTH” is a syllable short (again, that wouldn’t be fatal, but I think it works better all around the way I have it).
No, the superfluity is in: “JUKE-box, thy HAIR”.
Rakkav over 14 years ago
Oh, then I miscounted the lines (talk about working too late, or too early). Well, then, what about “juke” or “box”? A poetic shortening could be forgiven, and if memory serves the Bard did that often enough too.
pawpawbear over 14 years ago
Wow, stupid cartoon turns into lesson in English Lit. Gotta love it.
fritzoid Premium Member over 14 years ago
I’ve considered “juke” rather than “jukebox”, but it sounds clunky. Just using “box” would be confusing, I think. I’ve also considered dropping the second “thy” in the line: “Thy voice, the broken jukebox; hair, the rag…” but again the improved scansion comes at the cost of overall euphony. Ultimately, I think the extra syllable (there’s a technical term for that, I believe, but I’ve forgotten it) is the least of all available ills.