Remember the myth of the goddess Eos and her mortal husband Tithonus. She asked he be granted immortality but forgot to include eternal youth. He thus withered as the years passed, and eventually transformed into a cicada. Tennyson wrote a poem of his imagined lament:
Ida No over 1 year ago
Moral: “Lame-butt epitaphs FTW.”
PraiseofFolly over 1 year ago
Whoa there, chicken! No cause for celebration!
Remember the myth of the goddess Eos and her mortal husband Tithonus. She asked he be granted immortality but forgot to include eternal youth. He thus withered as the years passed, and eventually transformed into a cicada. Tennyson wrote a poem of his imagined lament:
.
The woods decay, the woods decay and fall,
The vapours weep their burthen to the ground,
Man comes and tills the field and lies beneath,
And after many a summer dies the swan.
Me only cruel immortality
Consumes; I wither slowly in thine arms.
SHIVA over 1 year ago
Hey, is that scrambled eggs on his plate??!!
Zebrastripes over 1 year ago
And that chicken was clucking lucky!
ladykat over 1 year ago
LOL!
Sir Isaac over 1 year ago
“Dead Like Me”
kartis over 1 year ago
Aw. The one chicken that never got to the other side.
Indianapolis Smith over 1 year ago
I read about that chicken. They cut off it’s head, and it kept going and going!
The Duke over 1 year ago
Winner, winner, chicken dinner.
tims145 over 1 year ago
If there’s Death, the Death of Rats, then it only stands to reason that there must be a Death of Chickens. Pretty busy guy, I expect.
T... over 1 year ago
I don’t think so, I got that one at KFC…
Frank Burns Eats Worms over 1 year ago
He’s running around like a chicken with his head still on.
lawguy05 over 1 year ago
Lucky clucker!