Friday, May 6, 2011

Guess It's All About Point-of-View

Have always loved Roald Dahl.  Stumbled upon this little ditty today.  Little morbid, but then I guess it depends on one's point-of-view. :)  There's one about Red Riding Hood and Cinderella as well.

Excerpt –
'This famous wicked little tale 
Should never have been put on sale
 
It is a mystery to me
 
Why loving parents cannot see
 
That this is actually a book
 
About a brazen little crook...'
 

'...Now just imagine how you'd feel
 
If you had cooked a lovely meal,
 
Delicious porridge, steaming hot,
 
Fresh coffee in the coffee pot,
 
With maybe toast and marmalade,
 
The table beautifully laid,
 
One place for you and one for dad,
 
Another for your little lad.
 
Then dad cries, 'Golly–gosh! Gee whizz!
 
'Oh cripes! How hot this porridge is!
 
'Let's take a walk along the street
 
'Until it's cool enough to eat.'
 
He adds, 'An early morning stroll
 
'Is good for people on the whole.
 
'It makes your appetite improve
 
'It also helps your bowels move.'
 
No proper wife would dare to question
 
Such a sensible suggestion,
 
Above all not at breakfast–time
 
When men are seldom at their prime.
 
No sooner are you down the road
 
Than Goldilocks, that little toad
 
That nosey thieving little louse,
 
Comes sneaking in your empty house....'
 

'...(Here comes the next catastrophe.)
 
Most educated people choose
 
To rid themselves of socks and shoes
 
Before they clamber into bed.
 
But Goldie didn't give a shred.
 
Her filthy shoes were thick with grime,
 
And mud and mush and slush and slime.
 
Worse still, upon the heel of one
 
Was something that a dog had done.
 
I say once more, what would you think
 
If all this horrid dirt and stink
 
Was smeared upon your eiderdown
 
By this revolting little clown?
 
(The famous story has no clues
 
To show the girl removed her shoes.)
 

Oh, what a tale of crime on crime!
 
Let's check it for a second time.
 

Crime One, the prosecution's case:
 
She breaks and enters someone's place.
 

Crime Two, the prosecutor notes:
 
She steals a bowl of porridge oats.
 

Crime Three: She breaks a precious chair
 
Belonging to the Baby Bear.
 

Crime Four: She smears each spotless sheet
 
With filthy messes from her feet.
 

A judge would say without a blink,
 
'Ten years hard labour in the clink!'
 
But in the book, as you will see,
 
The little beast gets off scot–free,
 
While tiny children near and far
 
Shout 'Goody–good! Hooray! Hurrah!'
 
'Poor darling Goldilocks!' they say,
 
'Thank goodness that she got away!'
 
Myself, I think I'd rather send
 
Young Goldie to a sticky end.
 
'Oh daddy!' cried the Baby Bear,
 
'My porridge gone! It isn't fair!'
 
'Then go upstairs,' the Big Bear said,
 
'Your porridge is upon the bed.
 
'But as it's inside mademoiselle,
 
'You'll have to eat her up as well.'
Roald Dahl

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