Read The Confessions of Henry Hooter the Third Online
Authors: Gabriel Rosenstock
“I think not,”
Says the Nepalese Apricot
“I think not⦔
“What?
Hey, Apricot!
Think not what?”
“No, I think not,”
Says the Apricot
“I think not⦔
“That there Apricot
Sure does think a lot!”
“I think not,”
Says the Apricot
“I think not⦔
Larry the Locust
Is fond of his swarm
“Keeps me warm.”
Larry the Locust
Flies here and there
“Most everywhere.”
Larry the Locust
Could never live alone
No mind of his own.
Larry the Locust
There he goes!
Which one is he?
Nobody knows.
Where bananas straighten out by the hour
And the stinging coconut slowly loses its hair,
Have you been there?
I was â I swear!
Nuts there swell, shiver and grow sour,
Sad gorillas stare
At aeroâbats sailing backwards through the air â
For a dare!
Swamps giggle as fish cower,
Sly crocodiles, weeping, glare
At snide parrots who don't give a care
Because there's zillions of them there.
Slimy waterfalls freeze, stumpy giraffes glower
And whistle a soft tune â so sweet and rare â
Before ⦠splat! They tumble into the spider's
snare:
YES, I WAS THERE!
I no longer want to be a gooseberry!
But wouldn't it be merry â very â
To be a duckberry, â what?
I'd like that a quacking lot!
Or a turkeyberry for that matter
And never run out of chatter.
A swanberry â yes, that would be nice.
A swanberry â cool as ice:
With cygnetberries all in a row
Waiting to turn into snow.
Anything! Anything but a gooseberry!
I'm nothing but a hairy what'sâtheâuseâberry!
The Carrot woke up
To the sound of a slicing scream;
Old Turnip spoke up:
“Young Carrot there's having a dream.”
The following night
Carrot woke up as before;
Turnip was right
“I'm afraid you're a bit of a bore!”
“Help! Help! It's a rabbit!”
“Oh, shut it!” says Turnip, “this is becoming a
habit!”
There were snails
on rails
and mice
on ice.
Dogs, hogs
and frogs
in clogs â
floundering in bogs.
Gnus
in pointed shoes
(their tootsies will bruise).
Llamas
in striped pyjamas.
Asses
with glasses.
Chimps
with limps â
such imps!
Cats, rats
and bats
in spats.
Yaks
in plastic macs â
(soaked to the bone,
all all alone,
they groan,
all trying to use the phone:
Hallo? Hallo? Ochone!)
Two fighting cocks
a stray fox
something rather like an ox.
A papoose
riding a moose
and a goose
with a screw loose.
And there with his easel
Wilfred the Weasel
painting a sun as small as a measle!
The Asparagus is learning French
Oui Oui!
and s'il vous plait;
The Jerusalem artichoke says “Mensch!
She getting crazier by the day!”
Nobody knows what she's saying,
She's been at this now for a week:
“Please stop this s'il vous plaiting
Or I'll speak Welsh!” says the leek.
Hedgy the Hedgehog
Is crossing the road,
I sure hope he makes it
And lives to be old:
“Come on Hedgy, hop it!”
He stops dead cold â¦
“Hop it?” says Hedgy,
I'm not a bloomin' toad!”
Miss Orange has a stutter,
Or, should one say a splutter?
It annoys Professor Apple
Who, as you know, is trying to grapple
With the flutterflyâ¦
Oh my!
Stand back if you please, Miss Orange â back!
Out of my way!
Slorry, Professor Zapple, what did â what did
you slay?
A polar bear once went to sea
On a morning as cold as could be,
“This iceâfloe,' he felt
Is unlikely to melt⦔
But it did â when he went for a pee.
The onion's eyes are streaming
The tears drip down his nose
His two little ears are beaming
And this is how his story goes:
Oh woe is me.
Oh me is woe.
Look at that bunion
On my toe.
Poor onion!
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N
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Henry Hooter is tired of mice:
“Put them on ice!
Put them on ice!”
Henry Hooter won't touch a fly:
“I'd rather die!
I'd rather die!”
Henry Hooter is fed up with life:
“I need a wife!
I need a wife!”
So he puts an ad in
The Owltime Review
:
LOOKING FOR A MISSUS. COULD IT BE YOU?
REPLIES IN CONFIDENCE. TOâWHIT! TOâWHO!
Litter-bug litter-bug
Where have you been?
“Scattering rubbish â
I'm ever so keen!
Down by the waterfront
Up in the green
Searching for places
Still tidy and clean.
Well I've made such a mess
It's just got to be seen!”
Litterâbug litterâbug
You're mean
Real mean.
Far out in the sea lived a whale
With a great dashing lashing big tail.
It smashed as it bashed
And it crashed as it slashed
And it flashed â and got lost in the gale!
Miss Pear! Miss Pear!
Miss Pear is in despair
(She's really very sad!)
Miss Pear! Miss Pear!
Miss Pear â don't despair!
It can't be all that bad.
Miss Pear! Miss Pear!
Miss Pear! She doesn't care
(She's really glum!)
Miss Pear! Miss Pear!
She needs some air â
She's hopelessly in love with Mr Plum.
And this â this Plum? (Now that she has made
her heart bare).
The wretch! “But all I wanted was to peel Miss
Pear!”
How would you like to be
a weenshy little flea
a weenshy little flea
with a pain in one knee?
His knee is so small
he can't see it at all
“Is it growing pains I have?” says he.
Weenshy little flea
try a compress of cold tea
it works. Always worked for me.
“Hm⦠Maybe⦔
sighs the flea.
“You see
what's worryin' me
is I'm in agony
but, golly gee,
only in the one knee ⦔
Spare a little thought for the fleas â¦
their little knees
The fire-eating moth is a sucker for fame
And dances and jumps to applause,
“There's nothing,” he says, “to compare with a flame,”
(Which he chews without using his jaws).
A remarkable fellow, the fireâeating moth,
He has never been scorched, as of yet â¦
Except once and he yelled: “This flame is thoo hoth!
Geth me a drink â one that's weth!”
It's two o'clock in the morning,
The crow has lost his way,
His wife in her sleep is turning,
Very soon it will be day!
At last he's found his nest,
He snuggles so quietly in:
When, nestling up to her breast,
Suddenly â there's an awful din!
“Caw Caw! He's back! He's back! He's back!
Caw Caw!” They sing and jeer.
“Sorry,” he says, “night was so black!
Breakfast in bed, my dear?”
I think I've got a slug, said the Cabbage,
Something's crawling over me,
Try to get it out .. can you manage?
Oh, please hurry Mr Chicory.
I'm doing my best, says Chicory. Lord above!
It's not a slug you've got â it's two!
And if I'm not mistaken, they seem to be in love â
No, not with one another, dear â with you!
“Nobody ever talks to me,”
says poor Canute Cucumber.
“Nobody takes a walk with me
or says I'm a cute Cucumber.
“What on God's earth can one do?
One feels so terribly green;
Must one wait till one's twentyâtwo
Before one is heard of or seen?
“Nobody ever talks to me,
I wonder is it my name?
Nobody takes a walk with me
Really, you know, it's a shame!”
Darkâ¦
Dogs bark â¦
I hear them howl,
Growlâ¦
WUFF!
What are they saying?
What are they baying?
Wuff! Wuffâwuff!
Wuff!
You'd think by now they'd had enough
“Who is crying over there?”
“Who disturbs the evening air?”
“Pineappple, is it you?
Are you blue?”
“Tell us what's wrong!”
“I pine ⦠I pine for a song⦔
“Oh pineapple! Silly, silly! Why pine?
Let us all sing,
Auld Lang Syne
!”
“Dr Spinach will see you now, Mr Banana,
Step right this way please.”
“Thank you Miss Parsley â I â I mean Anna â
Excuse me I'm going to sn- sneeze!”
“Well well, Mr Banana â let's see how you look.
Still green with envy, poor sod:
Take to your bed and read a good book â
The Koran, the Bible â anything, by God!”
There once was a small honey bee
Went out on the wide open sea,
Flying for hours
Searching for flowers â
It never came back for its tea.
Professor X does not agree
With either colleague, A or B:
“No no no, it cannot be â¦
You see ⦔
Professor B swallows a pill.
He has truly had his fill.
Professor X he'd like to kill.
“Someday I will,” he says, “I will.”
Professor A just stares ahead,
Hasn't heard a word's been said.
Got out wrong side of bed,
Only half alive, half dead â¦
Professor X says: “Well, that's that⦔
Goes to put on scarf and hat.
Professor A says: “Look, a rat!”
Hits him with his brolly â splat!