My father recited this bit of doggerel fairly regularly when I was a young moohoo.
One evening in October, when I was one-third sober,
An' taking home a ‘load' with manly pride;
My poor feet began to stutter, so I lay down in the gutter,
And a pig came up an' lay down by my side;
Then we sang ‘It's all fair weather when good fellows get together,'
Till a lady passing by was heard to say:
‘You can tell a man who "boozes" by the company he chooses'
And the pig got up and slowly walked away.
I just today discovered that these are lyrics to a song written in 1933. Here is a 1934 recording by someone named Frank Crumit. I'll get back to this.
April returned again today. Average temperatures for these April days is a bit of a shock after so many days of averages fit for May. But it was a pretty day and I have the gear.
I have wanted this exact picture for a couple of years. It always seemed as though every time I was out there the shadows were wrong. It turns out that you have to go in the middle of the day in mid-April.
I got this picture of Lake Emily from the north end. This is another one of those opportunity moments. Later on in the year the sun angle makes photos from this end a matter of proper time of the day. The real problem though, is that later on when the foliage fills in you can barely see the lake from the road.
And the deer lowered its head and slowly walked away.
Anyone seeking to understand this post should be informed that the queerest sight I ever did see was the night on the marge of Lake LaBarge they cremated Sam McGee.
2 comments:
The wording is a little different than I remember it, but not much. Artistic license. I had no trouble following the flow --
Lighting is apparently everything. Some nice pics.
Doggerel is a great word (or should I say literary term?).
This post is chock-full of interesting tidbits and good photos. The ramshackle structure reminds me of some scary movie I saw a long time ago.
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