.

Political Musings

.

While bumbling Biden’s basking on the beach,
The Donald’s dodging bullets in the breach.

.

Abortion this, abortion that—it’s 24/7;
But not a word about the smash and grab at 7-Eleven.

.

Kamala never mentions God,
Or faith, or Jesus Christ. How odd.

.

While Secret Service bureaucrats were sitting on their tushes,
A wanna-be assassin hid in place among the bushes.

.

I beg you, God—have mercy. Spare us
From four more years of a cackling Harris.

.

.

Cheryl Corey is a poet who lives in Connecticut. “Three Sisters,” her trio of poems about the sisters of Fate which were first published by the Society of Classical Poets, are featured in “Gods and Monsters,” an anthology of mythological poems (MacMillan Children’s Books, 2023).


NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets.

The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary.


Trending now:

16 Responses

  1. Warren Bonham

    I enjoyed all of the couplets and agree that someone must spare us from Harris.

    Reply
  2. Cynthia Erlandson

    I like these thoughtful couplets, especially the final prayer. As for the third one, clearly this is good sarcasm; I’m sure it has never occurred to her that there could be any being above herself.

    Reply
  3. Cheryl Corey

    If anyone has a couplet or couplets they’d like to post, please do so!

    Reply
    • Cynthia Erlandson

      They ask what unknown motive could have been inside the head
      Of the assassin? Obviously, they wanted Donald dead.

      Reply
      • Cheryl Corey

        Thanks for your input, Cynthia. It cracks me up when someone questions “motive”. As your couplet points out, it’s obvious. Duh.

  4. Cheryl Corey

    Illegal migrants cross the fruited plain
    for subsidized apartments in Bangor, Maine

    (That’s two years, rent-free, fully furnished, flat screen t.v., and stainless-steel appliances – all new. In the meantime, displaced citizens in rural Appalachia get squat.)

    Reply
  5. Roy Eugene Peterson

    Cheryl, those are great two-liners that expose and excoriate that which needs to be blasted!

    Reply
  6. Joseph S. Salemi

    These brief, epigrammatic zingers were much more common in the past, and they were mostly used to make political points or to lampoon political enemies. In Rome (during the Renaissance and later) they were written on small slips of parchment or paper, and then attached to the Pasquino statue. For this reason they were often called “pasquinades.” Frequently they were very sexually explicit as well as political.

    These ones by Cheryl are great.

    Reply
  7. robert elkins

    Abortion this/that all day crying?
    Perhaps because of all the women dying?

    The Donald’s dodging’s so uncouth
    His biggest breach is from the truth.

    Kamala never mention’s God.
    But Donald’s lacuna isn’t odd?

    Consider four more years of Trump
    Consigns our Constitution to a dump.

    Reply
    • Joseph S. Salemi

      Elkins comes here to denigrate our man —
      Bobby, go back inside your garbage can.

      Reply
      • robert elkins

        Twas ever thus to answer back
        Absent valid argument with ad hominem attack.

        I miss our previous ability
        To debate issues with respect, civility.

        Statements of political opinions
        Should be reasoned with by other side’s minions.

      • Joseph S. Salemi

        Pasquinades don’t do “debating.”
        Pasquinades are just for hating.

        You throw stones and then expect
        Reasoned words, with due respect?

        Once you utter pasquinades
        You’re bound to get them back in spades.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.