739 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
739 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
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FFFFF I L K K fffff i l eeeee
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F I L K K f i l e
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FFFF I L KK ffff i l eeee
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F I L K K f i l e
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F I LLLLLL K K f i llllll eeeee
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TWO
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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What, already??? The second compilation of filksongs collected
|
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from the FILK Echo and provided for download via the auspices of
|
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Kay Shapero, moderator of same. Publication date, June 1990.
|
||
All copyrights belong to the writers.
|
||
|
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FILKfile appears at irregular intervals of a month or more,
|
||
depending on how many songs appear on the echo.
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||
----------------------------------------------------------------
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BANNED FROM ARGO -- THE NEXT GENERATION
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lyrics by Bob and Brenda Daverin
|
||
(tune: "Banned From Argo")
|
||
|
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After 74 long years the Argo people changed their minds,
|
||
And said they'd let us visit their fair planet one more time.
|
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They figured we're a brand new crew, so how could it go wrong.
|
||
But something did, and that is why we're singing you this song.
|
||
|
||
And we're banned from Argo for all time,
|
||
Banned from Argo, though our visit was sublime.
|
||
We had a lovely shore leave there for just a week or four,
|
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But they won't let us dock there anymore.
|
||
|
||
Our gallant, Gallic captain with his head so mirror-clean,
|
||
Stepped in an Argo bar just to observe the local scene.
|
||
A drunk Ferengi used the captain's head to check his looks,
|
||
And woke up in the hospital, his hands replaced with hooks.
|
||
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Our handsome, suave First Officer likes anything in skirts,
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||
And when he's playing poker, his opponents lose their shirts.
|
||
He founds himself at table with a highlander from Earth,
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||
And now he swears he knows how women feel when giving birth.
|
||
|
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Our sensitive Ship's Counselor walked by the Argo Jail,
|
||
And was hit by the emotions held by each and every male.
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The warden called us up and said, "You've got to beam her out!
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||
She's taking on my convicts, and she's wearing each one out!"
|
||
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Our lovely, widowed doctor found herself a big surprise,
|
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A man just like her husband, only doubled in one size.
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||
She introduced him to her son, and then was shocked to find
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That having sex with Mama was no longer on his mind.
|
||
|
||
Our blind Chief Engineer's experience was rather slim.
|
||
Not knowing what girls looked like was a sticking point with him.
|
||
He fixed his VISOR so that he could see their proper shape,
|
||
And ended up in court, arraigned on 30 counts of rape.
|
||
|
||
Our green-skinned android helmsman felt the need to build a mate,
|
||
So when a ship leave came about, he'd always have a date.
|
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They found a cheap motel that had sex movies as the fare,
|
||
And when the rescue crews arrived, the hotel wasn't there.
|
||
|
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Our good chief of security's a Klingon with some class,
|
||
He led a pack of Romulans in a Klingon Catholic Mass,
|
||
Or so he told the shore patrol when they came to claim the dead.
|
||
He said they'd moved a bit too slow when told to bow their heads.
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||
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Our youthful acting ensign fended off his mother's friend,
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And sought to give his shore leave a far more auspicious end.
|
||
He made a human daisy chain like some had never seen,
|
||
It took two turns through hyperspace and generated steam.
|
||
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||
The hostess of Ten-Forward lounge has been a mystery,
|
||
Like how she met the Captain, also just how old is she.
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She found a dear old friend who called himself the Wandering Jew,
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And they reminisced about the time they spent in Kathmandu.
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||
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*****
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COMPUTERWOCKY
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||
|
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by David Dyer-Bennet
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||
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Twas Digital, and the binary bits
|
||
Did shift and rotate in the core.
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So flimsy were the circuit boards
|
||
That the mainframe out-wore.
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||
|
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Beware the swapping disk, my son.
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The seconds lost! The systems crashed!
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Beware the 12-bit word, and shun
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Remotely entered batch.
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He took the joystick in his hand,
|
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Long time the flashing circle sought.
|
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Then rested he by the PDP
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And programmed it -- he thought!
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|
||
And as in uffish thought he stood,
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The swapping disk, with blinking lights,
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Came whiffling through the I/O queue,
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And complemented bytes!
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01, 10! 01, 10! And through and through!
|
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His flashing line went forth and back.
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||
He left it dead, its dump unread,
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And thought to hit the sack.
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||
|
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And hast thou bombed the swapping disk?
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||
Oh, come to my arms, my beamish boy!
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Oh frabjous day! I overlay!
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He chortled in his joy.
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Twas Digital, and the binary bits
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Did shift and rotate in the core.
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So flimsy were the circuit boards
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That the mainframe out-wore.
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[The "flashing circle", "joystick", and "flashing line" refer-
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ences refer to a primitive computer game we ran on the PDP-8/L
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systems at Carleton in the very early 70's. It's the only case I
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know of a graphics-based game designed for a storage-tube dis-
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play.]
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*****
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DRAGON'S BREATH II
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by Charlie Kellner
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The dragon sleeps within the earth
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||
His dreams will never die
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||
They seek to trap him in his cave
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||
His soul is in the sky
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||
With shields upraised the armored knights
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||
Advance into his lair
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||
A breath is drawn; a sword descends
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||
The dragon is not there
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||
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copyright Charlie Kellner, 1990
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*****
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I LEFT BY BART
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by Charlie Kellner
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||
(tune: I Left My Heart in San Francisco)
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||
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I left by Bart in San Francisco
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||
Beneath the bay it calls to me
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To be where little cable cars
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||
Lay waiting for repairs
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||
The morning smog may clog the air
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||
They don't care
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They cry "Unfair!" in San Francisco
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About the pay they can't agree
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If I return to you, San Francisco
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I'll drive my car and ride for free
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words copyright Charlie Kellner, 1990
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*****
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ONE FOR THE 'PUTERS
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words by Susie Lee
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tune: The Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly"
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Poor old lady
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||
she swallowed a pi
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||
(I don't know why she swallowed a pi,
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poor old lady, I think she'll die)
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||
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Poor old lady
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||
she swallowed a mouse
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||
and the wire is still hanging out of her mouth.
|
||
(it makes her jump and grump and grouse)
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||
she swallowed the mouse to catch the pi,
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||
..poor old lady, I think she'll die.
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Poor old lady
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||
she swallowed the rest
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of the WHOLE computer!
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||
(wow, what a test! you can hear the hard drive in her chest)
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She swallowed the 'puter to catch the mouse,
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||
she swallowed the mouse to catch the pi,
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poor old lady, I think she'll die.
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||
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||
Poor old lady
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||
she swallowed a SysOp
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||
(a nice young man who made her hiccough)
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||
He used to be a computer repairman
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||
and now they two have made it to heaven.
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||
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words copyright Susie Lee, 1990
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*****
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RENFESTIE
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||
words by Jane Rogge Fredericksen.
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||
(tune: Wild Rover)
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||
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I've been a RenFestie for many a year
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||
And I've spent all my time pulling hay from my beer
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||
But now I'm returning for still more abuse
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||
With my boots far too tight, and my tights far too loose
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||
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||
(chorus)
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||
And it's no, nay, never
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||
No, nay, never, no more
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||
Will I ever be normal?
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||
No, never, no more
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||
|
||
I went to auditions to show them my stuff
|
||
And was told the artistic director was tough
|
||
I asked for a contract - He answered me, "Nay!
|
||
We've got junior high kids who will work for no pay!"
|
||
|
||
chorus....
|
||
|
||
So I pulled from my pocket my tinwhistle bright
|
||
And I loudly played "Greensleeves" 'til he cried with fright
|
||
"All right, you'll have staging. Just please let me be!
|
||
Play off by the privies in area C."
|
||
|
||
chorus....
|
||
|
||
So now I'm a Festie, confessin' I lack
|
||
Complete understanding of why I go back
|
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With the drunks and the mashers and whackos who do....
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||
And the audience even gets kinda wierd too!
|
||
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||
end with chorus....
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||
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||
words copyright Jane Rogge Fredericksen, 1990
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This makes a good singalong. If you are one of the variant bunches that
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sings Wild Rover with four sharp claps after the first line of the chorus, you
|
||
may choose to add the (traditional Minnesota Renaissance Festival) phrase
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||
"Right up your kilt!" in place of the clapping, varying it with "We want a
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||
raise!" if the song is being sung ON site.
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||
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||
*****
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||
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SUPER-FRAGILE...
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words by Susie Lee
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tune: "Supercalifragilisticexpialadocious" from the movie, "Mary
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Poppins"
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||
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||
Super-fragile-calculistic-extra-expeditious!
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||
It's the science of which (has to have been)
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quite fictitious
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||
If you write a tome of this
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||
you might be held suspicious!
|
||
Super-fragile-calculistic-extra-expiditious!
|
||
don't power it with D.C. comics,
|
||
only A.C. Clarke..
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||
and dashes of some Bradbury and Simak
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||
(for a lark!)
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||
you pour it down an Aldiss-ian abyss just for me,
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||
while I go into retrogression, jabb'ring in my tree!
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||
(OH! lum di-deedle-eedle, lum deedle,la!)
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||
((do that again if you really want TA!))
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||
Super-fragile-calculistic-extra-expiditious!
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||
this described a fellow who
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||
a lady thought delicious
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||
but then after she ate him,she
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||
was sick into her dishes!
|
||
Super-fragile-calculistic-extra-expiditious!
|
||
|
||
Now Stephen King and Edward Bloch, they
|
||
might have been amused.
|
||
For Bram Stoker and Annie Rice
|
||
our lady had perused,
|
||
SO never did she cook her meat
|
||
but ate him fully raw,
|
||
and by the time she had got sick
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||
she'd made it to his ____ (Awww!)
|
||
(Oh, lum di, deedle-eedle, lum deedle,la!)
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||
((take it from here if ya want any maw!))
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||
(((Oh, wellll)))...Super-fragile-calculistic's really a
|
||
comp-u-ter
|
||
And when it gets too fractious we would really like to
|
||
shoot 'er.
|
||
But it would cost us much too much to get ourselves a-noth-er
|
||
So whenever we're mad at it, we just call it "..a mother!"
|
||
|
||
Now Super-fisted calisthenic
|
||
is a swartzennegger,
|
||
and super-ma-te-ri-a-lis-tics,
|
||
of their husbands, beggar
|
||
but super stainless-steel-rats,
|
||
they'll never worry 'bout it
|
||
cause whether there's a law or not,
|
||
they'll all be sure to flout it!
|
||
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||
words copyright Susie Lee, 1990
|
||
|
||
*****
|
||
|
||
SWINGING ON STARS
|
||
words by Beth Friedman, Sharon Kahn, Elise Krueger and Cally
|
||
Soukup
|
||
|
||
Chorus: Would you like to swing on a star,
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||
Carry moonbeams home in a jar,
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||
And be better off than you are,
|
||
Or would you rather be a ...
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||
|
||
... Fan?
|
||
|
||
A Fan in an animal with books in its lair,
|
||
It won't wash its face or comb its hair.
|
||
It knows every story Heinlein ever wrote,
|
||
From his laundry lists to his grocery notes,
|
||
So if you think that you really are a slan
|
||
Then you are probably a Fan.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: ...Pro?
|
||
|
||
A Pro is an animal who likes to tell tales
|
||
About his advances and his sales.
|
||
He goes to conventions like the others do,
|
||
And every now and then he writes a book or two.
|
||
So if you think you can do without the dough,
|
||
You could grow up to be a Pro.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: ...Agent?
|
||
|
||
An Agent is an animal who gets ten percent,
|
||
Barely enough to pay the rent.
|
||
She'll hold your hand in all those contract fights,
|
||
Then lose your residuals and foreign rights.
|
||
|
||
So if you think you've got the stamina to shlep
|
||
You could become an author's rep.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: ...Editor?
|
||
|
||
An Editor is an animal who feeds on your prose,
|
||
Anything you like, she says, "It goes."
|
||
She cuts four chapters as a last resort,
|
||
And then gets angry 'cause the book's too short.
|
||
So if you like making others' stories beditor
|
||
You could grow up to be an Editor.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: ...Artist?
|
||
|
||
An Artist is an animal who won't read the book,
|
||
But knows just exactly how it looks!
|
||
He draws the cutest unicorns you ever saw,
|
||
And puts your hero in a chainmail bra.
|
||
So if you're one of those disgusting dragon lovers
|
||
You could grow up to do the covers.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: ...Critic?
|
||
|
||
A Critic is an animal.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: Reader?
|
||
|
||
A Reader is an animal who isn't a Fan,
|
||
But reads all the Skiffy that he can.
|
||
He buys his books from the major chains,
|
||
And reads L. Ron Hubbard 'til it rots his brains.
|
||
So if you're just an esthetic bottom-feeder
|
||
You might grow up to be a Reader.
|
||
|
||
CHORUS: So would you like to swing on a star,
|
||
Carry moonbeams home in a jar,
|
||
And be better off than you are?
|
||
You could be swinging on a star!
|
||
|
||
words copyright Beth Friedman, Sharon Kahn, Elise Krueger and
|
||
Cally Soukup, 1990
|
||
|
||
A New Chorus
|
||
words by David Emerson
|
||
|
||
So to heck with dragons and elves
|
||
All the fiction's not on the shelves
|
||
You can make life up for yourselves
|
||
You could be better than you are
|
||
You could be swingin' on a star!
|
||
|
||
words copyright David Emerson, 1990
|
||
|
||
And More Verses
|
||
words by Elise Krueger
|
||
|
||
A zinefan is an animal who's crazy for zines
|
||
And antiquated mimeo machines
|
||
She still does ditto, and you needn't laugh:
|
||
Her last perzine was on a hectograph!
|
||
And so if zinefandom's really what you wish,
|
||
I guess you'd better pub your ish!
|
||
|
||
A drobe is an animal who isn't afraid
|
||
To show us the stuff of which she's* made
|
||
She's got a costume that's unique and new:
|
||
Three large sequins and some Elmer's glue....
|
||
So if you like going out without a robe
|
||
You might grow up to be a drobe!
|
||
|
||
words copyright Elise Krueger, 1990
|
||
|
||
*two notes are in order here. First, I don't intend to offend
|
||
anyone. Certainly I don't intend to offend costume fans; I re-
|
||
vived the Masquerade at Minicon in the face of much opposition,
|
||
and have worked hard to allow costume fans the opportunity to
|
||
display and enjoy their craft. The song is designed to lovingly
|
||
insult everyone; if your group is left out, we can fix that!
|
||
Second, I'm looking for a masculine gender verse variant here.
|
||
Any ideas? I like to be able to sing both.
|
||
|
||
****
|
||
|
||
THE MAVEN
|
||
by Charlie Kellner
|
||
|
||
Once upon a weekend weary, while I pondered, beat and bleary,
|
||
|
||
Over many a faintly printed hexadecimal dump of core -
|
||
While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
|
||
As of some Source user chatting, chatting of some Mavenlore.
|
||
"Just a power glitch," I muttered, "printing out an underscore -
|
||
Just a glitch and nothing more."
|
||
|
||
Ah, distinctly I remember that old Teletype ASR,
|
||
And the paper tape dispenser left its chad upon the floor.
|
||
Eagerly I thought, "Tomorrow, maybe I will go and borrow
|
||
From my friend an Apple micro - micro with a monitor -
|
||
So that I can chat at leisure, and then throw away my paper -
|
||
Lying all across the floor."
|
||
|
||
And the repetitious tapping which had nearly caught me napping
|
||
Woke me - and convinced me that it could not be an underscore;
|
||
Appearances can be deceiving, so I sat there, still believing:
|
||
"My terminal must be receiving more express mail from the Source
|
||
-
|
||
That's it - my terminal's receiving new express mail from the
|
||
Source;
|
||
Posted mail and nothing more."
|
||
|
||
But my curiosity grew stronger; hesitating then no longer,
|
||
I stood up and crossed the room to see what waited there in
|
||
store.
|
||
Sticking from the terminal were three inches or so of paper;
|
||
Carefully my trembling hand tore off the scrap, and then I swore
|
||
-
|
||
"What is this?" I cried in anger - here I threw it to the floor;
|
||
Blankness there and nothing more.
|
||
|
||
Deep into its workings peering, long I stood there wondering,
|
||
fearing,
|
||
What could cause the thing to stutter, dropping twenty lines or
|
||
more?
|
||
But the ribbon was unbroken, and the "HERE IS" gave no token,
|
||
I thought the Teletype was broken, so I typed the number "4"!
|
||
This I typed, and then the modem echoed back the number "4" -
|
||
Merely this and nothing more.
|
||
|
||
Back then to my work returning, with my temper slowly burning,
|
||
Soon again I heard a tapping something louder than before.
|
||
"Surely," said I, "surely that is just another RESET message;
|
||
With my luck, there's probably expensive data to restore!" -
|
||
As it chattered, still I sat there, trying to complete my chore.
|
||
"'Tis the Source and nothing
|
||
more."
|
||
|
||
Such a simple program, really - just to fill one K of memory
|
||
With the Fibonacci series, but when it reached 144,
|
||
It had failed to set the high bit - Suddenly I thought I had it!
|
||
But just as I found the bug, my train of thought derailed once
|
||
more
|
||
As the Teletype's loud bell rang, then it sat just like before -
|
||
Rang, and sat, and nothing more.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly I couldn't stand it - Just as if someone had planned it,
|
||
Now the paper, like a bandit, rolled its way across the floor!
|
||
As I put it back, I spied two words: "CHAT TCX122" -
|
||
Which I knew must be the Maven, chatting from the Eastern shore.
|
||
Presently the terminal received and printed one word more -
|
||
Quoth the Maven, "#4?"
|
||
|
||
Such a message I was having difficulty understanding,
|
||
For his letters little meaning - little relevancy bore;
|
||
Though I must admit believing that no living human being
|
||
Ever could remember seeing evidence of Mavenlore -
|
||
Tell me now, what kind of Maven of the saintly days of yore
|
||
Could have written "#4?"
|
||
|
||
But the Maven, waiting for me to reply, transmitted only
|
||
That one word, as if his soul in that one word he did outpour.
|
||
Nothing farther then he ventured; silently the Teletype purred -
|
||
Till I scarcely more than murmured: "Stars and garters, what a
|
||
bore!"
|
||
Whereupon the terminal abruptly started with a roar;
|
||
Then it typed out "#4?!"
|
||
|
||
Startled at the stillness broken by reply so tersely spoken,
|
||
"Doubtless," said I, "what we have here could not be a line
|
||
error.
|
||
Failure to communicate, perhaps - it's late and getting later -
|
||
But I've never seen a greater unsolved mystery to explore."
|
||
Then I knew I'd never rest until I solved his semaphore...
|
||
"Who am I, the Prisoner?"
|
||
|
||
But the Maven didn't answer; no more data did he transfer,
|
||
So I wheeled my Herman Miller office chairair across the floor;
|
||
Then, upon the plastic sinking, I betook myself to linking
|
||
Logic unto logic, thinking what this ominous bard of yore -
|
||
What this unknown, unseen, unsung, unrepentant bard of yore
|
||
Meant in typing "#4?!"
|
||
|
||
This I sat engaged in guessing, but no syllable expressing
|
||
To the dour and cryptic Maven now whose words I puzzled o'er;
|
||
This and more I sat divining, with my head at ease reclining
|
||
On the seat back's plastic lining that the lamp light flouresced
|
||
o'er,
|
||
But whose flattened plastic lining with the lamp flourescing o'er
|
||
Shall compress, ah, little more!
|
||
|
||
All at once my thoughts grew clearer - as if looking in a mirror,
|
||
Now at last I understood where I had sent the number 4!
|
||
"Look," I typed, "I was just testing - did you think that I was
|
||
jesting?
|
||
Why was it so interesting that I typed the number 4?
|
||
Did you think that you were chatting with some foolish
|
||
sophomore?"
|
||
Quoth the Maven, "...#4?"
|
||
|
||
"Maven!" said I, "Great defender! Venerable comprehender!
|
||
Whether you began this chat, or were a victim of error,
|
||
Mystified, and yet undaunted, by this quandary confronted -"
|
||
(Could my terminal be haunted?) "Tell me truly, I implore -
|
||
Can you understand my message? - tell me, tell me, I implore!"
|
||
Quoth the Maven, "#4!"
|
||
|
||
"Maven!" said I, "Great pretender! Ancient Jewish moneylender!
|
||
By the Source that now connects us - by the holy Oath you swore -
|
||
Tell me in your obscure wisdom if, within your distant modem,
|
||
You receive my words unbroken by backspace or underscore -
|
||
Tell me why my Teletype prints nothing but the number 4!"
|
||
Quoth the Maven, "#4?"
|
||
|
||
"Be that word our sign of parting, bard or fiend!" I typed,
|
||
upstarting
|
||
"Get back to your aimless chatter and obnoxious Mavenlore!
|
||
Leave no token of your intent - send no message that you repent!
|
||
Leave my terminal quiescent! Quit the chat hereinbefore!
|
||
Type control-P (or escape), and quit this chat forevermore!"
|
||
Quote the Maven, "#4..."
|
||
|
||
And the Maven, notwithstanding, still is chatting, still is
|
||
chatting
|
||
Over my misunderstanding of his cryptic "#4?";
|
||
And I calmly pull the cover and remove a certain lever
|
||
From the 33ASR, which I never shall restore;
|
||
And a certain ASCII number that lies broken on the floor
|
||
Shall be printed - nevermore!
|
||
|
||
|
||
(with a nod and a smile to Edgar Allan Poe)
|
||
copyright Charlie Kellner, 1990
|
||
|
||
*****
|
||
|
||
THE NEW WAVE
|
||
by Charlie Kellner
|
||
|
||
The guru sits
|
||
high atop a hill
|
||
and says to the world
|
||
"Here comes the new wave!"
|
||
The businessman sits
|
||
sipping his martini
|
||
contemplating stock futures
|
||
and beach front property
|
||
The old-timer sits
|
||
secure in his mansion
|
||
and refuses to move
|
||
And here we are
|
||
in our outrageous T-shirts
|
||
and sandals
|
||
surfing
|
||
|
||
copyright Charlie Kellner, 1990
|
||
|
||
*****
|
||
|
||
THE PHOENIX CYCLE
|
||
by Charlie Kellner
|
||
|
||
Born of light in a darker age
|
||
When men howled at the moon in fear
|
||
Nourished by a spark of hope
|
||
In the ashes of despair
|
||
|
||
You awoke as the sun's last ray
|
||
Shattered the egg that protected you
|
||
Rising high on a plume of smoke
|
||
You spread your wings and flew
|
||
|
||
Fly, Phoenix!
|
||
Into the dark of night
|
||
The world has need of your magic
|
||
Wonderful and bright
|
||
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
As you grew in your power
|
||
Took to the sky like a shooting star
|
||
You lighted the path men walked on
|
||
They saw the glow from afar
|
||
|
||
Then they looked up in wonder
|
||
Fear of the night for a moment gone
|
||
They thought you might be a dragon
|
||
Until they heard your song
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fly, Phoenix!
|
||
Borne on the winds of change
|
||
The world has need of your magic
|
||
Wonderful and strange
|
||
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
As the dawning sun rose high
|
||
You sang with a passion they never knew
|
||
The light that had been gone for so long
|
||
Cast its love on you
|
||
|
||
Rising into the clear blue sky
|
||
Seeking the light that gave you birth
|
||
You touched the fire of the heavens
|
||
And brought it back to Earth
|
||
|
||
Fly, Phoenix!
|
||
Where no one else would dare
|
||
The world has need of your magic
|
||
Wonderful and rare
|
||
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
Men didn't know what you gave them
|
||
Some day you knew they would use it well
|
||
And tales would be told of the fire bird
|
||
That touched the sky and fell
|
||
|
||
With the last rays of evening
|
||
You knew that your work on Earth was done
|
||
You followed those last rays skyward
|
||
To the greater light beyond
|
||
|
||
Fly, Phoenix!
|
||
Into the endless night
|
||
All worlds have need of your magic
|
||
Beautiful and bright
|
||
|
||
copyright Charlie Kellner, June 6 1990
|
||
|
||
*****
|
||
|
||
THE WAYWARD WORD
|
||
by Charlie Kellner
|
||
(tune: "The Way We Were")
|
||
|
||
Memories... in the Lo-res screen I find
|
||
Missing 16-color memories of the wayward word
|
||
Scattered pixels of the files we left behind
|
||
Files we saved with Apple Writer of the wayward word
|
||
Could it be that it was all in ASCII then
|
||
Or has DOS rewritten every line?
|
||
If we had the file to edit all again
|
||
Tell me - would we... could we?
|
||
Memories... can be powered up and yet
|
||
What's refreshing to remember, they simply lose, then forget
|
||
So it's the hardware we'll try to repair
|
||
Whenever we encounter the wayward word
|
||
The wayward word
|
||
|
||
(apologies to Barbra Streisand and Marvin Hammlisch)
|
||
|
||
words copyright Charlie Kellner, Oct 1981
|
||
|
||
|
||
*****
|
||
|
||
WELL, ALMOST NO ROOM...
|
||
verses by Kay Shapero
|
||
choruses by Lee Gold
|
||
(tune: either "Temperance Union" or "Banks of Sicily")
|
||
|
||
Dad cycled the airlock, and Mom pulled it to,
|
||
Then looked at her hand which was covered with goo.
|
||
So that's where my chewing gum disappeared to!
|
||
We're off to the Moon for the weekend.
|
||
|
||
While making a sandwich my brother has found
|
||
That untethered honey jars wander around.
|
||
The galley is now a nice warm sticky brown...
|
||
We're off to the Moon for the weekend.
|
||
|
||
My sister revised the computer and we
|
||
Do not seem to be where they want us to be.
|
||
Two shuttles just missed us. Whoops, no make that three!
|
||
We're off to the Moon for the weekend.
|
||
|
||
To add to the noise, Baby's started to cry.
|
||
I don't like the look Mommy has in her eye.
|
||
And Daddy is swearing that next time they'll buy
|
||
A Spaceship with No Room for Children!
|
||
|
||
Choruses:
|
||
for "Banks of Sicily"
|
||
|
||
So fare you well, green grass and gravity,
|
||
We won't be back til Sunday night.
|
||
We left kitty home, 'cause there's no room to swing her
|
||
We're off to the Moon for the weekend.
|
||
|
||
for "Temperance Union"
|
||
|
||
Hurray, hurray for Zero-G
|
||
For Zero-G, for Zero-G
|
||
Hurray, hurray for Zero-G
|
||
We're off to the Moon for the weekend!
|
||
|
||
Verse copyright Kay Shapero, 1987
|
||
Choruses copyright Lee Gold, 1987
|
||
|
||
This was sort of as a comment on "A Spaceship Has No Room for
|
||
Children", originally intended to be to the same tune, but it was
|
||
SO ose I couldn't stand to listen to it often enough to learn
|
||
same...
|
||
|
||
I usually sing this to a modified version of Banks of Sicily.
|
||
|
||
------end of file----------
|
||
|