Our Quest #39
an occasional newsletter for davenport enthusiasts
copyright April 1999
used by permission of Charles & Jeanne Craver

Craver Farms

Charles & Jeanne Craver
Rt 2 Box 262
Winchester Il 62694
(217) 742-3415
email
 

Page 9

Poetry

At last after years of silence the poetic muse has revealed herself through feverish activity of our Davenport poetesses who have rejoined the battle of double dactyl versification, to which is added other snappy rhyme that is easier to read than describe. Our contributing poetesses are a mother, Carol Drennan, and her daughter, Kirby Drennan. A wittier and more gentle pair of ladies could not be found, and it ought to be added that an editor has to be careful with what Carol writes because it sometimes slips over the edge into being truly poetic. Such material, of course, is ruthlessly excluded from the pages of Our Quest, which are strictly used for doggeral about good horses.

  

Equiphilic Double Dactyls from Kirby:
          Clippity Cloppity
          Homer X Davenport:
          Desert-bred horses were
          His cup of tea;
          Said who wants saddlebreds
          Skeletologicly,
          Find your own sources, can’t
          Get them from me!



          Clippity Cloppity
          Dressage Monopoly
          Bored Walk and Park Pace
          will Not win the prize.
          Arab competitors
          Unprejudicially
          Pass C, collecting, in
          Spite of their size.


A Name Game (using the names of Craver Farms horses: Monsoon, Vivacity, Dixie Cup, Atticus, Catalyst, Petticoat, Arietta, and Regatta and Jeanne's mare, Levity) and linking them with the Flood of 1993.

          Levity Brokity
          Monsoon Vivacity.
          Bring me a Dixie Cip
          There’s been a flood.
          Attaboy, Atticus,
          Catapult Catalyst.
          Somebodies' Petticoat’s
          Stuck in the mud.
          Arietta the end yet?
          Regatta be soon.



Not Quite a Double Dactyl from Carol:
          Boomily Gloomily
          Cumulonimbusly
          Thunder Storms crashing and
          Shouting of Spring!
          Sunlight and Breezes so
          Warm and inviting coax
          Violet myriads,
          Whispering Spring.


Found on the back of a photo of Major General, sent to us by Judith Franklin:

        No job too big, no job too small:
        Major General can do it all!
        Boundless energy in one bay hide,
        Tremendous power in every stride!
        No wisp of south wind, he —
        King of the mountain, he would be.
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