“Her son, her daughter.”

Her son,

her daughter,

have the same happy eyes.

 

As though their auroral kindnesses

were a shining blue birthright —

a girl’s compassion can apprise

a legacy of sunlit skies.

 

(c) Eric Robert Nolan 2019

 

Pale_blue_eyes

Photo credit: Larali21 [CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)%5D

Cover to “House of Mystery” #289, Joe Kubert, 1981

DC Comics.

House_of_Mystery_v.1_289

“Conversation enriches the understanding, but solitude is the school of genius.” 

“Conversation enriches the understanding, but solitude is the school of genius.”

— Edward Gibbon

 

BBC206171

“Sturmlandschaft,” Franz von Stuck, circa 1920

“Storm Landscape.”

Franz_von_Stuck_012

It’s a Christmas Twitter Political Limerick Miracle.

So, dudes, this really cool thing happened during the first wee hours of Christmas 2019.  I couldn’t sleep (yet again) so I was Twittering in bed — I wound up responding to the #Dimerick hashtag, where people were poking fun of Donald Trump with limericks.  I wrote four.

George Conway retweeted two of them. (As you’re doubtlessly aware, he’s the husband of White House spokesperson Kellyanne Conway — which is funny, because he’s an outspoken and highly visible critic of Trump.  He’s also a very smart guy — if you’re not following him on Twitter, then you should remedy that right now. )

The two tweets just took off.  I got 8,000 “likes” on the first one that you see below, and 5.8 thousand “likes” on the second one.  (Both got more than a thousand retweets.)  All sorts of people were retweeting them at Trump, Mitch McConnell, and the rest of the Senate GOP leadership.  (If the secret police come for me, I love you all, by the way.)

I know it’s a silly thing to be proud of.  But these limericks are … my most popular poems to date.  I might have finally found my real niche.

Just for kicks, I’m sharing the other two that I wrote below as well.

 

Limerick 1

 

Limerick 2

 

Limerick 3

 

Limerick 4

“Hanging Out the Clothes,” Charles Courtney Curran, 1887

Oil on canvas.

display_image

Throwback Thursday: January 1, 1980 magazine covers

I hope that you are all looking forward to a rockin’ New Year’s Eve.  It’s hard to believe that we are not only ringing in a new year, but also a new decade — “2020” still sounds like science fiction to me.

Where does the time go?  Somewhere irretrievable.

Anyway, here’s a couple of Pinterest finds for my fellow 1980’s nostalgia nerds.  (We’ve got a nice little subculture goin’ on Facebook.)  These are a few covers from January 1, 1980 (or in the case of the weekly TV Guide, the decade’s first full week).  Try to wrap your head around the fact that, in a few days, the decade will have begun a full forty years ago.

Oh … I couldn’t resist throwing in a couple of comic book covers dated January 1980, too.  I actually had that issue of “Battlestar Galactica.”  I still remember it sitting in a stack at the bottom of my closet, with one or two others — vastly outnumbered by “Sgt. Rock” and various “Archie” titles.

 

cv010180_1 - Copy

MAG1980PS-S

91vvV1AAg-L - Copy

3eb3a8e42a300d8f416af14dfa68d780 - Copy

il_794xN.1498535141_291z

49d59fbf5623f85deb747386ff6d2a07 - Copy

Cover to “House of Mystery” #261, Mike Kaluta, 1971

DC Comics.

House_of_Mystery_v.1_261

Merry Christmas, all!!

I wish you and your families a very Merry Christmas and a Happy, Peaceful, Prosperous New Year!

 

Christmas_Tree_Decoration

Stained glass window at St. Michael’s Lutheran Church, Nidda, Germany, 2018

Photo by Jörg Blobelt.

20180922425DR_Stolpen_Stadtkirche_Bleiglas-Weihnachtsfenster

Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers