Ballade Against Cheesemongery

Story by Rob MacWolf on SoFurry

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#29 of poetry

One of the things I love about the Ballade, as a form, is that it's equally adaptable to jokes as to serious poetry.


The grocer's, for $6.95 per pound

Harvarti sells, in blocks of creamy beige

Bespeckled with unthinkables (well ground

Or crushed) like nuts, or wine, or sage

And rosemary. At this I briefly rage

Then pass it o'er for cheap varieties

My unsophistic hungers to assuage.

I do desire no vanity in cheese.

I go, and madness does not fall behind:

In tubs on frigid shelves they sell a paste

Flavored with cherries, or with garlic rind,

Or bacon. And withal there goes to waste

The sweetest cream that e'er Galthea placed

Between pastoral palms of devotees

In Arcady, whose name is here disgraced,

And did desire no vanity in cheese.

And lo! What woe behold I though I rail

Against whatever fiend devised this thing

Called Pepperjack, to make the righteous quail

With wax to mock and capsicum to sting!

My muse fails, and I can no longer sing

Upon this sacrilege! The poet flees.

(He snatches Mozzeralla on the wing,

For he desires no vanity in cheese.)

Prince, you sent me pepper-corned Edam

With citron-oil essence. Remove it please:

Its power to sour my gut, your soul to damn!

I do desire no vanity in cheese.