It’s the second day of November and I have to get to writing verse. This is my 14th year of taking on the challenge to write 14 14-line poems in November, in what I’ve called LoSoRhyMo – Local Sonnet Writing Month – before I learned that my favoured verse form is not a sonnet, but an Onegin stanza. You can browse 20 screens of past efforts here, or you could even buy one of the five little books I’ve made out of them – here.
Today I’m taking as my starting point Waleed Aly and Scott Stephens’ discussion of the recent referendum result on The Minefield, though I’ve only listened to their opening salvoes, so my verse doesn’t actually engage with their thinking.
Here goes, with a bag of mixed metaphors and apologies for the Kipling reference:
November verse 1: Yes and no Yes means yes, and No means something else, just not the offered thing. True, Yes is narrow, No's a thumping choir too many voices sing, to drown out Yes's one voice, crowing, snarling, weeping croc tears, lowing pride-like, herd-like, chewing cud of victory, and tasting blood. But Yes can watch its hopes lie broken, stoop, and build with worn-out tools a new flame as the old one cools. Not just the Woke have now been woken: gauntlet's run and gauntlet's thrown, to be picked up. A seed is sown.

Loved it, Jonathan. A great summation of such a huge event in just 14 lines. You captured so much – and yet left the door open for the next steps. Thank you x
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Thanks, Deb. When I started I only had the first line. The tight form pretty much demanded an open door – and you can almost hear the gears changing as one leader after another speaks. We passed Stan Grant in the street in Glebe the other day and he wasn’t looking good
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