Jigsaw Puzzles & The Hobbit

Saturday, March 18, 2023

18 March 2023

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for today's Jumble, Printable or Interactive. Then return here to discuss it! This 𝕮.𝕿. site was available from 6:00 pm yesterday (Mountain Time).
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Image(s) from the Internet.
The opening poem contains all the words (or variations of them) from today's Jumble.
Comments are welcomed! And couching them in Poetry is NOT required.

Since August 2022, Wordle brags and links to original jigsaw puzzles are also welcomed!

Do not explicitly reveal any of the actual Jumble or Wordle answer words until after closing time, but embedding them surreptitiously in comment sentences is encouraged.

18 comments:

  1. Today’s Jumble haiku:
    (Soothing the bird’s morning,
    that she needn’t …)

    ”Wake Hard”

    A canary dish
    of fishy bits sings to her,
    “Awaken gladly!”
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wordle 18 March ‘23
    Par=4
    Wordle 637 2/6

    🟨⬜⬜🟩🟩
    🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
    Same no. of
    silent letters.
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  3. (My Mom used to keep a song bird in the kitchen. We filled her [usually a she] dish with store-bought seed, but every now and then we’d treat her to a small portion of what we thought a wild bird would like…)

    Diced & minced-up bits of fish
    serve to decorate her dish.
    What bird of song—wren, canary?—
    trimmed like a fairy, all alary,
    (even if, by nightmares, shaken)
    would not to such a feast awaken?
    This is what they love to eat:
    “Yum,” they say, or rather, “Tweet!”
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  4. I started with my usual flower, and did a lot of head-scratching between guesses two and three.
    Wordle 637 3/6*

    🟨⬜🟨⬜⬜
    🟨🟩⬜⬜🟨
    🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

    ReplyDelete
  5. Case (of) Fiords

    The sailor raised a canary
    Aboard his luxurious yacht.
    He studied everything fishy,
    And voyaged where he ought not.
    He awakened one day
    To find rock cliffs in the way,
    And ditched the boat right where it lay.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Same here C-eh on

    Wordle 637 3/6

    ⬛⬛🟨🟨🟨
    🟨🟨⬛🟨⬛
    🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

    Finally the ship rolled in. I think it's a starter word for many

    Misty , right out of the CHUTE I began with a J

    Fln, 3/16 is a Boston City holiday but it's termed "Evacuation Day"
    And...
    My 85 year old Pastor(Catholic) was "retired". He took a certain pol's name in vain in re. To the thousand + lies accumulated

    WC

    ReplyDelete
  7. "Pet Debt"

    Fred and Fanny met playing cards,
    looking at each other, face to face,
    and quickly let down all their guards,
    which their romance did awaken
    with feelings of loving grace,
    now knowing they would never be forsaken.

    A year later did marry
    and Fred bought Fanny a canary.
    Next day he found a goldfish in a ditch
    which made their romance even more rich.
    Now their marriages has lasted many years
    and Fanny remembers those early days with cheers.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Looks like W637 was an EZPZ slip of a thing.
    (That ship has surely sailed!)

    CEh!
    Your sailor’s wallet could afford
    to be in charge of all souls aboard.
    Rather than bother to navigate,
    he found it cheaper to evacuate.

    Piratical heart or spirit o’ whaler
    needs a proper corollary:
    We knew he warn’t no true sailor
    replacing parrot with canary.
    ~ OMK


    ReplyDelete
  9. Misty~
    Looks like Fred & Fanny
    shared instincts uncanny.
    From the get-go their hunches
    needn’t pull any punches.

    They were right to trust
    it was more than just lust
    between ‘em, but sweet
    smooth years on Easy Street.

    (Seems pets that are tiny
    prognosticate sunshiny.)
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  10. Washington’s first victory, Wilbur, as he relieved the British siege in March 1776!
    It is the same day as St. Patrick’s, a coincidence which, according to Wikipedia, “played a role in the establishment of that holiday.”

    Afraid I don’t follow you as to the “certain pol.”
    It might be a Kennedy in Boston.
    But the large no. of lies suggests Trump—although the number is way too small.
    Fact checking rated him at 21 lies per day while in office, and who knows how many as a civilian?

    But I can’t imagine a Catholic cleric getting in trouble for insulting Trump in MA.
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  11. Wasn’t this the day for Chet & Lois
    to be wed—for all us poets?
    Maybe, to avoid a farce,
    there’ll be nuptials discretely sparse.
    If, on their own, they’ll be eloping,
    Wilbur can claim he wasn’t joking!

    Or maybe he’ll post a later description,
    an elaborate blow-by-blow transcription
    of the fancy rites the family incited
    (even if we aren’t all invited).
    In that way, we will understand
    the reporting pressure won’t be grand.
    As fellow poets, we appreciate
    the value of deferring a date,
    one that may give us extra time
    to find our rhythm and set our rhyme.

    So, for Chet & Lois, let’s raise a toast!
    However they plight those troths, a most
    congenial wedding is sure to be had.
    They’re Cupid’s favorites, and that ain’t bad.

    However we read it in the end,
    It’s sure to be a winner, once it’s penned
    by Wilbur. He’s laid a foundation
    for a brilliant celebration.
    And on top of transfixing his reading crowd,
    he’s created a couple to do AA proud!
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  12. Ol' Man Keith, if I remember our early years on the blog correctly, I thought you did only haikus or very simple brief rhymes at first. Then slowly, slowly they grew a little longer and then a lot longer and more complicated, and then when I just read your long, elaborate response to Wilbur--well, I just want to raise a toast to you for the brilliant poet you've become. Bravo!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Actually, Misty, I started out with regular-length verses, usually sonnets or sonnet-length. Haiku came along over a year ago, maybe 2 years.
    But I thank you for today’s toast. Very much appreciated!

    Nowadays, I’ll venture again into longer pieces when the mood strikes, sometimes (rarely) pentameter, but most often three- and four-beat lines, which are the easiest.
    And couplets allow me to play freely still.

    It is easiest of all, of course, when I’m done with the J-words and can choose my own.
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete
  14. Yes OMK, it was Trump but it was retirement area Florida hence diehards.

    Way back in early Christian days the Bishops sent observers around to the parishes to monitor the sermons

    Said Bishop (Archdiocese of Tampa) must have got a lot of phone calls and mail

    It didn't help that Father T's congregation loved him and attendance barfed without him

    WC

    I'm trying to get ahold of Chet to see whether wedding has taken place or is delayed

    ReplyDelete
  15. Loved hearing your poetry development story, OMK--no wonder you're so brilliant!
    And today we should raise a toast to your amazing verse, and to Wilbur, and to Chet and Lois! Hurray! (I'd have my "sunshiny" pets toast you too, but all I have left is my Gophie tortoise, and she's not very sunshiny).

    Wilbur, I tried CHUTE and a few words starting with J but no luck whatsoever with Wordle today. But still so glad you checked in with us today.

    CanadianEh!, I hope your sailor saved his canary when he ditched his boat. Delightful verse!

    ReplyDelete
  16. Well, here's a blast from the past sparked by one of the J's
    [Smaug is loose, he know Laketown aided the dwarves]
    ********
    Smaug was no longer grumpy, he was raging abound
    His powerful wings were shaking the very ground
    Bilbo's droll raillery had stoked Smaug's ferocity
    The beast knew all. His revenge would not be pretty.

    Anything above ground was piecework for the serpent's ire
    The ponies dashed off, could they outrun the beastly fire?
    Inside the mountain's back door the party snuck and crept
    Shrinking, cowering Bilbo thought of Laketown and wept.

    ****
    Fruit,Usher,Overdo, Canary; Trans-furred
    **"**""$
    The fruits of his reckless riddleing would usher in
    Fire and brimstone on the Laketown men.
    He'd just had to overdo it. He'd got away
    So Smaug transferred his rage to they
    Who'd helped the Hobbit. What would betoke
    Bard and his kin and the kindly townfolk.
    He thought of young Tommy and sister Mary
    His teddy bear and her beloved pet CANARY.

    WC

    ReplyDelete
  17. Busy day today with the family.
    Enjoyed reading you all.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Nice to get your pastime “blasts,” WC.
    If we’re not yet to observe the bonding of Chet and Lois, it is good to be treated to reminders of your art. You give us a taste of the flavors to come when you’re ready to present the nuptial details.
    ~ OMK

    ReplyDelete

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