"Frog and Toad" were friends - how did you channel that epic image from Arnold Lobel, with this charming poem:
The gopher left his slippers
on the doorstep one night ....
then woke in the morning
with a feeling of dread
that the woodchuck was coming
It's awesome, as always. I love it when the prompt gives you brain freeze as far as plots and stories go, but the free verse comes spinning out like this.
How do you remember all these tales, and their authors? Your memory for old lit is astounding. You literary types...
I'm just winging it, tapping into global intelligence systems or something. Having fun doing it.
Thanks for reading my old stuff! I liked this one, and hardly anyone noticed it. It's sad to know my posts will never be read again, and I wonder why I do it at all, especially when I see others make $100 by saying the same old thing over and over again. Who cares if my posts are permanently on the blockchain? Maybe when I am older and greyer I will go over them again. For now, many of my stories are completely forgotten.
Wait, what...?
My memory for old books isn't so strong. I'm sure I spelled the author's name wrong. --Wait. I didn't misspell it!!! WOOT!! "Lobel" it is!!
Oooh, I feel better now (not knowing the difference, if any, between the two):
Woodchucks vs. Groundhogs: Are They the Same Animal?
The name “woodchuck” comes mostly from the Native American word “Wuchak,” which means, roughly, “digger.” The word developed into the name as we know it, and the names are used interchangeably, even in scientific reports on the groundhog/woodchuck. There are other Native American words that sound similar to “wuchak,” and it’s possible that “woodchuck” is a combination of all of them.
Now I want a picture of gopher leaving his slippers at the door, and
THE WOODCHUCK IS COMING....
Sorry to keep belaboring the point (comment, comment, comment!), but this is the image that made me think of Frog and Toad Are Friends:
Nope, not likely to find an image online to convey these friends walking in London in search of corndogs!