Topical Acrostic Sonnets

 Bigger And Lower

 Before The Bull was partly painted out,
 Its balls were bigger, dangling lower down—
 Genteel Dutch folk were bashful, then, about
 Gigantic orbs on pictures hung in town
 Establishments. Conservators, who are
 Restoring this iconic painting (by
 A Dutchman) with their modern repertoire,
 Not only, using X-rays, verify
 Dimensions, but can also resurrect,
 Like new, the glories last seen long ago
 On Potter's Bull and give it more respect,
 With all of its endowment still on show ...
 Except, they don't—in art, Dutch bourgeoisie
 Remain as bashful as they used to be!

 (First published in the Spring-Summer 2026 issue of
  Rat's Ass Review. Story here)
 Veronika The Cow

 Veronika the cow can wield a broom,
 Enabling her to scratch her back and breast,
 Relieving itch. This Austrian, for whom
 Old age brings fame, is now the manifest
 New poster-girl for multi-purpose tools
 In use by livestock, widely thought to lack
 Keen intellect. But what if they aren't fools
 And, copying Veronika, attack
 The status quo with brooms held high—if smart
 Hoofed animals refuse to constitute
 Earth's humans' prime rib roast supply and start
 Campaigns to claim their basic right, pursuit
 Of happiness? ... Will humans have a beef
 With Austria's tool-user-cow-in-chief?

 (First published in the March 2026 issue of
  Lighten Up Online. Story here)
 Austin Appelbee

 A teenage Ozzie, Austin Appelbee,
 Unfazed by having failed his swimming test,
 Swam bravely for four hours across a sea
 That grew more stormy as the day progressed.
 Intent on rescuing his nearest kin,
 Not giving in to weariness, this lad
 Approached an empty beach as night drew in,
 Propelled by hopeful thoughts alone—he had
 Partaken of no food or drink, and was
 Exhausted, yet he had to soldier on,
 Lest help not reach his kin, adrift from Oz,
 Before too late ... His ultramarathon
 Enjoyed success—except for judges, who
 Erred badly failing one who swam so true!

 (First published in the Summer 2026 issue of
  WestWard Quarterly. Story here)
 A False Identity

 An octopus was in the record book
 For having been the oldest in its long
 Ancestral pedigree. But what you look
 Like isn't what you were. The book was wrong:
 Strange blobs are hard to tell apart when they've
 Endured three hundred million years below
 Immense dead weight of rock above their grave.
 Dentition outs a record that is faux:
 Exceeding nine in dental number thus
 Negates the fossil's octopoidal claim
 To fame—it was instead a nautilus,
 Inside a false identity ... To name
 The fossil specimen you found beneath
 Your ancient rocks correctly, count its teeth!

 (First published on 4th May, 2026 in
  Oddball Magazine. Story here)



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