Just Like Me

Ben Fankhauser sings “Just Like Me” at WRITE NOW: The Music of Michael Mott.

Lyrics by Michael Mott and Zoe Samuel.

Music by Michael Mott.

 

Hannah Elless at the Lark Play Development Center 20th Anniversary

Hannah Elless sings “Drawing a Blank” at the Lark Play Development Center 20th Anniversary celebration. Song by myself & Douglas J Cohen. Produced by Bruce Cohen, hosted by Dick Cavett, featuring Sally Field presenting Edward Albee with the night’s key award.

Lark founder John Eisner asked us to write about writer’s block, and after some heavy procrastinating, we did.

The Carbon’s Triumph

Written aged 18ish with my sister Juliet Samuel, who now writes for the Telegraph. Check out her work here. To the tune of I Will Survive. We were apparently really into chemistry.

The Carbon’s Triumph

First I was afraid
Just an allotrope,
All alone with excess neutrons
Without any hope.
I spent my time alone
In a gritty charcoal wand,
Then they threw me in the fire
And I formed a single bond!
And now I’m back,
An alkane gas,
And I float around the ether
With a great atomic mass.
With my four covalent friends
And my tetrahedral form,
I have now become some methane
And I keep you people warm.
You don’t see me,
I’m colourless!
I’m an alkane now
And that means I can decompress.
I found my catalyst when Bromine came to stay,
And we reacted,
In a very violent way!
I’m an alkene!
No longer crude!
I’m a form of plastic
And I’m used to package food.
I’ve formed a double bond,
And I’ve got some carbon friends;
We’re an alkene,
I’m an alkene!

[Instrumental]

It took all our energy
How our chain was torn!
Then some O3 trios joined us
And some ethanol was born.
We shared all our electrons
And were happy for a while
An alcohol…
But then we met a lump of coal.
I missed my youth,
My life before,
I’m a chained-up hydro-carbonate
And I want more.
So I waited for a furnace,
Broke the bonds, went off alone,
Then I met some fellow carbons,
And we formed a diamond stone.
I’m a diamond! A diamond….

[Instrumental]

To Natasha and Richard Ascott, on the Occasion of Their Wedding Day

Written with Natalie Samuel for some of our very favorite cousins!

To Natasha and Richard Ascott, on the Occasion of Their Wedding Day

It was a summer’s day in Somerset
When Richard and Natasha wed. They vowed
Eternal love, and every eye was wet
And every head, so tearful were the clouds.
The guests thronged from the corners of the land
To share the joy, or was it for the feasts?
For lo, there poured from Michael’s open hand
Five desserts, ten speeches and two priests.
Who are this lucky pair? Natasha’s job
Means daily battle in a hellish school,
Casting pearls before antisocial yobs;
While Rich helps wealthy socialites look cool.
And yet they match, so cynics, keep in mind,
Real love is fun to mock, but hard to find.

 

From His Coy Mistress

Written aged 17 in response to Andrew Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress, a poem which the speaker whinges about how the woman he wants to bang won’t bang him. He says that if they could live forever he would be happy to take things slowly and court her at length, but since they are going to age, she should give her honor to him before the worms take it from her grave. Essentially, he’s such a creepy, entitled, manipulative shit that a teenager could see through him.

From His Coy Mistress

Thou wouldst not be content to gaze
Upon me ’til the end of days.
Shouldst thou inspect me much before,
Thy lust will fade with every flaw
Thou find’st; I cannot let thee near.
Thy love to me is ever dear,
Yet, if I give kind words to thee,
What more wilt thou then take from me?
Were any man thus made to wait,
His love must soon transform to hate.
Content to look, yet not to touch.
Methinks thou dost protest too much.
Thy kind doth live for but one thing.
Taunt me not with thy whispering
Of lies, that men before have told,
Which steel my will a thousandfold.
Thou speakst of romance tender, though
Thine inmost thoughts remain below.
If thou wouldst claim an ounce of praise
Speak not these lies; of endless days
In harmony, of one accord.
Could any man live thus? How bored
Thou shouldst be, thou must needs confess,
If thou couldst not thy love undress.
If thou wilt claim me e’en so fast
Pretend not that thy love would last
Denied. No man did yet succeed
To lust in word and thought, sans deed.
Thy words are false; yet eloquence
Could prompt me not to send thee hence.
Tell me of what I may acquire
Were I to fan thy raging fire.
First, deck me with that diamond jewel;
Think me not some believing fool
To love without the marriage knot.
Once wed, to bed, or I will not.
Hadst thou been born within my sphere,
With ample means to keep me here;
Hadst thou great wealth, high status, land
Thy ring might soon adorn my hand.
Then all will follow; sense foretells.
Yet thou wouldst have no wedding bells.
Then do not fear, thou foolish knave.
I’ll take no honour to my grave.
The worms’ hot lust shall ne’er be sated;
I am going to be cremated.

 

The Nuisance

A reply to John Donne’s The Apparition, in which a recently-dumped whinger threatens to die of a broken heart and haunt his ex. Upon reading the original you have to conclude that the lady was better off out of it, and that Donne was a stalker. Written for a poetry contest aged 17ish.

The Nuisance

Why should I care if thou wilt clank thy chains?
Thou think’st thou couldst affright
Thy murd’ress by thy ghoulish sight,
To penalise my sin. O, spare thy pains
And stay in Hell; go not bump in the night.
He, whose I am now, is two of thee
And of thy love a mockery doth make;
He doth not tire so easily of me
For slumber’s sake.
Thy negligence made our love cease to be
So wilt thou now in envy prate thy plaint?
It was not I who cleft thy heart in twain,
But impotence. Lust thus slain
Cannot by mere love expiate its taint,
For nature will be satisfied. ’Tis just
That I am not content to gather dust,
But will live now; not slave to thee, but lust.