Fun_People Archive
14 May
MacDonald's Soliloquy


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From: Peter Langston <psl>
Date: Tue, 14 May 96 16:20:40 -0700
To: Fun_People
Subject: MacDonald's Soliloquy

Forwarded-by: "Jack D. Doyle" <doylej@PEAK.ORG>
Forwarded-by: gregory.lam@test.ablelink.org (Gregory Lam)

                         __MacDonald's Soliloquy__
                         or, Parody after Macbeth
                                                                Gregory Lam
                                                                  Feb. 5/96

                 Is this a burger which I see before me,
                 The soft bun in my hand?  Come, let me clutch thee.
                 I eat thee not, and yet I want thee still.
                 Art thou not, gourmet's vision, sensible
                 To taste as to sight?  or art thou but
                 A burger of the mind, a false dinner,
                 Proceeding from the meat-oppressed stomach?
                 I see thee yet, in form as palatable
                 As this cracker which now I chew.
                 Thou nourish'st me on the way that I was going,
                 And such condiments I was to use!
                 Mine mouth are made the fools o' the other senses,
                 The calories worth all the rest; I see thee still,
                 And on thy plate and Happy Meals of fat,
                 Which was not so before.  There's no such food:
                 It is the bloody diet which informs
                 Thus to mine eyes.  Now o'er the Weight Watchers
                 Tastebuds seem dead, and raw salads abuse
                 The growling bowels; famished celebrate
                 Jenny Craig's offerings, and wither'd hunger,
                 Alarum'd by his sentinel, the bathroom scale,
                 Laughs as it watches, thus with his mocking numbers.
                 With Hamburglar's ravishing strides, towards his goal
                 I move like a ghost.  Thou warm and delicious beef,
                 Hear not my teeth, which way they chew, for fear
                 My very swallows prate of my gluttony,
                 And take the present mirror from the room,
                 When now suits do not fit.  Whiles I starve, he lives:
                 Buffets to the heat of charbroiled chicken gives.
                     [A bell rings.]
                 I go, and it is done; the microwave bell invites me.
                 Hear it not, Tongue; for it is a knell
                 That summons thy mouth to heaven and thy body to hell.
                     [Exeunt.]


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