Dear Country
Feb. 18th, 2009 04:45 pmDear Country,
OK, we get it. You liked the bloody poem.
But seriously, do you have to take it quite so literally? I mean, in the course of the last month we've had floods, fire and it looks like we're gearing up for the famine part (OK, I'm over-dramatising a bit there. Maybe.)
Still, if you are going to take it quite that literally, could we have some of the rain down here please? Because we really would like to have the "filmy veil of greenness" thing happening, not least because it's more fire-resistant. And it'd help settle some of the ash.
Ta muchly.
OK, we get it. You liked the bloody poem.
But seriously, do you have to take it quite so literally? I mean, in the course of the last month we've had floods, fire and it looks like we're gearing up for the famine part (OK, I'm over-dramatising a bit there. Maybe.)
Still, if you are going to take it quite that literally, could we have some of the rain down here please? Because we really would like to have the "filmy veil of greenness" thing happening, not least because it's more fire-resistant. And it'd help settle some of the ash.
Ta muchly.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-18 11:12 am (UTC)AND...
It seems that Working Class Man is an anthem for all occasions. Song never dies. Always pops up in the weirdest places. It started me thinking it could even work at a funeral.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-19 12:27 am (UTC)"Working Class Man" I'm meh on. Hasn't popped up as much for me, obviously.
I still don't mind "We Are Australian", probably because it makes me giggle.
"I am, you are, we are, they are, he is, she is, we are Australian."
It's a song and a grammar lesson.