The Riddle Of The Dinosaur Poem by Bert Leston Taylor

The Riddle Of The Dinosaur

Rating: 3.0


Behold the mighty dinosaur,
Famous in prehistoric lore,
Not only for his weight and length,
But for his intellectual strength.
You will observe by these remains
The creature had two sets of brains,
The one in his head, the usual place,
The other at his spinal base.
Thus he could reason a priori
As well as a posteriori.
No problem bothered him a bit,
He made both head and tail of it.
So wise he was
So wise and solemn
Each thought filled just a spinal column.
If one brain found the pressure strong,
It passed a few ideas along.
It something slipped the forward mind
’Twas rescued by the one behind.
And if in error he was caught
He had a saving afterthought.
As he thought twice before he spoke
He had no judgment to revoke.
For he could think without congestion
Upon both sides of every question.
O gaze upon this noble beast,
Defunct ten million years at least.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
estoppel 20 November 2018

so very interesting and beautifully fun. i love it a lot.

1 0 Reply
person 07 May 2019

i could not agree more with your opinion to this poem

0 0
Emily 03 May 2018

I love the poem it's so fun

1 0 Reply
Neil Hudson 20 March 2018

First saw this poem in book 'An Appetite for Wonder' by Richard Dawkins and was delighted. Every line just sparkles with skipping fun. Below I read ' Not translated'. Well, I think it would likely lose a lot in translation.

1 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Close
Error Success