I dreamt a dream of Diddle Times
Where yellow moons float in the air;
They light the trees and jungle vines
And look to see what I see there:
The Gobageek flies open-beak
And grabs a tasty baya,
And down she sees the Lemurs sneek
In leaves and says goodbye ya'.
The Gobageek is quite a bird,
N'dawden doesn't lack it,
And when she flies no sound is heard
Except a clicky-clackit.
In Jungle Madagascareze,
N'dawden does math for ya',
Where Lemurs swing up in the trees,
And dangle in the flora.
She sees a silly question there;
She grabs it and she dunks it
In Lemur Sea: "Are circles square?"
The Punkalunks debunks it.
The Punkalunks is off to seas
And floats his boats a bobbin',
And in his ease, catastrophes
Can't touch a faithful baba.
His baba flies into the seas
and then he hears a plunkit,
It splunks right back to Timotheebs,
itself, oh who'd a thunkit!
The Punkalunks and Emalems
(N'dawden's what he calls her),
Are silly as their Daddilems;
They're Bitsy Pookem's treasure.
The word N'dawden is 3 syllables, with the stress on the middle syllable. The N'd is pronounced like the nd you would find at the end of a word, but you don't say a vowel before it. It's prounounced like something like end but without saying the e. You won't find anything like it in any English word. The a in N'dawden is long, as in mod, broad, or odd.
Copyright 2008, Tim Davis. Please don't copy-and-paste it; link to this page instead.