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Here we are again at The Baaamy Inn where, on the farmers table, a thermos flask surounded by tankards of ale is attracting interest; “I popped into the milking parlour to see how Ditzy Daisy was getting on”, said Ted, “and she gave it to me; she said it was supposed to keep hot things hot and cold things cold, well, she said she’d filled it with steaming coffee then dropped in a scoop of ice cream, but later when she opened it, it hadn’t worked – I left her to her udder-tugging, I’ll have a go at at explaining where she went wrong tomorrow!”
Babs had been to visit her mother in her old folks home, “a bloke was standing up making them laugh, he said ‘twelve’, and they laughed, he said ‘fifteen’ and they laughed, I was interested to know why it was funny; apparently he only knows a few jokes and they all know them too, so instead of repeating them at length each time, he’s given each one a number; well, I was asked to sing a song, they like my dulcet tones, and when I finished I thought I’d amuse myself by saying ‘twenty-one’ – they nearly fell out of their chairs with laughter, some probably wet themselves – I asked why it was funny and a guy said, ‘because we’ve not heard that one before’!”
“I went to funeral”, said George, “old Johnnie, he was always the life and soul of the party, a serial prankster, he would have hated seeing his friends and family all dressed in black looking glum, I remember him once saying he’d like to open an undertakers for people who wanted fun funerals, after all, the word funeral starts with f-u-n – he’d have a brightly coloured hearse that played tunes like an ice cream van, pallbearers dresses as ghosts and hilarious liturgies – he’d even scatter un-popped popcorn in the coffins to make cremations more interesting!”
Over at the knitting circle, eavesdropper Polly was talking about her friend Fiona, “she was married to a banker, when he died she married an actor, unfortunately he died too then she married priest; she says that if he dies she’ll marry an undertaker, they must be well off because it’s the only dying business that keeps going – Suzie at the next table leapt to her feet and started to sing – “one for the money, two for the show, three to get ready then go go go!”
“I used to be a banker”, said Colin, “but I lost interest – Irish bankers are successful because their capital is always Dublin – the banker stayed single because he was a loner – I asked my banker to check my balance and she pushed me – I gave a speech about savings but it didn’t get much interest – I’m going to retire tomorrow and live off my savings, what I’ll do on day two I haven’t a clue – I’m not attending my mate’s funeral, why should I, he’s not coming to mine – funeral directors start their day with a mourning coffee – people are always dying to get their attention – I asked one how many bodies were buried in the cemetary and he said ‘all of them’ – being a mortician is gross but selling fruit and vegetables is grocer – I found a new interest in playing backwards origami, I’ll let you know how it unfolds – I’m giving away a puppet if anyone’s interested, no strings attached – the World Health Organisation has your best interests in mind, WHO knew ……..!”
Landlord Len is not that computer literate, but now and again he tries to be creative, infact he’s just composed, printed and scattered about some leaflets advertising a Spelling Contest, but so far there’s been little interest and he was wondering why – ‘it’s probably because they’re not keen on smelling compost’, his dearly departed Maggie whispered in his ear’ – “oh no, that wretched auto-correct’s been playing games with me again”, he muttered!
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Thanks to Denise at GirlieOnTheEdge for hosting Six Sentence Stories where our given word is Interest.





















































































