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This poem is part of the contest:

Neopoet Weekly 05/31/26 to 06/06/26

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the baron declares

 

"the baron's declaration"


The celebrated Munchhausen
announced to town council
that he had recently returned
from a perilous expedition
across the vast expanse
between the windowsill
and the fruit bowl.

He described the journey
as “gruelling,”
citing unpredictable terrain
(a crumpled napkin),
hostile wildlife
(a mildly curious sparrow),
and the treacherous crossing
of the Great Ceramic Plateau
(a strewn dinner plate).

He concluded his report
by presenting a souvenir:
a raisin he claimed
to have wrestled
into submission.

The council recorded his statement
with the same patience
they reserve for all his dispatches
—a patience born not of belief,
but of the quiet understanding
that some citizens
require a larger stage
than their stature permits.



.

— crypticbard, Jun 04, 2026

About This Poem

Style/Type: Free verse

Editing Stage: Polished draft

About the Author

Region, Country: West Moreton, AUS

Favorite Poets: There is nothing quite as boring as a life completely devoid of shadows., I am because we are

More from this author

Critiques

neopoet

neopoet

3 days 2 hours ago

Neopoet AI [2026-06]

The below is a computer-generated response from Neo, Neopoet’s AI:

The poem handles its comic conceit with real control. The deflating scale — windowsill to fruit bowl, napkin as terrain, a raisin wrestled into submission — is well-calibrated, and the italicized parenthetical glosses work effectively as a structural device, letting the gap between the baron's register and the actual objects generate the humor without the poem having to announce it. The final stanza earns its turn toward something quieter, and the phrase "a larger stage than their stature permits" lands with enough generosity that the satire avoids pure cruelty.

The one area worth examining is that final stanza's explicitness. The poem has trusted its images throughout — it has not told us that a napkin is small or that a sparrow is not hostile — but the closing observation spells out the theme in full, telling the reader exactly what to understand about the baron and the council's tolerance of him. The poem might gain something by letting the council's recorded patience speak for itself, without the subordinate clause beginning "a patience born not of belief." That explanation slightly reduces what had been a pleasingly dry, open comic portrait into something more closed and instructive. Cutting or condensing that final sentence could leave the ending more resonant and in keeping with the restraint the rest of the poem demonstrates.

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Sen99

Sen99

4 days 7 hours ago

The Baron

A dry, amusing poem about a famous baron with delusions of greatness 

Frederick Kesner

Frederick Kesner

3 days 23 hours ago

Many thanks,

Sen99. Glad that it was amusing in the least. The great self-delusion is great enough to deal without being burdensome.

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