Robert Brown
Place bio text here.
Place bio text here.
All hail a great man: Robert Brown
A Sidha of global renown
Up over, down under
His work is a wonder
He wears an invisible crown
He’s worked with an interesting crew:
Brad, and the Brookses, and Sue—
The President’s Office—
With lights rarely off, it’s
Amazing the things that they do
His depth is the depth of an ocean
Which equals his depth of devotion
His silence in action
Creates such attraction
They’re calling it “Brownian Motion”
He’s been neither yellow nor blue,
Nor seen red, nor gone white, and that’s true
One thing’s for sure:
His color is pure—
He’s brilliantly Brown through and through
Robert looks young for his years
“Forty-WHAT? ” he constantly hears
Don’t stare, dumbfounded —
The reason’s well grounded:
There’s coherence between his two ears
No verse about Robert would do
Without making mention of Sue
They’re two of the greats
A pair of true mates
Browns — we’re big fans of you
Now Robert, in most things, is kosher
Except when he has to say “brosher”
His speech strewn with Strine
It’s no strain, it’s just fine —
May his pow-points soon balance his doshers
MIU Video Magazine —
He’s supervised scene after scene
Let the cameras be swung
Unsung heroes be sung:
Let Robert appear on the screen!
The handsomest head in this town
A face quite unable to frown
Great of heart, strong of hand
He enlightens our land
From the Red, White, and Blue: Welcome, Brown!
The phrases at first sounded alien
The speech recalled scenes from Pygmalion
But we Up Above
Soon fell in love
With this dapper and dashing Australian
From Down Under he journeyed Up Over
(He’s known as a bit of a rover)
But soon he sunk roots,
Began bearing fruits,
And now he’s quite rolling in clover
You wonder where Robert met Sue?
It’s true — it was Woolloomooloo
Then these two flew
To view MIU
And accrue a not-new Subaru
The language he spoke is called “Strine”
But this barrier could not confine
Robert, unwoeful,
Worked hard, passed the TOEFL,
And since then he’s doing just fine
He’s steady, and does a good job,
Along the way loves to hobnob
Quirks? Yes — for instance,
His constant insistence
That we all have an uncle named Bob —
A belief that he loves to declare
To anyone, anytime, anywhere
“Bob’s your uncle!” he’ll say,
Day after day,
Like it’s news too exciting to bear
Perhaps he was too long Outback
Where the heat can make riverbeds crack
But we nod and chime in —
“Bob’s your uncle!” we grin
And Robert comes right back on track
Irrepressible, this Aussie chappie
He enters the room, you get happy
Though sometimes outrageous,
His bliss is contagious —
Your own sense of humour grows snappy
§ § § § §
It’s obvious — no one need guess
At Robert’s Press Council success
A fact long concealed
Will now be revealed:
Robert once ran his own press!
Talent and drive? Clearly lots —
Everything gets his best shots
His goal is terrific
And most scientific:
Fill the world with books full of “chahts”
In Video, all would agree,
He’s flourished — spectacularly
Why, you might ask,
Was he given this task?
He simply loves watching TV
MIU Video Magazine:
It has to be seen to be seen
Place all your bets
On half-inch cassettes
When Robert enlightens the screen
As an artist whose language is stone,
He sculpts more than stoneworks alone
He sculpts knowledge on tape,
He sculpts rooms, changing shape,
He sculpts Heaven on Earth, as he’s shown
As a manager, Robert’s top gun
For big jobs and small, he’s the one
The man is a sprinter
At finding a printer
And anything else you need done
As a teacher, his gifts are unending
Keeping students alert, comprehending
But his teaching hits peak
With a certain technique —
He’s taught two thousand people transcending
He’s travelled to Russia to teach
And Latvia (close to the beach)
Thailand as well —
It’s easy to tell
He’s global in heart and in reach
(And noble in art and in speech)
§ § § § §
His feeling for nature runs strong
He often breaks free from the throng:
After the Dome
This jumbuck comes home
And sits by his own billabong
He planted small sticks in the ground
Put plenty of water around
Skeptics would tease —
But the sticks became trees!
In his yard Robert Brown is renowned
Robert loves tending things growing
In his garden, his “forest,” he’s glowing
When summer arrives
Samhita thrives —
Of mower, mown, process of mowing
§ § § § §
He dresses himself somewhat sportily —
With style, yet dignified, orderly
So very well kept
It looks like he stepped
From the pages of Gentleman’s Quarterly
From Italy, his coat’s warm when icy
His suits all look French — and quite pricey
But Robert is partial
To neckties from Marshall’s —
And it works — it has never seemed dicey
He’s charming, urbane, debonair
Such sang-froid, panache, savoir-faire
It’s very well known
He sculpts lines on stone —
But inside him, all lines are on air
He’s ideal, we know and believe —
We wear how we feel on our sleeve
An ideal big brother,
Unlike any other —
He’s Wally — and we’re each the Beav
He lights up our lives every day
And our futures as well, we must say:
We rise through the years
Without any fears
When Robert is blazing the way
Some may experience fright
Imagining themselves at that height
But Robert, invincible,
Displays a new principle —
He shines with a quiet, brilliant light
We scan the great heights that he’s braving
The path that he’s practically paving
We search that high place. . .
And look! There’s his face!
And look again! Robert is waving!
At 50 some think of survival
Others turn downright archival
But Robert, unbounded,
Shows fears are unfounded —
Fifty brings Ram Raj’s arrival
We’re still a fair distance behind him
But certain we know where to find him
Just look for his grin
To find your way in
To that region where nothing can bind him
Fifty years old! The dear man
Has lived them as few people can
He’s risen so high
Beyond even the sky —
He clearly reflects divine plan
With typical vim, verve, and pep
He took a significant step:
Perceiving the need,
Then taking the lead,
He founded, then joined, Peer Group Prep
The man is amazing, forsooth
He’s truly a fountain of youth
His bliss effervesces
Scintillates, blesses,
For what alone triumphs is truth
Robert’s middle name is Enjoy
This man who is still quite the boy
With praises we heap him —
And vow we shall keep him —
We’ll use any ruse, any ploy
One meets him and knows from the start
His life is a work of fine art
Gentle, genteel,
To repeat: quite ideal —
A very cool head and warm heart
He does all he does with aplomb
Outer big waves, inner calm
We locate the cause
In Nature’s deep laws —
Deep in his heart we find Raam
His action is that of devotion
His power is that of the ocean
In the Self he’s collected,
Protected, perfected —
The man is pure Brownian motion
And so we wish Robert “G’Day”
And more than words ever can say
By virtue of Robert,
With bliss we’ve been clobbered
Transforming our work into play
§ § § § §
So mike im a semmitch, dear Sue
Robbet is ow uncle — it’s true
Keep ’is rise-up lides shop
Minetine ’im tip-top
Ezzit gives you gripe layzha t’do
Robbet Bran an Sue Bran, by an by
Yer baoth stewnce again naow, thy sigh
When ’e sez, “Wezzme books?”
Daon’t give ’im looks —
Zarf trawl, ’e egg jelly does try
Praps ill come aom — gunga din
Plaise, nao sag ripes — it’s nao sin
Fitwer smeeide be griteful
An serve ’im a pliteful
An thynk the good Lowd furris grin
At aom, at yo tible en chez
Cant aony blaissins, not kez
Bran, man, ’e’s grite —
Zen ice of a mite —
Praishy-ite ole thetty sez
E nayva will pice uppandan
An nayva will fiva a fran
E’s a sote of a hobbit
Ow gryshus deah Robbet —
Ow gryshus and deah Robbet Bran
Praps more optoontees fo’ ott
Toox prace the grite genius aze got —
But daon’t ’it the eye-wye
The a-pote, the rye-wye —
MIU nades emma lot
The dye’s scummin glerser — betoid
Sanders lape, easa wike dape insoid
We’ll onna the beth
Of Aven on Eth
An see Robbet onnid weldwoid
An oi sigh naow to you, laze an jem
Shou ole yo prizes on them
On Robbet and Sue
Who grice MIU
Robbet and Sue
From Woolloomooloo
Aich of them’s truly a gem —
(And wot ayva thy want tadoo — lem!)
January 22, 1993