
Perfume on a Stranger’s Coat
Can I? I might need ears of wax—
A light, warm poem that catalogues every conventional term of endearment before landing on the one that slipped out unbidden—"bumpkins"—and discovers that the most personal pet name is the one no one else would ever use.
This is one of the most charming and least complicated poems in the HoneyBeeBard catalog, and that simplicity is its entire strategy. The poem opens by acknowledging that the speaker has tried every standard term of endearment available in the English language, and the three quatrains that follow—Honey/Sweetheart/Darling/Love, Baby/Babe/Dear/Beloved, My heart/Angel/Gorgeous/Beautiful—read like a greatest-hits compilation of romantic vocabulary, each word landing with the comfortable familiarity of a phrase heard a thousand times. The line “You own them all— / and wear them well” is a graceful transition that honors the conventional terms before dismissing them: the beloved deserves every one, but none of them is quite right. Then the poem pivots on “something odd slipped out,” and the reader braces for revelation. What arrives—”You are my bumpkins”—is deliberately absurd, and the poem’s honesty about not knowing where it came from or what it meant is essential to its charm. The word “bumpkins” shouldn’t work as a term of endearment. It sounds rural, slightly ridiculous, maybe even insulting. But that’s the poem’s argument: the truest names we give the people we love are not the beautiful ones selected from a catalogue but the weird ones that escape before the editor in our head can stop them. The self-identification as “a fool like me” connects to the broader catalog’s tradition of the speaker as lovable underdog, and the parenthetical “(Not kiddin’!)” is pure voice—you can hear the speaker grinning. The closing image—”I’m a warm fuzzy blanket / of affection / for you”—is deliberately cozy rather than grand, matching the poem’s domestic scale. At 34 likes, this is among the most popular poems in the collection, confirming that the audience responds to warmth and personality as strongly as they do to philosophical ambition. The subtitle “My Bumpkins” suggests the word has stuck, becoming the private language that only two people share.
A small poem that does exactly one thing and does it perfectly: it finds the gap between what we’re supposed to call the people we love and what we actually call them, and it lives in that gap with unforced delight. The catalogue of standard endearments in the opening is structurally necessary—the reader needs to hear Honey, Sweetheart, Darling, Baby, Angel, Beautiful all laid out in their conventional elegance before “bumpkins” can land with its full comic-tender impact. The pivot from “something odd slipped out” to the reveal is paced like a stand-up routine, and the poem earns its biggest laugh at the moment of greatest vulnerability: calling someone “bumpkins” in a published poem is an act of trust, because the word only works if the beloved understands that it means more than all the beautiful words that preceded it. The self-deprecating “a fool like me” and the winking “Sheesh, / I hope you’re not / offended” give the poem the quality of a real conversation—the speaker is performing confidence while genuinely nervous, which is how most declarations of love actually feel. The closing blanket metaphor is the right scale: not a bonfire of passion but a warm fuzzy blanket, which is what most people actually want from the person they love at the end of a day. At 34 likes, this is one of the catalog’s most popular poems, and its success suggests that readers recognize themselves in the experience of accidentally inventing a pet name and then discovering it’s the most honest thing they’ve ever said. The poem’s only limitation is that its charm is its ceiling—it doesn’t attempt depth beyond the anecdote, and it doesn’t need to. Not every poem has to contain the universe. Some just need to contain a word that makes one person smile.
To impress you,
I’ve expressed many
Terms of endearment—
every sweet nothing
under the sun.
Honey,
Sweetheart,
Darling,
Love—
Baby,
Babe,
Dear,
Beloved—
My heart,
Angel,
Gorgeous,
Beautiful…
You own them all—
and wear them well.
But then,
something odd slipped out.
I don’t know where from
or what it meant
right then.
But hey—
You are my bumpkins.
And you are all of the above—
and the absolute best
damn bumpkin
a fool like me
was lucky to meet.
(Not kiddin’!)
I hope that’s a hug
wrapped in a chuckle
that lingers
around you.
My Bumpkins.
Sheesh,
I hope you’re not
offended.
Wink, wink
with a twinkle.
I’m a warm fuzzy blanket
of affection
for you.




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