Daily Archives: August 25, 2023

Epizeugma

Epizeugma (ep-i-zoog’-ma): Placing the verb that holds together the entire sentence (made up of multiple parts that depend upon that verb) either at the very beginning or the very ending of that sentence.


Going the way of the wooly mammoth, lost in my bellbottoms, I said “haaay maaan” to the dude sitting next to me on the bus. He looked at me and said “has been.” I said “What is it man? My perm? My skinny ass? My bellbottoms? My Fu-man-chu?” He said: “All of the above and more.” The bus skidded off the highway, crashed, and I was all alone. I flipped on my boom box and slid in “Disco Inferno” and blasted it. People in white suits boogied out of the woods and circled around me. They turned into bill collectors and took away my boom box. A gust of wind blew up my bellbottoms and I took off. I landed outside a motel dance club/cocktail lounge named “Stayin’ Alive, Stayin’ Alive.” I looked at the marquee outside and saw my name flashing off and on: Prancer Pettibone. I was billed as “The dreamin’ danger: second cousin to the long ranger.” I couldn’t think of a better way to put it. I hiked my bellbottoms up and got ready to bust some moves.

I burst through door. I was ready! I looked around. There were around twenty people inide and they were all dead. No wonder! The disco ball was shut off. I turned it on. It started spinning throwing speckles of light on the dead patrons. They started twitching, and then moving. I found the sound board and slipped “Disco Inferno” into the CD player. I turned it up full bast. Everybody got up and started dance. I took the center of the floor solo. I did nine backflips, spun around and did my knee-break helicopter spin for 2 minutes and then a one-handed floor pump. I finished with a New York Crotch Cracker. I had brought the house to life. I was a hero.

Then I woke up on the bus to Scranton. I was 74 and could hardly get out of a car any more. For some bizarre reason I had been invited to give the high school commencement speech. Why me? I was a famous disco dancer back in the 70s and worked as a choreographer on “Saturday Night Fever.” Maybe that was it. Maybe it wasn’t. They should’ve told me in the email they sent me, but they didn’t. Maybe it was some kind of joke. I was late getting there, so I had to walk directly into the auditorium and start my speech. I walked up the aisle and everybody was yelling and screaming “Prancer!”

Then I woke up and my daughter gave me some hot cocoa. “Here Dad, this will help with the nightmares” she said, patting me on the head. They weren’t nightmares.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

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Epizeuxis

Epizeuxis: Repetition of the same word, with none between, for vehemence. Synonym for palilogia.


“Shuck, shuck, shuck.” I worked in a seafood restaurant named “Flounder” as an oyster shucker. We were required to “contribute to the atmosphere” by yelling “shuck, shuck, shuck” whenever we finished shucking a half-dozen or a dozen oysters. I didn’t think it mattered, so I yelled “suck, suck, suck” and “schmuck, schmuck, schmuck” and nonsense words like “shunk.” One night, right before closing I yelled “shuck you, mother shucker.” I had gone off the rails.

The Boss, Mr. Tony from New York, came up to me and said “You think you’re smart don’t you, wise guy?” I told him I was going to college and I would graduate soon, so yeah, I was smart. He told me we were going for a boat ride after I got off work. I wondered if I was going to be thrown overboard wrapped in cinder blocks. I got off at 11.00 and me, Mr. Tony, Tommy Chadrool, and Sticky headed to the dock. It was a beautiful night. Stars filled the sky and it was warm with no breeze. We boarded Mr. Tony’s boat. It was named “A Billion” for all the money Mr. Tony had made in the “restaurant” business. It was majestic: mahogany, teak, polished brass, and two huge diesel engines. The cabin was as big as my whole apartment, furnished in leather with 5 AK-47s set in a gun rack hanging from the wall. “A Billion” was fifty feet long with a crew of six.

The engines started, we untied and headed slowly around the harbor. as we passed “Flounder” Mr. Tony pointed at it and said “That place is a big success. If anybody does anything to hurt it, they will be in big trouble.” When he said “big trouble” he looked me in the eyes—I felt a burning.

So, from then on, I stuck with “shuck, shuck, shuck” when I finished a batch of oysters. I was yelling “shuck” one night when Mr. Tony’s daughter wandered in. She was 22 and beautiful. She said “you’re a big shucker, I’d like to shuck you after you get off work.” I had been warned about Carlotta. If anybody so much as looked at her for too long, they’d be found floating face down in the harbor. It was rumored too that she actually enjoyed playing death bait. So, I said, “We can shuck right now in the walk-in refrigerator.” She looked shocked: “What do you think I’m talking about you filthy goon?” Just then Mr. Tony walked up. “Is he bothering you Carlotta?” He asked. “He said he wanted to shuck me in the refrigerator.” she said. Mr. Tony started laughing uncontrollably—so hard his Beretta came out of its shoulder holster and fell on the floor. “Pick it up oyster boy” said Tony. I picked up and it fired, instantly killing Mr. Tony with a bullet to the head. Carlotta calmly dialed 911. When she was done with the call, she told me she had to go home and I could come over later if I wanted to.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

Buy a print edition of The Daily Trope! The print edition is entitled The Book of Tropes and is available on Amazon for $9.99. There is also a Kindle edition available for $5.99.