Monthly Archives: February 2025

Brachylogia

Brachylogia (brach-y-lo’-gi-a): The absence of conjunctions between single words. Compare asyndeton. The effect of brachylogia is a broken, hurried delivery.


“Pile, car, laying.” It was his last gasp. They were his final words as he lay there bleeding under his lawnmower. We had been hunting Mr. Scarzone for 2 years. He had stolen Prince Charles’ beloved polo mallet. Charles believed it brought him luck on the Royal Field of glory. Scarzone was adept at evading capture. He had hidden the stolen polo mallet and vowed he never reveal where it was hidden. When he was on the run, he would email cryptic messages to taunt us about its whereabouts. They were all adventures in misdirection, but we had to follow them for the sake of the Prince, who had become, more than usual, an intolerable whining twit—a boundless rotter.

Two weeks before he committed rotary mower suicide, as Director of the “Mallet Recovery Task Force,” I received another email from him. It said simply “High Marks.” After hours of deliberation, we were sure that the “High” was the “High” in “High Gate Cemetery,” where all the famous miscreants are buried. “Marks” referred to “Karl Marx” who is one of the famous miscreants buried there. We jumped in our police cars and with sirens blaring we headed for High Gate.

Nothing was disturbed around Marx’s grave. We searched the woods adjoining the grave, believing the mallet would be disguised as a small tree. It wasn’t. We had been misled again. I was infuriated, but there was nothing I could do.

In the meantime, the Prince purchased a new polo mallet that he believed was bringing him good luck. He found a woman who was “miles better” than his current “hag of a wife” and his watercolors had improved. So, the task force was to be disbanded the following week.

Even though we were disbanded long ago—eight years ago to be exact—I’ve been trying to decipher Scarezone’s last words. I have failed. I have given up. The polo mallet is forever lost.

I was getting ready to retire and was going to have a car boot sale and get rid of the junk that had been accumulating in my garage for the past twenty years. I had bundles of “Police Gazette” magazine piled up five feet high. I was thinking about how stupid it was to save them. Then, I saw something that looked like a broomstick in the two-inch space between a couple of stacks of “Gazettes.” I pushed them back, and you guessed it: it was the missing polo mallet. Goddamn it! Mr. Scarzone had hidden the polo mallet in my garage. Bastard! I sawed it up into one-foot pieces, and burned it in my back yard.

Fu*k everybody.


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

A Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Cacozelia

Cacozelia (ka-ko-zeel’-i-a): 1. A stylistic affectation of diction, such as throwing in foreign words to appear learned. 2. Bad taste in words or selection of metaphor, either to make the facts appear worse or to disgust the auditors.


I didn’t have a chance. My pomme de terre had fallen on the floor. It hit the floor muzukashī! I was on the verge of tears as I dropped my dishrag to cover it. “Verletzt” is not strong enough a word to describe its current state, although German usually captures effectively the effect of volence, like the German word “mord.”

I was next. Chef Parfaitti was making his way toward me. He looked at my stoemp on the preparation table and then looked at my dishrag on the floor with my patata’s bump beneath it. “What is that my little carrot top?”he asked like he was on the verge of kräkningar! He was fingering the butcher knife in his belt. Last week he cut off Tiffani Chuckwort’s ear. It was a mess. But, we were going to chef school where that sort of discipline is encouraged, Belarus.

We were going to a foreign chef school because no American school would admit us. We were like medical students forced to study abroad because of their lack of promise as doctors. Even my father’s billions couldn’t get me in an American culinary college. It was beaucoup decepcionante!

Now, I was about to be maimed for dropping a potato on the floor and trying to hide it.

“Pick it up you microwaved meal brain, you ‘Ready Mix’ muffin!” He yelled so everybody looked. When I bent over to pick it up, he squeezed my ass and started laughing like it was the funniest ever, anywhere.

This was too much, even for me. I turned on my cordless meat slicer and went after him. He was obese, so he couldn’t get anywhere very fast. My friend Dino tripped him and he fell flat on his face. I yelled “wooden mixing spoons!” Everybody grabbed their spoons and jumped on him and started beating him until he was dead. His face looked like rhubarb compote. I sliced off his ear and everybody cheered when I handed it to Tiffani.

The police showed up and bagged him up and dragged him out the door. Nobody said anything. Nobody asked any questions. Nobody did anything. Nobody cared.

The next day we had a new Head Chef. His name was Lucas Pinelli. He was wearing a Kevlar vest and had two Tasers holstered on his belt. Seemed mild-mannered and kind. “Time get back to learning,” he said. He pulled a pastry bag out of his pocket and squeezed a blob of pink frosting into his mouth. He looked down and said softly, “I’m an addict.”


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

A Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Catachresis

Catachresis (kat-a-kree’-sis): The use of a word in a context that differs from its proper application. This figure is generally considered a vice; however, Quintilian defends its use as a way by which one adapts existing terms to applications where a proper term does not exist.


Every time I hear “AI,” I think of the Carmen Miranda song: “AI, AI, I love you very much, AI, AI, I, think I do.” I see a woman dancing with a basket of fruit on her head somewhere in South America, most likely, Argentina. But this is my problem, not yours. I don’t know what AI is. “Artificial Intelligence” seems like an oxymoron to me, like “jumbo shrimp” or “alone together.”

My bony brain is turned to lava by the hot heavens of technology. In other words, I don’t understand. I recover from my fruitless musings by eating the banana resting in a bowl on my kitchen’s granite- topped island—disjoined from the kitchen counters, adrift in the center of the kitchen with pendant lights above casting their beams on the banana in the bowl below—yellow, with a few brown spots, at its peak as an edible.

AI, AI, I love you very much!

As far as I know, “Rod Johnson” was the first AI-driven animatronic being. He was introduced in the early 1950s to supplement the teaching of health-related topics in 9th grade classes across America, until the “League of Decent Citizens” lobbied to have him removed and burned. There is only one known Ron Johnson remaining. He is housed in the “Museum for the History of Visual Aids” in Iceland, adjacent to the famous Penis Museum in Reykjavik.

Rod’s mechanism: since he was deployed in the 1950s, there is only a heterosexual version of Rod. You plug him in. You slide the switch on the back of his neck to the “On” position. Rod’s eyes open wide. Choose one of the soft-core XXX pictures from the pile stacked in front of him. Hold the picture in front of Rod’s eyes. Then, pop goes the weasel, and there is a tent in Rod’s pants. Rod was supposed to be used in Health Class Units devoted to the male erection, its causes, and effects.

Things went wrong. Even though the pictures were locked in the principal’s office at the end of the day, it was rumored that teachers were staying after school and “doing things” that made the Rod Doll pop up. It was never proven, but nevertheless, the Rod Johnson dolls were confiscated and burned. Many people thought it was jealousy about the reliability of Rod’s pop-up function that led to his demise. Many men felt threatened by his 100% average.

But here we are today. A Japanese company is working on a life size Rod Johnson animatronic companion. It comes with three different size penises, a variable-speed humper function, and a heated variable-speed twirling tongue. Currently, they are back-ordered to 2031.

AI, AI, I love you very much!

So, without knowing what it is that I’m talking about, I’ve rambled way off point and probably angered and disgusted some of you. But, on balance disgust peeks from my soul’s basement, from the dank inner sphere of its deteriorating French dam cracked by anger as it floods—floods, floods, floods. That’s what I think.

Keep reading.

Rod! Bring me a robot brownie so I may eat the future for dessert. No?


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

A Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.