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Auxesis

Auxesis (ok-see’-sis): (1) Arranging words or clauses in a sequence of increasing force. In this sense, auxesis is comparable to climax and has sometimes been called incrementum. (2) A figure of speech in which something is referred to in terms disproportionately large (a kind of exaggeration or hyperbole). (3) Amplification in general.


When is big too big? It was like my nose. I made Pinocchio look like one of those pug-nose dogs from China. It was six inches long and shaped like a broomstick. It was hereditary.

10 centuries ago it had a purpose, when the world was a magical place and there were strange creatures populating the land. Among others, there were princely frogs, cats in boots, and mermaids in the sea, in rivers, in lakes. People were on an equal footing with other creatures—helping each other and sharing the land and waters and not eating each other.

My ancestors were “Transporters.” They used their noses to provide a sort of taxi service for imps, sprites, and other tiny creatures. My ancestors wore small saddles on their noses and provided tiny umbrellas when it rained.

Sadly, all this came to an end when the Huns murdered the remnant of magical creatures who survived the plague. It was a sad day for my family. They lost some of their best friends, and their taxi-noses were no longer needed. They discovered that their ample noses were good at picking up scents. Some joined packs of hounds chasing game (often fox hunting) and others went into law enforcement sniffing out fugitives. Still others went into the perfume business ensuring the consistency of the perfumes’ scents. My most famous ancestor was Gilbert Bear. He was a wine taster. His huge nose magnified his palette’s unerring discernment of excellence in every vintage imaginable. He had a special wine glass to accommodate his nose, custom made by Venetian glass lowers from glass so clear it is nearly invisible. Truly, a priceless work of art.

Tomorrow, I’m getting my nose shortened 5 inches, down to one inch. Its dowel-like shape is being sculpted into a normal-looking nose bridge.

I arrived at “Nu-Nose” at 8:00am. There was a woman sitting there with a nose exactly like mine! My heart skipped a beat. My God! She was beautiful. I asked if she was descended from the Gascoins, drivers of nose taxis. She said no, but her ancestors, the Crompers, were nose taxi drivers too. There was a warmth between us. It was like we were meant to meet at a nose-job clinic. We had our nose-jobs, dated and got married. We have just had a baby, Mildred. She has inherited her ancestors’ noses. Already at six months it’s 2 inches long. We can’t wait to get her a nose job.


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

The Daily 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

Dendographia

Dendrographia (den-dro-graf’-ia): Creating an illusion of reality through vivid description of a tree.


I was a loner as a kid, and my best friends were my little plastic cowboys and Army men. They were about one inch tall and were molded in different poses—cowboys spinning lariats and aiming .45s, and Army men marching, or aiming their rifles.


I used to play “little men” at the base of the oak tree during the summer when I was on school vacation. The oak tree towered above me. Even though it wasn’t autumn, every once in awhile an acorn would fall—sometimes hitting me on the head as I played. I would pick the acorns up and hold them up and look at them—smooth shiny green skin with a brown cap—round, with a surface almost like sandpaper. If I tossed an acorn it would bounce along the sidewalk, flip flopping in different directions.

The sidewalk had cracked around the base of the tree where its roots had stretched out, some over six inches wide. They formed tunnels between them, turning into little caves where they grew from the tree. This summer, carpenter ants had taken up residence in the tree. There was sawdust accumutating at the mouths of the cave openings.

For the heck of it, I put my favorite cowboy Joe at a cave’s opening. Joe said, “Git outta here you varmints or I’ll call in the soldiers and have you run outta here!” I heard a tiny female voice say, “Oh thank-you noble cowboy! But, it is hopeless. Once they take over, it’s all over. I will need to find a new home. But where?” I stuck my face in front of the opening. The tree fairy inside made Barbie look like a frump. The tree fairy saw me and asked me who I was. I said, “My name is Johnny. I can help you find a new home. There are woods at the bottom of my street where there are two or three really big oak trees. Come with me and you’ll be saved.” She said, “Yes. I will stay with you tonight and we can find me a new home tomorrow.” I agreed. She came out of the tree and climbed into my shirt pocket. We sneaked into my house, past my mom and up to my room.

“This where I sleep. I’ll be back in a couple of hours.” After dinner and after watching the “Honeymooners” with my mom, dad and sister, I went up to my room. The little tree fairy was already asleep on my pillow. I put her and the pillow on the floor and climbed into bed. In the morning, we were awakened by the sound of chainsaws. They were cutting down the oak tree! The tree fairy started crying. She was tiny, but her crying was deafening. The chainsaws stopped. She said she had to say goodbye to her beloved tree, and then we’d be on our way. I put her in my shirt pocket and we headed downstairs. When we got to the tree, the workers were distracted, arguing about why their chainsaws had quit.

The tree fairy said to the oak tree: “You were my home for 112 years. You fed me. You kept me warm and dry. I tended you as best as I could, but there comes a time when a tree must die. You are dying. Goodbye my beloved oak tree.” She asked me to gather a handful of acorns for her to store and have to eat when she got to her new home. As I turned and we started for the woods again, the chainsaws started up and the workers went back to cutting down the tree.

We found a beautiful new home for her—a giant oak with a squirrel living in a nest in its branches. I put the acorns on the ground and lifted the tree fairy out of my pocket. She said “Hold my face to your forehead.” I did, and she gave me a kiss. I put her down and she scurried into an opening at the bottom of the tree.

I went back early the next morning. She and the acorns were gone.

When I went to school that day, I noticed there was a new girl in my class. She wore a necklace made of acorns. She looked at me like she knew me. Could it be?


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

The Daily 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.

Diasyrmus

Diasyrmus (di’-a-syrm-os): Rejecting an argument through ridiculous comparison.


“Your argument is like a squirming dog with no legs. Your argument is like an oath of allegiance to an onion. Your argument is like a carrot up an acrobat’s ass.“ This is what I live for, tearing 19 year-olds to pieces with sarcastic, and possibly sociopathic, opinions of their stillborn reasoning abilities.

This was my fist meeting of the semester with my class—all first-years with starry eyes and great expectations. They were taking PHL 107 from me. They’re aspiring philosophers eager to drag people out of their Plato-caves with 285 horsepower tow trucks pulling them toward Truth with all wheel drive logic. I titled the course “Argumentation for First-Year Twerps.” I would say crazy shit and they wrote it down—I allowed no electronic devices in my classroom, except for my vape pen. It was loaded with “Star Trek Drizzle,” advertised as “Warping you to where no man has been before.” Their tagline is sexist and I had written several emails complaining. All the replies I got were written in Klingon, That scared me so I backed off—I didn’t my mind melted by one of those ugly smart-ass weirdos.

So, the three students I was picking on today started quietly crying, like they had just seen a girlie movie about orphaned bunnies looking for their grandma in a field full of wolf traps. I yelled, “Do you need a tissue? I only have one. You’ll have to share.” They bowed their heads. I shouted “Stand up!” And they stood up, passing the tissue to each other. It was disgusting, but I was glad I’d told them at the start of class to sit alongside each other. I yelled, “Which one of you knows how to yodel?” None of them knew how to yodel. I said calmly, “Sit the hell down. Haven’t you caused enough harm already? That was a rhetorical question.” I took a long pull on my vape.

Then I spotted a goddamn garden gnome in the third row. When we made eye contact, he started laughing really hard. I yelled, “What the hell are you laughing at, you piece of shit excuse for an imp!” The students looked around like they were confused. The gnome told me that he was invisible. Then, he said, “You’re a piece of shit” and tipped his little red gnome hat. As he tipped his hat, I turned into a six-foot two- inch tall piece of shit. I could see my shithood, but I looked like normal me to the students. I knew this because they didn’t scream,or panic in any way when I went to shit.

To me, I see a permanent piece of shit. I look normal to everybody else. I was suspended from my teaching duties at the University for “Failing to secure permission in writing from your Department Chair before talking out loud to yourself in class.” Why the hell did I need the Chair’s permission for something half the faculty did all the time anyway? The Faculty Club was filled with professors talking to themselves everyday. To be fair, they thought they were talking to somebody, but the “somebody” wasn’t listening. The self-absorption rate among faculty is close to 100%. Nobody listens. They just want to “blah, blah, blah” about abstract bullshit with no application to everyday life.

I am filing a lawsuit so I can get back in the classroom. In the meantime, I am serving as interim VP for Academic Affairs and learning how to shave without a mirror.


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

There is a print edition of the Daily Trope available on Amazon for $9.99. There is also a Kindle edition available for $5.99.

Distributio

Distributio (dis-tri-bu’-ti-o): (1) Assigning roles among or specifying the duties of a list of people, sometimes accompanied by a conclusion. (2) Sometimes this term is simply a synonym for diaeresis or merismus, which are more general figures involving division.


Ok Norm, you’ll feed him the lies we’ve been working on. Charles, you’re on board for the promises that will never be kept. Jillian, you’ll float him the usual bogus accusations. Don, you just sit there on your fat ass. If your prefab feeds go south, just say “hoax” over and over like a hypnotized hippo. I’ll do the usual before-show extortion, and we’ll be all set for a stellar performance on “Meet the Press.”

Yikes!

This is what goes on as the Bullshit Express rolls across America on behalf of “Fog Horn” Trump whose smoking brain spins around inside cranium, belting out blather that passes for anything but what it is, among his angry sheep that consider him America’s Lord and Savior—a perfect genius, a credentialed saint, a prophet and a seer anointed by the Lord and endorsed by the Mandate of Heaven and FOX News.

Yikes!

He can do no wrong. His conviction for sexual assault and libel was the result of bribery and the cleverness of Satanic prosecution lawyers. But, even if he did the things he was charged with, Trump’s loving romantic urgings were misconstrued, and what was called “libel” was actually the truth packaged in strong language.

Yikes!

Now they’re saying Trump erred when he said Biden is taking us into WWII, when we’ve already fought it. Hah! We say there was a stretch of time between the battling, but we were always fighting Germans all the time. As far as the Japanese go, we say that was hardly a Word War—it was more like Viet Nam, but we won. “So, back off! WWII hasn’t come yet. Neither has WWIII or IV for that matter.”

Yikes!

Trump’s political cup overflows will bullshit. Certainly, just and merciless verdicts will propel him to prison where he will dwell for the rest of his life, and then, off to Hell where he will spend eternity eating shit with his tongue on fire and hungry leaches sucking on his eyeballs.


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

A paper edition of The Daily Trope, entitled The Book of Tropes, is available for purchase on Amazon for $9.99 USD. It contains over 150 schemes and tropes with their definitions and at least 2 examples of each. All of the schemes and tropes are indexed, so it’s easy to find the one you’re looking for. There is also a Kindle edition available with links to all of the schemes and tropes. It costs $5.95

Epizeuxis

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


Move! Move! Move! It should’ve been Moo! Moo! Moo! We were being pushed around like a herd of rebellious cows. I got stuck in the middle of this crowd while I was on my way to work. The handle had come lose on my briefcase and I stopped to look at it it and I was engulfed. I didn’t know where I was going—I was like a piece of flotsam. I looked at the guy next to me. He was wearing a cowboy hat. I counted six earrings swinging from his ear. He was wearing one one those sleeveless t-shirts. He had a black circle tattooed on his upper arm.

“Where are we going?” I asked politely. He turned his head and looked at me. He had another black circle tattooed between his eyes. He said “We’re going, going, just going until we are gone. They will throw us bottled water and roast beef sandwiches while we are on our way.” “How do I get out of this mess.” I asked. He said, “When we get THERE. And, by the way, it isn’t a mess, it’s a ritual celebrating The Herd Instinct.” “What?” “The fu*king herd instinct, loser! Why don’t you just lie down and get trampled, numnuts?”

At that point, a marching band started playing the theme song from “Rawhide” a cowboy show popular in the late sixties: “Roll ‘em, roll ‘em, roll ‘em. Keep those dogies roll’in, though the creeks are swollen. Rawhide. Move ‘em up, head ‘em out, Rawhide!” I couldn’t believe I was somewhere in Chicago being propelled along by at least 1,000 lunatics. Right then, I got hit in the head by one of the Roy Rogers roast beef sandwiches the “Trail Bosses” were throwing at us. Yes—they were “Trail Bosses” the guy alongside told me as he managed to catch a sandwich. Subsequently, I was hit in the head by a small bottled water. Then, the marching band started playing “Night Herding.” The guy next to me told me it was an old cowboy song: “I’ve cross-herded, circle-herded, trail-herded too, But to keep you together, that’s what I can’t do, Bunch up, little dogies, bunch up.” When they got to “bunch up,” everybody stopped and rubbed their hips up against each other, and then kept going. The guy next to me told me we were almost THERE. Although they had been closed for years,  I could smell the famed Chicago Union Stock Yards.

This was totally surreal. I was a successful businessman. In my head, I was chastising myself for not taking a cab that morning—why was I so damn cheap? Maybe it wasn’t me anyway. Maybe I had died and been reincarnated as a cow that looked like a person. I was freaked out through the roof. The smell of the stockyards got stronger. The guy next to me said, “We are THERE.” The herd stopped. My heart almost stopped too. A man with a Bull Horn, sculpted like a bull’s horn, climbed a fifteen-foot step ladder in front of stock yards’ gate—all that remained of Chicago’s once vibrant meatpacking industry. While the ghosts of millions of doomed cows mooed softly in the background, he addressed the crowd. Herdmaster  “Gristle” Jones put a bull’s horn to his lips and yelled: “Welcome fellow Herdites to our 300th annual Roundup, where we give thanks to our cow brethren for their enduring commitment to being herded, for our sake, to their final destination to be transformed into the red meat that we adore, and that sustains us as hamburgers, Porterhouse steaks, T-Bone steaks, all-beef hotdogs, and other delicious sliced, sawed, and chopped-off parts of their gutted, decapitated, skinned, and refrigerated bodies.”

The Herdmaster hoisted a T-Bone steak high in the air and the band struck up another sing-along: Eddie Arnold’s “Cattle Call”: “The cattle are prowlin’ the coyotes are howlin’, Out with the doggies bawl. Where spurs are jinglin’ a cowboy is singin’, This lonesome cattle call [moan].” Everybody moaned for about five minutes. Imagine 1,000 people having an orgasm all at once. That’s what it sounded like.

The Herdmaster climbed down from the ladder and everybody disbursed. There were booths set up selling Herdite-related products like meat cleavers, grills, meat grinders, skewers, seasonings, and aprons with humorous sayings like “Let’s Meat At My Place.” The Herdmaster was selling and signing his book “Cold Cuts.” I heard it was about a man so full of baloney that he turned into a submarine sandwich. It sounded pretty stupid to me. Anyway, he was wearing a mu-mu. Under the circumstances, I thought that was really funny.

As I walked back home, I decided to call in sick—no work today. I stopped at Mr. Squeaky’s Butcher Shop and bought a 1/2 pound of ground beef, almost without thinking. I took a shower and sat down to think. I asked myself, “John, what the hell happened to you today?” I Googled “Herdite” and found nothing. I made a big beef patty, fried it up, and ate it with my hands without a bun or ketchup. I felt my herd instinct rising. I got dressed and took a cab to “Cuddles” which was always jam-packed on Saturday night—shoulder to shoulder, dancing, drinking, sweating. When I went there in the past, I felt like a sardine in a tin, but tonight, I felt like a cow in a herd, and I liked it.


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.

Epimone

Epimone (e-pi’-mo-nee): Persistent repetition of the same plea in much the same words.


“Will you think it over? Will you please think it over? Will you consider it? Come on! Skydiving! Floating to earth under a colorful canopy of polyester. Landing on your feet won’t be a metaphor! The view from 12,000 feet is stunning. You can see the earth’s curvature. You can take pictures. You can brag about it. Plus, you have a reserve parachute! Fail safe!” I couldn’t believe my mother was trying get me to jump out of an airplane with what looked like a giant tablecloth billowing above my head.

All my life she had prodded me to play it safe—from the playground to the parkway—safe, safe, safe. No Monkey Bars. No driving over the speed limit. She would give me call and response pep talks. “What’s the most important thing?” she would yell. I yelled back “Safety!” “What keeps you alive?” “Safety!” “How did Columbus get to America?” “Safety!” “ Why did you wear diapers?” “Safety!” On and on it went. Safety was the Holy Grail.

So, why does she want me to take up sky diving? It isn’t safe. Far from it. People die. So, I asked her. She said, “Skydiving is a perfect pastime for an unmarried middle-aged uninteresting coward. I met a girl who’s a skydiver. We made friends and I told lies about you to get her interested. I told her you’re a skydiver too.” “Jeez Mom, I’ve pent my life protecting my cowardice with safety’s shield. You put me on that path and now pushing me off it. Ok, I’ll go skydiving.”

I took some lessons at the airport from “Soft Droppings,” the skydiving school. I was ready. I hadn’t made any actual jumps yet—all the lessons were conducted in virtual reality. I called Mom’s friend and asked her out on a skydiving date. She sad she would love it after what my mother had told her about me. She told me she had never met a professional race car driver before and was really eager to jump with somebody in “The 1,000 Jump Club.” I was screwed.

We were 8,000 feet above some hick town in central Minnesota. It was time to “Go!” and I was first out the door. The green light came on and, eyes closed, I jumped. My parachute deployed automatically and shredded like a piece of lettuce. I panicked and peed in my parachuting pants. But then, I remembered what my mother used to say about diapers, and I yelled “Safety!” I pulled the handle on my reserve chute. When it deployed, it wrapped around my neck. It looked like a giant condom fluttering in the wind, but it did slow me down a little. At that point, my date came flying out of nowhere and grabbed my harness. She cut the reserve chute loose with a big switchblade knife. She was facing me. She pulled close and kissed me, sticking her tongue in my mouth. It was my first kiss since my landlord’s daughter five years ago.

We landed on our feet. But, that wasn’t the end. She found out the truth about me and told everybody that I had peed my parachuting pants.


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.

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).

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 a Kindle edition available for $5.99.

Homoeopropophoron

Homoeopropophoron: Alliteration taken to an extreme where nearly every word in a sentence begins with the same consonant. Sometimes, simply a synonym for alliteration or paroemion [a stylistic vice].


NOTE: I have translated all text to English from Babylonian and French. I take full responsibility for any errors.


“Suffering succotash!” was coined by Sylvester Cat in 1951. Nobody knew what it meant, but he was allowed to say it by the cartoon company where he worked because he was a major star. Nobody could touch him. “Suffering succotash” is an alliteration—where the first consonants of adjacent words are the same. It has its roots in ancient Greece, and other ancient cultures, like Babylon, in Hammurabi’s Code: “6. If any one steal the property of a temple or of the court, he shall be put to death, and also the one who receives the stolen stuff from him shall be put to death.” I’ve highlighted “stolen stuff” because it is an alliteration. But, far out on the frontiers of alliteration is a more radical consonant-clanking concoction: homoeopropophoron.

In homoeopropophoron: almost every word in a sentence starts with the same consonant. My great great grandfather, the revered 18th century French philosopher, Marco Poulet used it to great effect in his “Memoir of a Macho Man.” In it, he recounts his life of debauchery until he met love of his life, a palomino named Monsieur Eduardo; a show pony of Spanish origin that he met in Italy at the annual Palio di Siena. Poulet was wandering around Sienna, checking out the competing neighborhoods and looking for a horse and jockey to bet on. As he entered the Caterpillar Neighborhood he saw a giant caterpillar which made him nervous. He didn’t know why. But, as he rounded a corner he heard a voice with a Spanish accent to say: “Cable coded clumps of coddled cod create clanking chords of conscience—Buy me! Purchase me! Make a bid!” It was the horse, of course, Monsieur Eduardo who was begging to be bought.

Poulet was stunned and, of course, immediately purchased the horse. They stayed in a very expensive hotel in Florence for one week before heading for Paris. Poulet had found his muse and could not help but speak, think and write in homoeopropophoron. His influential treatise “Cranial Constipation Closes Colonial Cabanas” liberated generations of Frenchmen and women from ethnocentric thinking and paved the way for the French Revolution, which initially excluded horses. That changed when they stampeded the Bastille and fell in a hail of spears and arrows. Eduardo, who led the charge, was the first to fall, calling out to Poulet as he lay dying: “Tentacles of time thoughtlessly trace transforming territories, transilluminating trouble’s tomb.”

Poulet remained heartbroken for 25 years, taking the blame for Eduardo’s death and falling deeper into homoeopropophoron. In the 25th year of his grief, he broke its spell with his most important work that would become the benchmark of excellence for all subsequent works of French philosophy. It’s title “Cloaked Closet Canary Cabal” rings out like the bells of Notre Dame to all patriotic French people. It was quoted over and over again by the best of French philosophers, and others around the world. The French philosopher Jean Jaques Rousseau wrote in the introduction to his “Confessions”: “Augustine aggregated angelic avenues aglitter with apples, but alas he was acerbic. I Rousseau radiate rectitude, rashly ranging rabbitlike; remiss, ridiculous, and rebellious.”

Poulet died peacefully in a blue brocaded armchair he had placed at the top of the Champs-Élysées, on the Place de l’Étoile, underneath the Arc de triomphe. He languished for weeks, attended only by his adoring nurse whom he had affectionately nicknamed Eduardo, who would read to him day and night, rain or shine. He loved Ovid’s works and the novel “Bélisaire.” When he died, the city of Paris erected a banner across the Arc de triomphe in his honor: “Truth is a Tyrannical Treadmill Tactfully Telling Tales.” After his death, Poulet’s nurse worked tirelessly in support of the establishment of “Joan of Arc Park” down the street from the Tuileries.


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

Excerpts from the Daily Trope are available on Kindle under the title The Book of Tropes.

Homoiopoton

Homoioptoton (ho-mee-op-to’-ton): The repetition of similar case endings in adjacent words or in words in parallel position.

Note: Since this figure only works with inflected languages, it has often been conflated with homoioteleuton and (at least in English) has sometimes become equivalent to simple rhyme: “To no avail, I ate a snail.”


I was having hopes where I was a superhero. Not just any superhero fighting villains or saving the world. No! I was Reduplicative Man. I knew the way to San Jose. I was wise for my size. I can do tricks with sticks. It’s not nice to have lice—to have a crotch cricket in your thicket.

Eventually, I was commissioned as Reduplicator Man. My mentor’s name was Strapsky. He had taught hundreds of Reduplicators since his induction and early career partnering with Hetch to help people get their lives back on track. They roamed the cosmos in their red and white Black Hole Cabriolet until they crashed in San Fransisco, Earth. Hetch was seriously injured and had to be star-lifted home. Strapsky stayed behind and obtained a red and white Corvette that he was going to drive across the USA on Route 66–back to Chicago. But he needed a partner. I was summoned, and we met in a bar in North Beach and knew immediately that we were meant to be.

Meant to be what?

I was a novice, and Strapsky filled me in: When people think straight thoughts, they get stuck in rationality’s dead end. They “therefore” their lives away. They use “seeing” as a metaphor for thinking. They think with their eyes, as in, “I see your point of view.” we Reduplicators teach people to think with their ears. The struggle to rhyme adjacent words enables lines of thought to emerge that would otherwise go unknown. As rhyming alternatives to linear ways of thinking emerge, people may be liberated from conclusions that are dysfunctional. Once liberated, they are free to cascade—to free-fall into universes of meaning and revel in the options they poetically invite. When they make negative or horrendous rhymes, they realize they made them, and accordingly, can unmake them.

Strapsky’s greatest success was Lao Tzu who found enlightenment in his ear. He never wrote down his rhymes. Instead, he recorded what they yielded. For example: “The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.” He told Strapsky it was in his ear as “My knee makes me free.” He massaged his rhyme and came up with his wise saying.

The first stop on our trip was Los Angeles where we knew there were a lot of disturbed people aching for us to give it to them in the ear. We put an ad in the personals section of the LA Times: “Need help? Give us a yelp.” We included our motel’s phone number in the ad. We quickly found out the ad was too vague: we got hundreds phone calls seeking help for everything from obtaining a fake I.D., to a problem with chronic constipation. We held a “Rhymorama” together in our room and came up with: “Broken love? We are your dove.”

The next morning we got one response. It was a women who was frantic. Her husband was a professional blackmailer. He had most recently blackmailed Tommy Lasorda, who was the Manger of the L.A Dodgers at the time. Her husband Gill had obtained a photo of Mr. Lasorda wearing a Yankees hat. She was disgusted, but couldn’t get it, or her husband, out of her mind. We took her phone number and began a “Rhymarama” out by the motel swimming pool. We went around and around for at least an hour, drinking gin and tonics and smoking Cuban cigars—Cohibas. Then, we heard it. Neither of us could take complete credit, but there it was: “Turn him pink whenever you think.” We called her immediately. We put it in her ear and she started laughing. We decided that laughing was better than crying, so our job was done.

Similar things happened 100s of times as we made our way to Chicago. When we got to Chicago Strapsky was summoned back home. He left me with the Corvette, a Bank of America credit card, and a load of fond memories.


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

Hypozeuxis

Hypozeuxis (hyp-o-zook’-sis): Opposite of zeugma. Every clause has its own verb.


I waved the crayon around over my head. I smiled and jumped up and down. My chest tattoo of a dormouse started showing as my cowboy shirt started to come unsnapped—pop, pop, pop, pop went the snaps as they came undone, revealing the tattoo’s caption: “Feed Your Head.” From “Alice in Wonderland” to The Jefferson Airplane, I had fed my head. So, I picked up my gold-plated kazoo, and did my best Jimi Hendrix, blasting out “Voodoo Child” like somebody was sticking pins in me. Then, I ate a handful of Smarties, as I did every day, as a tribute to Princess Diana. It was her favorite candy. Some people say she was eating a handful Smarties when she was killed in the car crash in Paris. It is almost too horrible to contemplate, but they say she had a red one stuck in her eye when they removed her body from the car. It reminded me of the time I was hanging out with the Stones, and we all put Red Stipe bottle caps in our eyes pretending we were blind Jamaican zombies with our hands stretched out in front, bumping into each other. That’s when we found out that Kieth Richards actually was a zombie. He kept saying “I smell the brain of an Englishman.” I pulled the bottle caps out of Keith’s eyes and he returned to his aged, wrinkled, nicotine-stained 80-year-old looking 35-year-old-self. I never saw him eat a brain, but he would talk about it after he smoked a little weed. He would talk about how much a “prime” brain weighs, the different “cuts” of brain and how the medulla was tremendously useful in making the heart keep track of the beat, and how it was very soft because it didn’t do any thinking.

Eventually Kieth went to South Jersey in the US for the cure. He was buried up to his neck on the beach, a perfect target for urinating dogs. After being “splashed” 13 times, he was cured. It is rumored that “Honky Tonk Woman” came out of this experience.

I was in the rock group “Sputtering Flame.” We sang songs we composed about serial killers, farm animals, and roller blading—looking for the kind of success The Beach Boys had achieved with with surfing with our music about rollerblading, Our biggest hit was “Crazy Gacy,” a song about the American serial killer John Wayne Gacy. At the same time, we were booed off the stage even if we hinted we might perform it. So, we focused on farm animals and roller blading. “Old McDonald Stole My Pig” made it to 72 on the charts—that was the best we did, although “How Now Tattooed Cow” made it to 89. Rollerblading was a catastrophe—it was almost ephemeral in its longevity. “Let Me Roll You to the Motel Next Door,” “Squeaking Wheels,” and “WD-40” were our best, topping the charts at 105, 107, and 125, and then the rollerblading craze crashed. The venues closed and “Sputtering Flame” was extinguished..

We were heartbroken, but we had to carry on. I gave up my musical career. I was awash in drugs, and still am—mostly pot and opiated hash. Although I’m nearly 80, after 40 or so years of debauchery that makes Dorian Gray look like the Pope, I got a full tuition scholarship at Candy Land Community College. I’ve dyed my hair black and lost a few pounds. I was pretty sure my creative writing professor Ms. Wangford, had some kind of crush on me. She told me I needed to come to her office for a “special lesson.” My imagination took off. It would be amazing. I got to her office and she was on all fours on her desk. She jumped down and we both sat down. She took off her wig. It was Alice Cooper. He said “Do you get the irony my man?” I was coming on to my third pipe load of opiated hash. Alice looked like the yellow circle in the center of a daisy, with white petals. Only he wasn’t only yellow—he was flashing purple and red too. Misunderstanding him, I said “I don’t do ironing. Everything I own is wash and wear.” He started spinning like a wheel of fortune and cackling. I ran out the door, slamming it so hard the glass broke.

I am almost ready to graduate with an Associate Degree in Topiary Sciences. I specialize in making hedges into squirrels and ducks. But I do have my creative moments—my senior project was a firefighter with a mug of beer in one hand and a BIC lighter in the other. I have a job with “Trendy Trimmers.” Although it sounds like a hair salon, it is the Number 1 topiary operation in North Jersey. My first gig will be making all of Jon Bon Jovi’s hedges into parked Harleys. It should take about a year.

So, it looks like I’ve landed fairly gently in life. With all my failures, it looks like I might have some success ahead. But still, I like to reminisce about the bad old days—taking the stage with “Sputtering Flame” and trying hard to be a star.


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

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Onedismus

Onedismus (on-e-dis’-mus): Reproaching someone for being impious or ungrateful.


“I do more for you than God, and all you do is complain. You’ve been wearing those pajamas for two weeks—they smell like a kitty litter box that needs cleaning. You’re not sick. You’re not injured. Why the hell don’t you put on some clothes and go look for a job?” “You’re no role model either,” I yelled. Her bathrobe looked like a feed lot for monkeys—there were ants crawling down one of the sleeves and cigarette burns on the lapels. Her hair looked like tossed pasta. But God—her figure was to die for. When she opened her robe I went berserk, lunging across the kitchen floor like a raging buck. She smelled like cigarettes, feta cheese, and her kisses tasted like Maalox. She pushed me away and said “Get a job and you’ll get what you want.” Finally, she offered an incentive that would get me out the door.

I took a quick shower and put on some clothes that were way too tight due to my stay-at-home sabbatical—no exercise, eating and drinking too much. I combed my hair and headed down the street to CVS to get a newspaper. I got home and sat at the kitchen table perusing the want ads. I had a Master’s degree in “General Studies,” from an on-line university in Australia. I was ready for anything “in general.”

I couldn’t believe it! There was an ad that read, “Wanted. Man or Woman prepared to do anything in general. Call: 800-231-5673. Mention this ad and ask for Abaddon Acheron.” I immediately called the number. Abaddon himself answered the phone. He asked me if I had a conscience. I told him “not much.” “Good. Perfect” he answered. “You’re hired. Starting salary is $200,000 per year, with benefits, including a 401K pension plan. One of my minions will pick you up at home tomorrow morning at 9:00 sharp. Don’t worry, we know where you live.” When he said a “minion” would pick me up, I got little nervous. But what the hell. Even though she wouldn’t take her bathrobe off, I had a great time with my wife that night. I had a job even if I didn’t know what it was.

The minion picked me up right on time. He looked normal, except one of his sideburns was missing. I figured it was some kind of fashion statement. We settled into the limo and took off. We pulled up at a landfill and drove into a tunnel in the side of a mountain of trash. There were armed guards all along the tunnel. We stopped in front of an elevator door, got out, and the minion pressed the button marked zero. When we got to zero, we were met by Abaddon. He kept going in and out of focus as we made our way to his office. He said, “if you’ve done your research you know that our company, “Infinite Misfortune” specializes in the manufacture of woe. Your position is that of Pet Killer. Your job is to eliminate peoples’ beloved pets by running them over, poisoning them, and even shooting them. You will be a major nexus of woe, second only to our corps of killers who put an end to peoples’ lives, causing the worst woe possible. I thought, “So, this is what a master’s in General Studies got me. Pet killer.”

I was immediately sent out on assignment—a three-person family who had just gotten their little boy a puppy. I was posing as a representative of Purina Puppy Chow. The family had “won” a bag of puppy chow. it had been poisoned by a technician back at Ft. Landfill.

The family was delighted. I wanted to throw up. I couldn’t do it. I grabbed the bag of puppy chow and took off rinning. I dumped out the puppy chow and kept running. I looked back and there was a woman with three Chihuahuas on leashes. They had started eating the poisoned dog food off the sidewalk.. “Too late for them,” I thought as I started crying. Abaddon popped out of a sewer grate and yelled “You’re fired!”

When I got home I called the police. They told me to “shut up” and leave them alone. So I did. To keep my wife happy and willing I got another job: school crossing guard. Every time a kid got run over on my watch, I thought of “Infinite Misfortune” and the great pension plan I could’ve had.


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

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. A Kindle edition is available for $5.99.

Paroemia

Paroemia (pa-ri’-mi-a): One of several terms describing short, pithy sayings. Others include adage, apothegm, gnome, maxim, proverb, and sententia.


As I looked at the scar across my left hand and my permanently crossed fingers, I thought of the saying “Barking dogs don’t bite.” It was a little multi-colored mutt about the size of a muskrat. It was barking. I reached down to pet her and she tore into my hand. She would not let go. She just looked at me a growled, with my hand in a vise grip. After a half-hour, I was starting to get really worried. That’s when my friend called 911. He had a hard time convincing the dispatcher to send help. It wasn’t their typical fare—gunshot wound, flipped over SUV, choking Grandpa, guzzling Clorox, poked out eye, etc. This was different.

Soon, we heard the siren of the approaching ambulance. It squealed to a stop and the 2 EMTS burst through the front door. They could’ve just turned the doorknob, but they trained to smash through doors, to save time in “entering premises.” One of the EMTS tried not to laughs when he saw the dog hanging from my hand. He said, “Jeez, I didn’t think dogs came that little. He looks like a puppy.” I said, “Yeah, a puppy that’s been grinding away at my hand for the past hour. Where the hell have you been?” He said, “We were actually saving a women’s life. She was having trouble finding a towel to dry off with after her shower. We stopped Sear’s along the way and commandeered a bath towel. We got to her condo just in time to dry her off and keep her from slipping on the wet floor and dying. Then, we came here to deal with your joke bite.” He pulled a Jack out of his bag. The idea was to use the Jack to separate the dog’s jaws. It didn’t work. They couldn’t fit the Jack in the dog’s mouth. Then, they tried doggie treats. Didn’t work. Then, one of the EMTS said: “We’re gonna have to anesthetize the dog.” I yelled “Why the hell didn’t you do that in the first place?” “It’s called ‘triage.’ We start with the least effective treatment and work our way up. It case of the dog, if anesthesia does not work, the next step is to shoot it out in the yard. Don’t worry, the “euthanizer” has a silencer so your neighbors won’t be alarmed by the gunshot.”

The dog’s owner (my little sister) went berserk. She grabbed the dog, with my hand still attached, and hugged it to her. She was not going to let go. She swore they’d have to drag her out into the yard and shoot her too—she would die alongside Midgy. I was now a a car on a pain train. I was the locomotive. Midge was a passenger car, and my little sister was the caboose. I just wanted to leave the station—uncoupled from Midgy! it was a terrible analogy, but it worked for me under the circumstances.

It was time to inject Midgy. The needle was big, the dog was small—even though I was in pain, I had trepidations. In went the needle and Midgy went limp! I pulled my bleeding hand out of her mouth and literally jumped for joy. After seeing my ripped up hand, the EMTs gave me a shot of morphine for the pain. Meanwhile, Midgy was showing no signs of life. I did not want to be there when she kept not showing signs of life. However, I saw Midgy’s leg twitch as I went out the door, I hoped it was a sign of life. I could barely walk and had encased my wounded hand in a Wegman’s plastic bag so it wouldn’t drip on the floor. My girlfriend helped me to the car and we headed to the hospital to get me stitched up. As we entered the Emergency Room, the security guard asked me if the plastic bag was recyclable. I said I didn’t know. He said: “Ok. Sir, please remove the plastic bag. You may replace it with this paper bag. Don’t worry. There’s no charge.”

I was hoping this wouldn’t be like my last visit when I had a gallstone that could not have been more painful, but the doctors were concerned I was faking it because I wasn’t crying. Instead, I rolled around on the floor moaning while I was interviewed by a policeman from the narcotics division under the assumption that i was a drug addict faking a gallstone so I could get a fix. It was hell. I squeezed out a tear after 20 minutes and the interview was terminated. I got my painkiller.

Now, already high on morphine, I was led to my “outpatient” stitchers to get my hand fixed.

I walked through the door and there was a teen-aged boy sitting there in a Boy Scout uniform. The doctor told me his name was Billy Jackson and that Billy was 16 and was working on his First Aid merit badge. The doctor said, “He’ll sew you right up!” After the doctor helped him thread the needle, we were ready to go. Billy sprayed my hand with Lidocaine and jammed the needle in. I was so drugged up that I felt nothing at all. After he finished, Billy told me to keep it dry—to put it in a recyclable plastic bag when I took a shower.

I’m suing my little sister for what her dog did to me. She has insurance, so it is no big deal. I should probably sue Billy too—his stitch-job left my index finger and middle finger permanently crossed. I frequently get accused of insincerity when I make promises and people see my crossed fingers. Hmmm. Maybe I’ll go after Billy too. The Boy Scouts probably have some kind of merit badge insurance.

I’d like to say, “All’s well that ends well,” but I can’t. My poor little sister has started drinking. The 2 EMTs were convicted of burglary for stealing from unconscious victims. Billy was caught pilfering narcotics from the hospital, Midgy had puppies.


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

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Synathroesmus

Synathroesmus (sin-ath-res’-mus): 1. The conglomeration of many words and expressions either with similar meaning (= synonymia) or not (= congeries). 2. A gathering together of things scattered throughout a speech (= accumulatio [:Bringing together various points made throughout a speech and presenting them again in a forceful, climactic way. A blend of summary and climax.])


What is my purpose for existing? Building? Constructing? Erecting? What would I build? What would I construct? What would I erect? Would it be noble edifices? Modest homes? Hot dog stands? Yes, hot dog stands! Yup. I build hot dog stands, big and small, with wagon wheels, plumbing, gas grills, bun warmers, condiment racks, napkin holders, red and white striped awnings, and souvenir key rings with my business info in printed on them, along with my logo—a smiling hot dog with ray-ban sunglasses and a king’s crown tilted to the side. His name is “King Red Hot,” and my business’s name is “Hot Dog Palaces.”

Every year there are hot dog stand races at the New York State Fair in Syracuse, NY: “The Weenie Stand Sweeps.” The only “stands” that are permitted are what are called 2-Holers—small stands that can be easily pushed—like push carts. They are souped up, with ball bearing rims and skinny tires, with bodies and awnings made from Kevlar, and all metal parts made from magnesium and capable of being filled with helium for added lightness. I had hired a long-distance runner, Lightfoot Abeba, from Ethiopia, who had won numerous marathons. He would by my “pusher.” The course at the fairgrounds was 1 mile. The “The Weenie Stand Sweeps” was two laps. While there were a few hot dog venders in the race, they had no chance of winning. It was the hot dog stand manufacturers that made up the bulk of competitors, with their souped up stands. Winning the race was what we all aspired to—but only one of us could win.

For as long as anybody could remember, “Bambi’s Big Stands,” had won the trophy. The current Bambi was the great-great-granddaughter of Bambi Number 1. Obviously, Bambi’s Big Stands had a secret. I was going to find out what it is. Countless others had failed. But I had a secret. Lightfoot had seen Bambi at an Ethiopian restaurant, “going full vegetarian.” I was going to blackmail Bambi—you can’t be a hot dog stand manufacturer and a vegetarian at the same time. It was tantamount to being a traitor! So I did it.

Crying, Bambi told me their racing pushcart had an electric motor. So, the driver, while he looked like was pushing, was actually holding onto the speeding pushcart. Being pulled along by it.

Bambi had betrayed her family and shattered 100 years tradition. The cheating ended and Hot Dog Palaces finally won the “Weenie Stand Sweeps.” We built a 6-foot high showcase for the trophy and placed in the entrance to our factory. But, then, there was Bambi. I told her if she started eating meat, I would hire her to show our stands at conventions, handing out brochures and key rings. She politely replied “No.” She had gotten a huge loan to open a factory making food stands for vegetarians. Her logo is a kernel of brown rice twirling two chopsticks like batons. The name of her business is “Nice Rice Rolling Stands.”

I love Bambi. Someday she will marry me.

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

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Thaumasmus

Thaumasmus (thau-mas’-mus): To marvel at something rather than to state it in a matter of fact way.


I can’t believe, I’ll never believe what a good good dog I have. Why? Because he isn’t—he’s a late night barking, leg humping, crotch sniffing, jumping up, slobbering, farting, carpet scratching canine wasteland. I have to keep him because my sister gave him to me. He was a little puppy in a thing like an Easter basket with a red ribbon around his neck when she handed him over. He was so cute! I picked him up to hug him and he farted. It smelled like he had a corpse stuck in his butt that was marinating in rotten eggs. My sister said, “Aw that’s cute” as I swallowed hard to keep from puking.

My sister had spent the past five years as a Nun. She had started having visions, but when she realized it was the lenses in her glasses that needed updating and replacing, not visions per se, she left the Convent of the Rolling Stone and got a job handing out menus for Wee Wong’s Chinese Restaurant. Her area was the worst part of the city, but that’s where she found the puppy she gave me. It was curled up next to a homeless man napping on the pavement wearing sweatpants and an aloha shirt with pictures of fishing poles and leaping Marlin. He was wearing Dr. Scholes Corn Busters on his feet. My sister gave him a little nudge and he made a growling sound. She offered him 10 menus for the puppy. Before he could answer, she shoved the menus down his sweatpants and took off running with the puppy, who she named Menu to commemorate his liberation.

I didn’t actually hate Menu. Sometimes I almost liked him, like when he looked at me with his big brown eyes. But then, he would blow one of his signature farts and I would have to open the window and bomb the apartment with Glade. I had taken Menu to dog obedience training school—the best in the City: Proper Pups. Menu wouldn’t stop humping the instructor’s leg and barking, and she kicked us out. Not even a cattle prod could deter Menu. He was not, and never would be, a Proper Pup.

I took Menu to the Vet too, for his gas and slobbering problems. The Vet shook his head and told me me he could insert a removable charcoal filter in Menu’s butt, but I would have to change it once a week, or it would have to be surgically removed by the City’s hazmat team for $300.00. The slobbering was a different story. The Vet told me he could “stem” a number of Menu’s saliva glands using a newly developed Super Glue designed specifically for medical applications. It “only” cost $2,500.00 for the procedure. Both options were too expensive for me.

So, I was stuck, and like a lot of stuck people, I became inventive. I invented the remote controlled window—it went up and with the push of a button on a hand-held controller. I didn’t have to run around the apartment any more opening windows when Menu farted. I also invented a “Slobber Bucket” to catch Menu’s drippings. It is loosely based on the drool bucket I saw on TV when I was a kid. It hangs around Menu’s neck and has a special siren that goes off when it needs emptying. These two innovations make life with Menu nearly tolerable, and I’ve made millions off the remote control windows, but we’re still living in the apartment. Location, location, location. I live across the street from Hooters.

In my research I found out that Menu is actually a breed of dog: “The Drippinker Otcrotcher Schtinkmaken.” It is of Austrian origin and was originally bred in the late 19th-century to “cultivate and strengthen it’s owner’s Nordic virtues— the Stoic propensities necessary for living a lonely, detached, angst-ridden, and brooding life.” There are only 20 known Drippinker Otcrotcher Schtinkmakens left in the world. I don’t know who owns them, but there’s a good chance they are mentally unstable or victims of coercion.


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

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Topographia

Topographia (top-o-graf’-i-a): Description of a place. A kind of enargia [: {en-ar’-gi-a} generic name for a group of figures aiming at vivid, lively description].


The Willow Harp Mall. Who the hell named this place? Willow Harp? What. Where’s the harp. Ok, there’s giant 30 foot high plastic resin harp outside the mall entrance. It has speakers inside it that play “Over the Rainbow” over and over, non-stop, day and night. But that’s not all. There are flashing lights in the harp’s sound board that flash off and on in accord with “Over the Rainbow.” And then, there is a circle of scraggly plastic willows “planted” around the giant fake harp.

Once you got into the mall you had to deal with the slew of punks that gathered there in the summer when school was out. Give our town’s total lack of anything remotely interesting to punks, they were left with the mall. They gathered in clumps, some of them making out with each other, others sitting stupefied on the latest designer drugs, or blasting Rap music about killing each other. Once you waded through the teenage throng, you were faced with a material extravaganza—all of it for sale. As you push further into the shopping zone, away from the Rap, there is Muzak playing almost imperceptibly in the background. The music is designed to make people buy things on what seemed like an impulse. But it wasn’t. The Muzak was the result of carefully controlled psychological studies. It functioned subconsciously to prompt you to purchase unneeded things. It targets the brain’s acquisition center—the pecuniary cortex, while at the same time stimulating the brain’s Eros escalation channel. The result is nearly the same as falling in love, only in this case it made be in love with a refrigerator, or a soup ladle instead of a person. People would get home with bags of crap from the mall, not being able to account for their purchase, but, for example, feeling deep affection for the salt and pepper set they bought.

Anyway, my favorite part of the mall was the fountain. It had the same lighting scheme as the harp, but without the music. People would throw money in into it to help the homeless people occasionally wandered through the Mall, if they wanted to risk being arrested by the thugs who worked as mall security guards. What that meant was the fountain would fill with coins. I would go “fishing” the fountain and give the security guards 10% of my take. Accordingly, they left me alone as I cleaned out fountain each week. If anybody asked me what I was doing, I told them I was a “Coin Raker” for Salvation Army; that I went around to shoppings malls “collecting” for homeless and indigent individuals and families.

It was a “the greatest scam on earth.” That’s what the newspapers said when I got caught trying to run $5,000 worth of coins through the bank’s coin counter/wrapper. Some skinny guy with a bowtie asked me where I got a trunkful of wet coins. I told him it was none of his business. He called the police. I was dragging the trunk out the front door when the police showed up. I told them I had gotten the coins from under the water. Well, everything came out at the trial. I was found guilty of some obscure crime from a law written in 18th century to to curtail piracy and treasure burying. I was fined $74.00 and given two weeks of community service painting the judge’s house.

Well, anyway, the Mall is the Mall. You can shop there or ruin your life there.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu). Bracketed text added by Gorgias.

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Traductio

Traductio (tra-duk’-ti-o): Repeating the same word variously throughout a sentence or thought. Some authorities restrict traductio further to mean repeating the same word but with a different meaning (see ploce, antanaclasis, and diaphora), or in a different form (polyptoton). If the repeated word occurs in parallel fashion at the beginnings of phrases or clauses, it becomes anaphora; at the endings of phrases or clauses, epistrophe.


I was the Head—the Head of Heads at the bank. The hierarchy was strict. Money laundering was not to be taken lightly. As Head of Heads, I was the ahead of the other Heads. In a way, it was a mistake to call them Heads—they were actually Junior Assistant Heads, and they did what I told them to do. We had to go down to the docks today to pick up a cargo container of cash: $100,000,500. It was looted from the Bank of Syria during the latest round of warfare. Before we took it off-site we had to check it out. We drove it down to the boonies to open the doors. My Assistant Head headed over to the container, unlocked it, and opened the doors. The cash was stacked up against the far end of the cargo container.

The cargo container had been refitted as a mobile home. There were six guys playing poker and drinking beer by the entrance. There were five more guys playing video games on the 70” plasma screen TV. They all had guns. “Take us to your bank,” one of them said. So, we drove off to the bank like we always did, with the addition of human cargo. When we got to the bank, the container passengers rolled out their wheeled luggage and headed down the street singing “Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?” by Boy George. Later that week, I saw a poster on a telephone phone pole advertising “The Flying Damascus Bothers.” They were acrobats, but they were also the guys we had imported into the US along with a lifetime supply of cash. We had set up an account, as instructed, for Hama Hussein. So long as nobody started poking around, the money was clean, and I guess, the acrobats are safe. They performed on the “Apprentice.” They were fired by our future President. He said their “costumes made them look like girls, which was a disaster for acrobats who already were sissies.”

“The Flying Damascus Brothers” were outraged. They let the air out of Trump’s limo tires and sailed pieces of manakish at his head as he left the studio, and Trump slipped on a small piece of cheese and almost broke his back. Of course, the police were called. But “The Flying Damascus Brothers” escaped in their converted cargo container. They drove to Las Vegas and landed a huge contract with Cirque du Soleil. They changed their name to evade detection. Now, they call themselves “The Flying Denver Brothers.”



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

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Abating

Abating: English term for anesis: adding a concluding sentence that diminishes the effect of what has been said previously. The opposite of epitasis (the addition of a concluding sentence that merely emphasizes what has already been stated. A kind of amplification).


The oak tree in our back yard was huge, but it wasn’t that big. My father told me that Abraham Lincoln planted it after he was sentenced to six months community service for chopping down a cherry tree in Norma Park, Clifton, New Jersey. He planted oak trees throughout North Jersey. They called him “Acorn Abe.” When he finished his sentence, he hitchhiked to Florida where he became one of the first professional alligator wrestlers—Alligator Abe. When he got a little older, he moved back up to New Jersey where he opened a successful guacamole stand—Abe’s El Paso Verde—on the boardwalk at Seaside Heights. There, he was called Avocado Abe. Then, one day he mistakenly shortchanged one of his customers. He rans after the customer and corrected the change. “You’re honest Abe.” “That’s it!” Abe exclaimed. “Honest Abe.” After all the stupid nicknames he had had, “Honest Abe” hit the bullseye. He thought maybe he could sell used carriages: Honest Abe’s Pre-Owned Buggies. He would make tons of money! Then, he got a telegram.

The family business in Illinois—Lincoln’s Leisure Lounge—had been raided and his Ma, Lucille Lincoln, had been jailed without bail. Honest Abe had to go home to take care of things. The first thing he did when he got there was to change the Leisure Lounge into a school for girls called the Honest Abe Academy. Abe taught lessons with a shovel and piece of coal as a blackboard. He taught English, Math, history and Rail-splitting. The Academy’s rail splitting team was the best in the state. The newspapers said “They could split more rails in ten minutes than a beaver on coca!”

The Governor of Illinois presented the annual rail-splitting award. it had been won by Honest Abe Academy every year. This year was no exception. As Coach, Abe received the award. As he handed him the award the Governor told Abe that he was destined for greatness and could win any office he ran for (except Governor). Honest Abe ran for Representative and won, and that was it. He was off and running.

Eventually, Honest Abe was elected President. His plan was to secede from the South and be done with slavery. The plan had originated in New York as the “Fuhgeddaboudit Manifesto.” However, before it could be enacted, the South started a war. The rest is history.


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

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Abbaser

Abbaser [George] Puttenham’s English term for tapinosis. Also equivalent to meiosis: reference to something with a name disproportionately lesser than its nature (a kind of litotes: deliberate understatement, especially when expressing a thought by denying its opposite).


I had an uncle who spent his time “cutting things down to size.” He called the Empire State Building a pile of bricks blocking the sun. He called Mickey Mantle the “Stick Swinger.“ He called President Eisenhower “Spike” instead of “Ike.” He called his Ford his “Fraud.” He called his wife (my Aunt Betty) his “Strife.” He called Wisconsin (where we lived) The “Empire of Cheese.” The list of his “size cutting” names goes on forever—there are hundreds and hundreds of them.

I admired my Uncle, so tried my hand at “cutting things down to size.” My teacher, Mrs. Grinney, had bad breath. So, I started calling her “Boiled Brussels Sprouts Breath.” I tried to get it to catch on with my friends, but it didn’t and somebody told her. I got two weeks detention writing: “I will not make fun of people with bad breath.” So, I stopped making fun of people—“cutting them down to size.” My next target was my town’s municipal building, named after somebody named Dodge. It was where the police and fire stations were, along with the town court. It was a beautiful building made from pink granite. I called it “Dodge City” after the cowboy town where everybody was bad. Our town was notoriously corrupt. The police never arrested anybody unless they were poor. The firemen sat on their asses playing poker night and day. Their motto was “The fire truck wouldn’t start, and besides, I had a straight flush.” The town judge was married to the local Mafia Don’s sister. You can imagine how that played out.

I first used “Dodge City” in a speech I made to my English class. My fellow students didn’t know what I was talking about, but my teacher did. He made me stay after class and told me if I used “Dodge City” again, there would be dire consequences and they would go “Bang, bang, bang.” He was the Don’s brother.

So, I stopped cutting things down to size, and started writing poetry instead. My first poem “Under Hot Asphalt” won the “Up and Coming New Comer Coming Up” prize from “Marginal Notes” a very prestigious literary journal. It is the oldest continuously published journal of its kind, first published in 1590. Shakespeare had first sonnet published in “Marginal Notes” in the late 16th century. I’m so glad my teacher steered me away from cutting things down to size “bang, bang, bang.” I probably would’ve ended up like my Uncle, found in a landfill two days after he called the police chief, the “Police Thief.”


Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu). Bracketed text added by Gorgias.

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Abecedarian

Abecedarian (a-be-ce-da’-ri-an): An acrostic whose letters do not spell a word but follow the order (more or less) of the alphabet.


A big crow descended, eerily flying, going hurriedly into Joey’s Mangetout nursery. We went inside the greenhouse to find the Crow, but it had flown out the other end. His visit was short, but he had dropped off a newborn kitten, eyes still closed, on the soft dirt spaded around one of the bean plants. Crows had always been good to me. I loved them and my nickname was Crow. But anyway, now a Crow had delivered a newborn kitten. I asked my friend, “What’re the odds? I think they are incalculable.” Melanie told me to go ahead and take charge of the kitten—I was good at those kinds of things. As I drove the kitten home, I tried to think of a clever name for him. After running hundreds of names through my head, like Clipper, Felix, Mewbert, and Peter, I settled on Byron. I don’t know why. He hadn’t had a chance to display any characteristics to be named after. I guess I just liked Byron.

So, I bottle-fed Byron and cuddled him. He was short-haired and pure white with a remarkable marking on his forehead: a perfectly shaped black heart. As Byron grew, I trained him to walk on a leash. People would ooh and aah at his heart marking. One day I was walking along Canal Street with Byron. An elderly woman walking toward us stopped and suddenly yelled “Stop right there.” I recognized her from her picture on the flyers taped all over the neighborhood. She read tarot cards out of a small storefront. She was notoriously good at it, helping people deal with their destinies. She said: “Your cat is special.” Byron looked at her as she spoke. I asked “In what way is he special?” “You will find out,” she said, laughed, turned around, and walked away. We took the shortcut through the alley when suddenly a guy with a knife appeared out of nowhere. “Give it to me!” he yelled. I had no idea what he wanted. “Give me the cat or I’ll kill you!” I was stunned. Byron sprung into action. With a deep growl, he leapt at the robber’s head and clawed out one of his eyeballs. He dropped the knife, screamed, and fell to the ground sobbing for help. Byron and I walked away like nothing had happened. Byron’s tail was sticking straight up—a sign he was happy.

Then I got audited by the IRS. They let me bring Byron because I told them he was my comfort cat. We sat down and the agent started to speak: “We are concerned about . . .” And Byron started purring. The agent blinked his eyes shook his head and continued “the mistake we’ve made making you come in for an audit.” Byron purred. The agent continued: “In fact, the IRS owes you $60,000.” Byron purred. The agent continued: “whoops, my mistake, it’s $600,000. You should get a check in two weeks.” Byron looked at me and winked!

This sort of thing has been going for years now. Byron’s purr has some sort magical power. I often wonder where the crow had found him and why I had ended up ‘owning’ him. I don’t care if I ever find the answer. We are pals forever. We’re going to look at a new Maserati tomorrow.


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

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Accismus

Accismus (ak-iz’-mus): A feigned refusal of that which is earnestly desired.


After forty years, I finally got an award. I deserved it so much that I wanted to curse the awards committee for overlooking me all these years, and maybe hit one of them over the head with the little plaque—the size of a Hershey Bar. I expected to stick around for another 20 years, so I didn’t want to ruin my chances for another award, so I faked it, saying I didn’t deserve it and I couldn’t accept it. Professor Clap, a drama professor in the front row yelled “You’re damn right! I’ll come up there and get it Prof. Bullshit Slacker.” The audience applauded and hooted, and Clap started to get out of his seat. At that point Dean Rambling intervened. He yelled “Sit down Clap! The committee was unanimous in selecting Professor Duly for the college’s Nick Belgium Treadmill Award—for going nowhere, but never giving up. As we know, Mr. Belgium, our most distinguished alum, had inherited tremendous wealth and spent prolifically on crackpot schemes, most notably, the solar-powered banana peeler. Not one of his schemes succeeded, but he never gave up. Most people considered him an idiot, but he endowed the College’s Treadmill Award—which carries a $20.00 cash stipend, divided into 20 equal payments. He also endowed the Pyramid Chair in Economics which is currently held by Prof. Bagman, who, as everybody knows, now teaches via Zoom from Rahway State Prison in New Jersey. Now, shut the hell up.”

I shook hands with Dean Rambling and left auditorium to catcalls and wadded up paper thrown at me. When I got outside, I looked at my car. It was a rusted up piece of shit. I had never been able to afford a new car, but now that I was an award winning Professor, I went to “Stony Joe’s Used Wheels” out on Highway 61. I told Stony I had just won an award, so it was time to buy a car. I didn’t tell him about the meager stipend. He said, “I’ve got just the thing—super discounted for a sharp-looking guy like you.” He took me across the lot to a nearly new Cadillac parked about 20 feet off the lot. It had about 20-30 of those pine tree air fresheners hanging around the mirror. I opened the car door and it stunk of cherries—so oppressive that I could almost feel the smelly cherries in my nostrils. Stony told me the car had belonged to a rich nutcase named Belgium who had never succeeded at anything. He had sat in his running car in the garage with the door closed. He went the way of the angels 2 months ago. Accordingly, he sat in his garage decomposing for 2 months. The warm summer days helped turn him almost into liquid. If you want his nearly new Cadillac for $1,000, it’s yours. Just change the air fresheners once-a-week—cherry works best.”

I thought “Oh the irony.” I bought Belgium’s Cadillac. I religiously changed the air fresheners and learned to like their smell. My colleagues at Aaron Burr College like my smell. I have found that this is a key to earning their respect, that, and owning a nearly new Cadillac. I am eligible for the Gerber “Spoon Fed Teaching Award” this year. It is awarded to “the faulty member who consistently adjusts their standards to assure a minimum grade of “B” for all their students.” I’ve had my eyes on this award for years. I’ve gone the extra mile by ensuring a B+ for all of my students in my signature philosophy course: “Life is a Bowl of Cherries.”

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

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Acervatio

Acervatio (ak-er-va’-ti-o): Latin term Quintilian employs for both asyndeton (acervatio dissoluta: a loose heap) and polysyndeton (acervatio iuncta:a conjoined heap).


Sunrise. Sunset. Mid-afternoon, 3:00 a.m. We look at the clock and we look at our watch, and everything is encompassed by time, and there is early, and there is late, and there is right on time—timeless, timely. The variations on time indicate it’s ubiquity. It passes. What does it mean?

It means we are finite beings aware of life’s eventual end—another mark of time written across the surface of our soul. It is a blessing and a curse.

I new I had drifted onto a new life course when I lost my time consciousness after a near-fatal motorcycle accident in a dust storm near Mesa Verde in Colorado. It came out of nowhere. The wind was so strong it tilted my motorcycle to a 60 degree angle. My mouth was filled with grit and I could hardly see. I tried to straighten my motorcycle. It was stupid. My hand came off the handlebar and the front wheel lurched to the right. I crossed white line flew off the highway, hit a small boulder and flew over the handlebars. I was probably going around 35 mph by the time I flew off the motorcycle. The brake lever had caught me in the stomach. I was wearing only a T-shirt, so the lever punctured my skin and gave me a pretty good gash. When I came to, I saw I was bleeding pretty bad. I pushed off the motorcycle from on top of me and tried to stand up. I couldn’t—the pain was too much. I was going to die by the side of the road, in a dust storm, in Colorado. Then, there was no time, none, zero, zip. I had lost my sense of being there. The anxiety that always threaded it’s way through my life was gone. There was no memory, no hope, no consciousness, but a small voice wishing me well.

There was a trading post across the road from where I had crashed. I reawakened as I was being pulled across the road, laying on a beautiful Navajo blanket. I felt weak and passed out again. When I woke up there was a young Navajo woman sewing up my wound. There was some yellow cream she had smeared on it that totally removed the pain.

I healed really quickly, had my motorcycle repaired and resumed my journey to anywhere. Having lost my time-consciousness I was like a leaf in the wind. Then, I called my mother and landed back on the clock: “Where are you? When are you coming home?, Do you know how long it’s been since we heard from you?, School starts again in a couple of moths! Your little sister wants you home now!” It was like somebody stuck an air compressor in my ear and blew away the quality of life I had been given.

“Whoosh! Look at me, I’m being in time!”


Definitions 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.

Affirmatio

Affirmatio (af’-fir-ma’-ti-o): A general figure of emphasis that describes when one states something as though it had been in dispute or in answer to a question, though it has not been.


Preacher: Who said the sky is blue? Who said the earth is round? Who said climate change is a fact? Who said abortion should be safe and legal? And now, get ready to roll around on the floor spewing puke and crying: Who said people should be permitted to change their sex?

It is those demonic Democrats every time. Their diabolical beliefs are undermining our party’s self-evident truths and feeding America to a hungry Satan. He is chewing on our children and laughing in our faces as he washes them down, crying and screaming, with our warm evangelical blood.

We are at war, and in wars people get killed. We must kill enough Democrats to satisfy Saran’s hunger. If we can feed Satan enough Democrats he will surely let us ultra-right conservatives alone. Technically, we may be doing Satan’s work, but actually we are clearing our communities of sin. On that note . . .

See this man here? We’ve tied him to this flagpole flying the American flag to emphasize the righteousness of our cause. We all know him as Jack, the counterman at Cliff’s. He sells alcohol. He sells tobacco. He sells lotto tickets. But most repugnant and disgusting: he is a baby killer, selling condoms—rubber baggies that keep the little swimmers from going where they belong—going through the baby door, into Eve’s egg-crate.

We must make an example of him by burning him at the stake. Sinners will hear about what happened here and tremble with fear.

Sheriff: Not so fast Preacher! It’s still illegal to murder people around here. Drop the Bic lighter and put up your hands, you’re under arrest.

POSTSCRIPT

The spell was broken. The crowd dispersed muttering. The ground opened up and the Reverend went to meet his fate.


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.

Antanagoge

Antanagoge (an’-ta-na’-go-gee): Putting a positive spin on something that is nevertheless acknowledged to be negative or difficult.


Life is hard. But it’s life. It is better than death. At least that’s what I think sitting here in my big comfy chair with my remote control in one hand and a martini in the other and a full pack of Marlboro 27s on the end table waiting to be smoked. So, what’s hard about this? I’ll tell you: eventually, I’ll have to pull a “Hungry Wolf” TV dinner out of the freezer, read the microwave instructions, and put the damn thing in the microwave. Inevitably, part of the crust is still frozen when I pull it out. So, I have to shove it in for another minute. Then, the unfrozen part gets burned. What a pain in the ass! There’s just so much about making dinner that’s a pain in the ass—that makes it harder than hell just to eat. There’s a lot of other things too.

I have to drag my garbage cans to the street. Why the hell don’t the garbage haulers drive down my driveway and pick my garbage cans up? Same with my mail—up the driveway I go to get it. What the hell is the mail slot on my door for? Jehovah’s Witnesses” pamphlets? I know I’m going to hell—I don’t need a reminder from them. Then, there’s my job.

It’s not very much better than death. I am a professional birthday clown. My stage name Jabber Warble. I wear a baggy red and green striped costume, a blonde wig, and a big red nose. I don’t wear giant shoes. I think they are ridiculous.

I specialize in balloon tricks—winding up hot dog shaped balloons into animals. I specialize in 8-10 year olds: smelly little imps. I do mostly Dachshunds. I bark with a German accent and the kids love it. My most challenging balloon twist is the hot dog on a bun. It takes two balloons. Often the hotdog won’t fit in the bun laying down, so I have to ad lib. For example, I stick the hot dog in the bun at a perpendicular angle and make it fit. I tell the kids it’s a sail boat, but some of the mothers have told me it reminds them of something else that we could talk about after everybody goes home and their husband and kid have gone to the movies or somewhere else. It is really hard saying “No.” But, I need to maintain my spotless reputation. Once, a mother followed me home. She walked in the door and dropped her raincoat on the floor. She was naked underneath. She came toward insisting that I bark with the German accent. I strained my vocal chords barking. It was scary, and that’s what makes my job hell.

Anyway, life is hard, but it beats the hell out of death, or a coma. What do you do in coma? You lay there surrounded by beeping hospital equipment and tubes in your arms monitoring your descent into death, or incremental return to being awake. I think it’s pretty bad to be in that situation, even if you come back to life. It is like trying to do your income taxes on April 14th with no computer, calculator, pencil, or forms, filing for an extension the next day, and buying a plane ticket to someplace you’ve never heard of, like Belarus.

Remember: life is hard, but it could be worse. No matter how hard it gets, just be glad you’re not dead yet.


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

Paperback and Kindle editions of The Daily Trope are available at Amazon under the title The Book of Tropes.

Antisthecon

Antisthecon (an-tis’-the-con): Substitution of one sound, syllable, or letter for another within a word. A kind of metaplasm: the general term for changes to word spelling.


I had a “cheeseborer” for lunch. I called it that because it bored right through me. It was like a cheese and beef flash flood. When I ate one, I made sure to sit by the restroom door.

Despite the trouble they gave me, I ate them anyway. Their taste was irresistible. People who ate at Stamper’s would fight over the tables by the restroom door, knowing they were going to have a torrential emergency soon after finishing their BM Burger (what I called the Cheeseborer). I started thinking about other foods where taste, not a quick poop, was the incentive for eating it, regardless of corollary consequences. The only thing I could think of was confections. Committing tubby-cide by sitting on the couch eating Little Debbie cakes all day, every day. There are probably hundreds of other examples, but what is so compelling about the BM Burger, given the risk involved—the risk of crapping all over yourself in a public place?

Most people lead a pretty hum-drum existence. Seizing on the BM-Burger’s excellent flavor as an excuse, they eat one, knowing they will experience the thrill of running to the restroom—with preliminary gas leaking from their butt, and pulling down their pants in a primal struggle, with the image of not making it pressing on every part of their body, weighing it down with terror, terror that is an incentive to pump the legs and cry out with animal sounds upon reaching the toilet intact. In one melodious whoosh, it’s over. It’s like scoring a goal or throwing everything you’ve got in a wishing well. You have to flush three times to make it all go away and prepare the toilet for the next person.

Stamper’s is at the leading edge of the emergent sport of Toilet Dashing. It is mainly a man’s sport, but some women are involved too. I think it’s just another fad like Rubic’s Cube or bell bottom pants. On the other hand, it could be a matter of mass psychosis like the dancing mania that swept across Europe from the 14th to the 17th centuries. If it takes on the scale of dancing mania, Toilet Dashing could spell the end of civilization as we know it with towns and cities awash in excrement and people hobbling around with their pant half down.


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

Paperback and Kindle editions of The Daily Trope are available on Amazon under the title The Book of Tropes

Chronographia

Chronographia (chro-no-graph’-i-a): Vivid representation of a certain historical or recurring time (such as a season) to create an illusion of reality. A kind of enargia: [the] generic name for a group of figures aiming at vivid, lively description.


Bartender: “Happy Hour! What time is it boys and girls?

It’s Happy Hour! Drinks are half price! This is one of the last opportunities in the world to get what you pay for! Bottom shelf booze for what it’s worth!“

Me: “Bartender! Give me 3 shots of vodka and a “Big Beer.” I’m ready to get shitfaced. Here’s my driver’s license. All in good order. Although I don’t look it, I’m fifty-four. I’m from Florida. Let’s go!”

Bartender: “Here you go son! As long as you can ask, I’ll keep ‘em coming. This is the bar where Knucky Mayhem got his start, betting on himself in bar fights. Some would last an hour before some wimp would call the police. He never killed anybody, but happy hour was when he let loose. Just before happy hour ended he would insult somebody roughly his size and punch them on the shoulder. Then, things would roll. The longest fight was 2 hours—a grueling bloody, smelly, grunting thriller. It was almost Knucky’s downfall. Knucky’s opponent was sent in by the Mob to win a little cash. The Mob’s boy was a professional boxer named “Rocky Barcelona.” He kicked Knucky’s ass up and down this very floor. Knucky lost a grand that night, but he didn’t give up on barroom fighting. Last we heard, he was kicking ass at “Billy Bob’s” in Dallas, Texas.”

Suddenly the barroom door squeaked open. There was Knucky standing there. He had a patch over one eye and you could tell he was wearing an adult diaper under his black sweat pants. He had on a white T-shirt with “KNUCKY” printed on it. When he walked toward the bar, you could hear his joints click and squeak. He had a briefcase. He put it on the bar and opened it. It was filled with hundred dollar bills.

Knucky: “There’s 500 grand in there. Somebody put up a hundred against my 500 grand, and we’ll have at it for the dough.”

Me: His voice was slurred like he was brain-damaged and his body was a wreck. I had just been paid at Bartelli’s Deli. It was a cinch. I was the first to volunteer, so I got the fight. Knucky tossed his cane away and pulled off the eye patch. His joints stopped making noises. He patted his diaper and yelled “Empty!” He stepped into the light. He looked 18.

Knucky: “Do you believe in ghosts?” You better believe in this one,” he growled as he punched me between the eyes, sunk his fist in my solar plexus like a jackhammer, and pounded on my kidneys like he was making dough.

Me: I woke up on my bedroom floor. My nose was bleeding and I hurt all over. Knucky was hovering over me.

Knucky: “Don’t worry chump, you’re dreaming. This is my eternal fate. Get up off the damn floor and get back to bed.”

Me: When I got up, I felt no pain, there was no bleeding, and Knucky had disappeared. I Googled him the next day and discovered he was dead, killed fighting in Panama. It was rumored that he “haunted” bars looking for fights, putting incredible odds on a half-million dollars to suck somebody into fighting him.

I had been sucked in! I would never fight again.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu). Bracketed text added by Gorgias.

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