Anacoenosis

Anacoenosis (an’-a-ko-en-os’-is): Asking the opinion or judgment of the judges or audience, usually implying their common interest with the speaker in the matter [and illustrating their communally-held ideals of truth, justice, goodness and beauty, for better and for worse].


“Haven’t we all farted at least once in our lives? Go ahead and raise you hand if you’ve never farted. There you have it. No hands up. How would you like to learn tactical farting? How would you like to fart on demand—real bad smellers? On demand! Raise your hand. All of you but one person—the priest sitting in he back row. It’s your prerogative father, but you could do some real damage in the confessional: a little sulphuric smell could motivate penitents to really open up. You could say ‘I don’t know about you, but I think I detect Satan’s smell quite nearby, maybe here in the confessional.’ Wow! Would that boost the disclosures—from the petty to the dark evil deeds? It would add to your absolutions and help you get more members of your congregation into heaven. Who would ever think a fart could perform such a noble purpose? Salvation!”

This was my fiftieth “Tactical Farting” seminar. I had learned when I was ten years old that I could fart whenever I wanted to. I discovered my skill the first time when my bad-breathed Aunty Kathleen wanted to give me a “hug and a kiss.” I visualized a fart escaping from my anus, and “blurrrrt!” I blew one . It smelled so bad that Aunty Kathleen changed her mind and rushed out of the room. There are countless examples I could cite.

I learned, if I farted, my teacher would not stop at my desk and look at an assignment I was working on. Better yet, I was never asked to speak in front class. She knew I would blow a blockbuster and clear the classroom. Or, once, I got called into the IRS for an audit. We were sitting in a small room when I blew an eye-burner. The agent started choking and waved me out of the room. Through his choking, he told me we were done.

My greatest triumph occurred when I was working behind the counter at Cliff’s. It was my first job out of high school and I was diligent. As top Employee one month, I got to meet Cliff. It was by a swimming pool in Arizona. He is seven feet tall and has the Cliff’s logo tattooed on his chest. He had a Red Bull in each hand and was smoking a Tiparillo cigar. He had an attendant who would hold his cigar when he took a sip of Red Bull or talked. He said “How’ya doin’ boy?” I told him “Great!” and he told me to get back to work before he fired me.

Anyway, some guy came into Cliff’s wearing a balaclava and brandishing a .45. He came behind the counter and told me to give him all the scratch-off lotto tickets. I visualized him as as a patient on an operating table and blew my anesthetic fart at him. He collapsed in a heap on the floor. I called 911 and the police and an ambulance came. The stick-up man was barely alive, but he survived, stood trial, and went to prison. The newspaper headline read: “Fart Foils Robbery.” For foiling the robbery, I made the Cliff’s employee of the year! I got to stay in Cliff’s mansion for two weeks. He wasn’t there, but his daughter Cliffetta was there. I asked her to marry me. She said no, and that was that.

I went back home. That’s when I thought of the idea of tactical farting. I wrote a book and set up a blog—they had the same title: “Tactical Farting: Winds of Change.” Anything you imagine, tactical farting will help you accomplish: from solitude to self-defense. The book outlines how to tactically fart—the steps, the exercises. The blog has real-time videos of tactical farting in action. One of my favorites is titled “Family Reunion.” It follows Jim to his family reunion, where all the relatives he hates are celebrating. He blows a one-minute megaton ass-buster blanket fart and chases everybody away. They get in their cars and drive recklessly, colliding with each other in the narrow driveway. What a tactical farting triumph! Kudos to Jim!

Anyway, this is my final seminar. It’s been a gas, but I’m winded.


Definitions 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.

Anacoloutha

Anacoloutha (an-a-co’-lu-tha): Substituting one word with another whose meaning is very close to the original, but in a non-reciprocal fashion; that is, one could not use the first, original word as a substitute for the second. This is the opposite of acoloutha.


He opened the door. He pushed hard. The door swung quietly on its hinges. He didn’t knock. He didn’t tap. He just pushed his way in. He tiptoed to the living room. There was his girlfriend Nell sitting in front of a crackling fire reading what looked like a magazine, but he knew it was a catalogue for men’s exercise clothing.

I was on page 24 of “Workout Meat,” sort of a “Victoria’s Secret” of scantily clad man hunks. I gave it to her to look at when she got lonely for me. I had so many muscles that I was paid to model nude at the local medical school’s anatomy classes. I was known as “Muscles Mike.” I loved to model, but I loved walking up and down the beach in my Speedo at Seaside Heights even more. The Jersey girls weren’t shy about whistling and applauding when I walked by. I loved the cat calls—“Gimme some of that pepperoni,” “Get on me big boy,” “Pull down your suit and I’ll pull down mine.” “Make me moan.”

Even with all that attention, I stayed faithful to Nell. We started dating in high school when I was a 98-pound weakling. She stood by me while I bulked up. Lately, I started taking steroids and my penis has shrunk to the point where it looks like a second belly button. Nell has cut me some slack, but lately, she has been adamant about me quitting the steroids, and we both know why—an important part of our relationship is gone. That’s why I snuck up behind her to see what picture she was looking at in “Workout Meat.” I was shocked to see she was looking at Mr. Muscle Mountain’s photo. He was my body-building rival in high school. He knew Arnold Schwarzenegger and had beaten him in a couple of body-building competitions. He was the spokesperson for “Body Propellor Protein Shakes.” He was arrogant and flexed anywhere, all the time. He’d be walking through the mall and suddenly stop and strike a pose. It was disgusting.

I quickly moved in front of Nell. Her pupils were dilated and her face was flushed. She told me: “I saw Mr. Muscle Mountain at Cliff’s today. Although he’s graying a bit, he had a nice banana bulge in his sweat pants. I couldn’t help but notice. We exchanged pleasantries, and he asked me if I wanted to take a ride with him at Motel Gaucho tonight. I told him no, that you’re my one and only love.”

I almost cried. I vowed to get off the steroids and grow my penis back. I could take human embryo shots to maintain my bulk—a lot more expensive than steroids, but Nell was worth it.

Inch by inch I grew back to proper poking size. Soon, when I wore my sweatpants to Cliff’s, I was sporting a hefty banana bump of my own when. I could make it twitch if I wanted too—only for Nell.

One afternoon, I met Mr. Muscle Mountain at Cliff’s buying beer. We faced each other and nodded, wiggled our hips, and shook our bananas at each other. I made mine twitch. His banana’s movement in his sweat pants looked fake. I could see him struggling, but he couldn’t make it twitch. I didn’t say anything.


Definitions 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.

Anacoluthon

 (an-a-co-lu’-thon): A grammatical interruption or lack of implied sequence within a sentence. That is, beginning a sentence in a way that implies a certain logical resolution, but concluding it differently than the grammar leads one to expect. Anacoluthon can be either a grammatical fault or a stylistic virtue, depending on its use. In either case, it is an interruption or a verbal lack of symmetry. Anacoluthon is characteristic of spoken language or interior thought, and thus suggests those domains when it occurs in writing.


“I am going to grab . . put that under it.” I lost my balance. I was supposed to be on vacation. There was a goddamn monkey on my back. He’d been riding me for weeks, heavily breathing in my ear, laughing his chattering laugh, and making me pick parasites off his shoulders. I was pulling a wagon loaded with bananas. I was feeling oppressed.

Now he wanted me to give him a manicure. I looked at the fellow members of my tour group and they were all filing and clipping their monkeys’ nails. The favorite color was turquoise followed by purple.

I was regretting ever hooking up with the “Primate Treasure Monkey Tour.” The brochure made it look like you’d have a monkey pal for two weeks, who “would be as close as any friend you’ve ever had.” I never equated friendship to slavery, but that’s what happened on the tour. That’s how I ended up with a monkey on my back.

Part of the tour was a banana plantation. I was given a large wagon and ordered to fill it with bananas. It was grueling work. Three members of the tour group came down with heat stroke and it was rumored that one of them died. That’s when I realized I had become a slave. I resisted picking bananas and I was tied to a whipping post. I wasn’t whipped, but it was very disconcerting. It was the only time the monkey got off my back. The march back to the hotel was horrendous—people falling like flies and loaded onto gurneys for a bumpy ride back to the hotel, one or them in a body bag.

My monkey started sticking his tongue in my ear and doing his monkey laugh. I told him to stop, and he just laughed harder. I snapped and yelled “Get the fu*k off my back!” That was it. I laid down and pinned him under my back. I beat him over the head with a rock until he stopped wriggling and laughing and his grip loosened on my shoulders. He was dead.

All the monkeys dismounted and formed a circle around me. The troop was going to tear me apart. I prepared myself to die. Suddenly the “Treasure Monkey Tours” proprietor popped out the bush. His name was Reginald Pramford and his ancestors had been oppressing monkeys ever since they colonized their habitat in the mid-1800s. Reginald was like a God to the monkeys. He told them to go home and they immediately disbursed. I was saved!

A female monkey wearing a dress, earrings, and a crown, seemed to be whispering something in Reginald’s ear. He frowned, unholstered his handgun, and pointed it at me. He said “An eye for an eye. My wife, The Monkey Queen, won’t have it any other way. Sorry old chap.” Clearly, he was insane.

I rushed Reginald, knocked the gun out of his hand, picked it up, and put it to his “wife’s” head. I told him: “Tell the monkey troop to back off and call me a cab to the airport.” He pulled out his cellphone and booked me a cab. Luckily, I had my passport with me. I didn’t pack. The cab came and we headed for the airport. Then I saw it: A monkey was driving the cab! But, he was a “good” monkey. I arrived at the airport safely.

I boarded my jet to Newark Airport. It was going to be a long flight. I sat in my seat and was shocked to see a monkey sitting next to me! But it was ok. He was a “emotional support animal” belonging to the woman in the window seat. His name was Salvatore, and he lived in New York City. He was wearing a NY Yankees hat. We shook hands and nodded. I was relieved.


Definitions 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.

Anadiplosis

Anadiplosis (an’-a-di-plo’-sis): The repetition of the last word (or phrase) from the previous line, clause, or sentence at the beginning of the next. Often combined with climax.


My prospects were shrinking. Shrinking to the size of an ant; the head of a pin; a grain of salt; a hummingbird’s squeaking butt, There was almost nothing left that I could do. I was kicking myself in the ass for majoring in music in college. My instrument was the bassoon, and I couldn’t play it very well. Luckily, my college graduated everybody who showed up and paid their tuition. So, at least I had a degree that I could put on my resume.

The problem was that the degree did me no good. Prospective employers would ask me, for example, “How will playing the bassoon help you work efficiently on the spice rack assembly line? Too bad you didn’t major in wood shop.” I would try to explain that my background with the bassoon would make my fingers nimble. But, I would be told “Don’t get funny with me young man. Musical instruments are not spice racks!”

There were no bassoon-player jobs anywhere in America. I tried becoming a street musician. I played The Mamas and Papas “Dancing Bear” over and over every day. It was ok, but there wasn’t much to it. Then, one day, a person dressed as a bear showed up and started dancing and singing to my bassoon. We didn’t talk. The bear-person just sang and danced. That went on for three months, and then, the bear disappeared. It destroyed my cash flow and put me back in employment panic mode.

I finally found a job, but it wasn’t playing the bassoon. “The Matthew Wilkie Memorial Museum” was opening in New York City. Wilke was one of the best bassoonists who ever lived. He could make you feel like the sun was rising in your shirt. My job was to sit on a stool holding a bassoon, dressed like Wilke, and answer customers’ questions. I wasn’t permitted to play my bassoon and that made me angry. However, it was a job.

Then one morning, I got to work early. Wilke walked in out of nowhere! He asked me to play for him. He cringed and said, “Jesus Christ! You play like shit.” I got really angry and tried to break the bassoon over my knee. I threw it on the floor and ran out of the museum.

Wilke felt bad about what he did. He got me a better job! I leave for Switzerland tomorrow. I will be playing the alphorn in the Swiss Alps. I will be stationed in Geneva, where I am provided with a free Ricola ration, and rental lederhosen to wear to mountain gigs. I am burning my bassoon tonight. I’m putting its ashes in a little brass urn. Tomorrow morning, I’m going to scatter the ashes in the gutter outside my apartment, toss the urn in the dumpster in the alley, and head for JFK.


Definitions 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.

Anamnesis

Anamnesis (an’-am-nee’-sis): Calling to memory past matters. More specifically, citing a past author [apparently] from memory. Anamnesis helps to establish ethos [credibility], since it conveys the idea that the speaker is knowledgeable of the received wisdom from the past.


As Rumpelstiltskin asked, “What’s my name Baby?” I was looking in the mirror preparing for my big move. I had been stalking this woman for about 3 months. I didn’t have anything better to do. I’m an unemployed stockbroker. My 401k is keeping me alive. I had earned the nickname “Tank” because everything I invested in for my clients “tanked.” I thought it was funny at first. That is, until it kept happening and happening. I lost the firm 2mil, then, they told me goodbye. I didn’t go quietly. I did a month in jail (with early release) for beating up my boss and trying to throw him out a second-story window, starting a trash fire on my desk, and throwing my stapler through one of the plasma monitors displaying the Dow.

As a condition of my early release, I had to attend anger management classes at “Featherdown,” a night “school” that makes a lot of money from the state, and deals exclusively in short-fused, belligerent, violent offenders.

On my first night, I brushed past a woman as I was going through the door. She pulled a knife, kicked me in the crotch an yelled “Don’t move you perverted asshole. What do I look like, your fu*king mother?” She was quickly frog-marched to her seat by two of the class monitors.

My favorite exercise was “Dipshit.” Facing your partner from two inches away, you yell “dipshit” in their face over and over until one you hits the other or pushes them away. Eventually, you look forward to being called dipshit, and you enjoy it. Then, you move on to the next exercise. Eventually, if everything goes well, you like being abused and you don’t get angry anymore.

The final exam consists of an atomic wedgy. You are given a loaded .45 and hung up by your underpants and taunted by your fellow classmates. If you don’t shoot anybody, you are designated “in control” and a “Certified Anger Manager.”

I found out after the exam that the .45 was loaded with blanks. That made me really angry. But, I was a “Certified Anger Manager” so I calmed down pretty fast.

The woman I was stalking ducked into a bar. I went in and sat down on the stool next to her at the bar. When I got close to her I could see that she was the woman I’d brushed up against my first night of anger management classes. I said “What’s my name Baby?” I expected to be knifed, but she laughed and said “Tank. I know you from Featherdown. You probably don’t remember me, but my name’s Rusty for my red hair.”

Success! We talked and drank. Drank and talked. I ended up at Rusty’s apartment. After awhile Rusty said we had talked enough and it was time to do something else. She wanted to make some scrambled eggs for an early breakfast.

I was looking for the eggs in the refrigerator when she came up behind me and yelled “Who do you think you are?” and hit me on the head with a frying pan. I said, “Quick! Let’s do the Dipshit!” We positioned ourselves and started yelling “dipshit” in each other’s faces. Rusty quickly regained her composure.

I got out of there as quickly as possible and went to urgent care for an x-ray. The next day, Rusty called me and apologized. We made a date to meet at “Slasher’s Steak House.”

POSTSCRIPT

Rusty had an anger attack at Slasher’s. Tank had taken the precaution of making sure her place was set with plastic tableware.


Definitions 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.

Anaphora

Anaphora (an-aph’-o-ra): Repetition of the same word or group of words at the beginning of successive clauses, sentences, or lines.


My family’s muffins were great. My family’s muffins were the best. My family’s muffins saved England. It was 1210. England was ridden with warfare—people were lying around all over the place riddled with arrows, looking like sleeping hedgehogs. People were starving to death left and right—children, adults, whole families. People were so hungry they ate their own fingernails and toenails. Poverty was the norm. Nobody had money. They bartered what little they had, or became indentured servants. Most people wore feed bags or flour sacks and lived under rich peoples’ carriages. They had to move continuously to keep a carriage over their heads.

In short, it was hell.

My ancestor was Chief Baker to the King. While surrounded by poverty and starvation, the big fat king had an abundance of gold and an abundance of food. My ancestor thought it was obscene.

The king loved my ancestor’s muffins. He ate ten every morning for breakfast and three more before bed. After eating his morning muffins he would burp loudly and take a nap. His favorite were plum muffins. When he stuffed them into his mouth he made a smacking sound, drooled, and spilled crumbs all over the floor. Sometimes, he would do this while looking out a window, watching starving people starve. He would snort and laughter. He was a nightmare and a glutton.

My ancestor couldn’t stand watching the King’s antics. So, she started smuggling muffins out of the castle to feed the poor. She was caught and tortured, and returned to her duties. The King loved her muffins too much to have her executed.

The King’s birthday was coming. For his birthday, she would make him his annual giant muffin. This year, she would poison it. She couldn’t wait to see him writhing on the floor coughing blood. She used plague- ridden rat testicles, disguised as plums, to do the job, baking them into the muffin. The King gobbled down the muffin. It took the King a week to die, moaning for God’s mercy as he passed away in his blood- and sweat-soaked gilded bed.

The King’s brother Neville succeeded him. King Nevill was benevolent, releasing the realm’s royal assets to the Kingdom, feeding the starving, creating government jobs, and providing subsidies to craftsmen and tradesmen.

England was saved by a giant muffin baked by my ancestor Mrs. Bran Oxley. Oxley’s Muffins are still sold by my family all over England. They are known as “The muffins that saved England.”


Definitions 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.

Anapodoton

Anapodoton (an’-a-po’-do-ton): A figure in which a main clause is suggested by the introduction of a subordinate clause, but that main clause never occurs.

Anapodoton is a kind of anacoluthon, since grammatical expectations are interrupted. If the expression trails off, leaving the subordinate clause incomplete, this is sometimes more specifically called anantapodotonAnapodoton has also named what occurs when a main clause is omitted because the speaker interrupts himself/herself to revise the thought, leaving the initial clause grammatically unresolved but making use of it nonetheless by recasting its content into a new, grammatically complete sentence.


As it was. Because of it.

The kaleidoscope of regret is spinning in my head like a multicolored wheel of misfortune. I had just finished dealing with the latest catastrophe and I was waiting for the next. It was like I was a fish hooked on a line of ill fate flopping out my future.

Most recently, the brakes had failed on my Tesla in autonomous driving mode. I couldn’t turn the ignition off either, and I just kept rolling on until I ran into a school bus. Kids poured out of the bus yelling “Elon must die.” I was surprised that Musk bashing had trickled down to middle school. Then they started pounding on my Tesla with their aluminum school-themed water bottles, still yelling.

My Tesla’s exterior finish was ruined and it was covered with dents too. The brakes suddenly started working again. I drove to an auto-body shop to have it repainted and the dents ironed out, but they refused to work on my Tesla because they hate Musk. So, I drove it out to my father’s farm. I parked it in the middle of a corn field, doused it with diesel, and lit it on fire. After it burned and cooled, I had it towed to the Tesla dealer. The place was surrounded by angry protestors. It was crazy. I left my car there with “Fu*k Musk” painted on both sides. I took an Uber home, and called my insurance company. Here I am now, waiting for the next shitstorm to hit.

I heard my 14year-old daughter yelling, “Daddy, Daddy, come here!” Panic stricken, I ran down to the living room. There she was with her left pant leg pulled up and a tattoo of Satan on her calf captioned “I Love You” written out in flaming script. “Isn’t it cool?” She asked. I flipped out. In our state you had to be eighteen to get a tattoo, I asked he who the hell did it. She told me she had fake I,D, and had been passing for eighteen ever since she was ten. My first thought was to have her leg amputated.

I think I started foaming at the mouth and running around in circles. When I stopped, I dragged her to the tattoo parlor, “Posh Ink,” to see what we could do. When I told the Tatoo guy my daughter was only fourteen, he said he couldn’t work on her, due to the law. I felt so stupid for telling him my daughter’s real age. He saw how distraught I was and took pity on me.

We couldn’t erase the tattoo, so he inked it over. He covered Satan with a big red heart and added “Mommy and Daddy” to the caption: “I Love You Mommy and Daddy.” That was a nice touch. If my daughter was going to have a tattoo, that’s the one I would like. My daughter thought it was cool too. Her gym teacher had recommended the Satan tattoo and my daughter didn’t like it from the start. She said her gym teacher was an ass and she wouldn’t listen to her ever again. I was relieved.

I sat in my chair waiting for the next piece of shit to hit the fan. I heard a loud crunching sound and my wife screaming in the basement. “Here we go,” i thought as I jumped from my chair and ran to the basement door. I opened the door and looked down the stairs, and was filled with dread when I couldn’t see what my wife was wrestling with. I flipped on the light. The was an Anaconda wrapped around her legs. Our son Breck’s pet had returned after missing for a year. He named Beagle. He thought that was really funny. God only knows how it had survived down in the basement, but the rodent infestation that we endured had abated.

I grabbed my Skill saw, plugged it into an extension chord and carefully sawed off Beagle’s head. I unwrapped him from my wife and we dragged him into the back yard and buried him in an unmarked grave.

Well, I was glad that over. I sat in my chair waiting for the next disaster. Then, I heard a loud buzzing sound and went to the window. It was a swarm of killer bees. All I had to do was stay inside and I’d be ok.


Definitions 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.

Anastrophe

Anastrophe (an-as’-tro-phee): Departure from normal word order for the sake of emphasis. Anastrophe is most often a synonym for hyperbaton, but is occasionally referred to as a more specific instance of hyperbaton: the changing of the position of only a single word.


Darkening was the starless sky. Darkening as dark as tar. Darkening as dark as the dark shadow of a crow. So dark! So damn dark. Something bad was going to happen. Ink black skies are always foreboding. I went inside. It was dark—filled with shadows and gloom. I wanted to flee—to grab a flashlight and get out of there.

I turned on the lights.

“Surprise!” My friends were gathered in the living room. Music started playing. There was a banner stretched across the entryway to the kitchen that said “Congratulations!” “For what?” I asked. I couldn’t think of anything I should be congratulated for. My birthday was two months away. I had graduated from Milton Weed High School two weeks ago.

Suddenly, Mary Beth’s eye fell out and hit the floor with a plop, like a mini water ballon. She said “Whoops” and started walking toward me arms outstretched, dragging one foot. Then, Mike’s right arm dropped to the floor. The stench of rotting flesh was overpowering.

I woke up!

I was having my “All my friends are zombies dream.” I was wide awake, My heart was racing. I could hear music playing downstairs. It was probably my sister and her boyfriend. I was thirsty. So, I headed downstairs to get a drink of orange juice from the refrigerator. I heard voices in the living room. Oh God! Could it be?

I flipped on the lights and there they were—just like in my dream, even with the “Congratulations!” banner. But I knew what was going on—I had gotten a full scholarship to Yale, and that’s what this was about. I said “Thank you. Thank you. I love you guys.”

Then, Mary Beth’s eye fell out. She picked it up and put it back in. “Damn this thing. I’ve got to get it readjusted,” she said, and the Midnight party started.


Definitions 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.

Anesis

Anesis (an’-e-sis): Adding a concluding sentence that diminishes the effect of what has been said previously. The opposite of epitasis.


It was a beautiful sunset. I was sitting on the beach, observing it. My shorts were soaking wet and the sand was sticking to my arms. I did not like it one bit. I had been stung by a jellyfish a couple of hours ago. My foot was swollen and I felt like shit. If this was vacation, I’d rather be working. My girlfriend Shelly had talked me into this. Here I was on the beach in Ecuador. There was nothing to do except sit on the beach and run to the restroom every half-hour or so. Shelly had disappeared and I didn’t give a damn. Knowing her, she probably found a new boyfriend. Maybe I’d see her on the plane home unless she changed her reservation.

I was eating a Guinea Pig sandwich for lunch, along with a glass of rum, when a kid came to my table and handed me an envelope addressed to me in the worst handwriting I had ever seen in my life. The letter inside was from Shelly. At least it was in her handwriting. She told me she had joined a cult “The Motorcycles of Moses.” I had heard of them before. National Geographic had done a story on them. Like their name indicates, they are a motorcycle gang, and a cult at the same time. They venerate Moses’s beard. All members have a big white bushy beard, including the women. They are devoted to living in accord with The Ten Commandments (as they interpret them). For example, “Thou shalt not kill.” They interpret that to mean “hire a hit man to do it.” So, they’re bad. But, if that’s what Shelly wanted, she could have it. Bye bye Shelly!

I met another woman who hung around the Porta-Potties by the beach. Her name was Esmeralda and she liked American men. She said we should go to my hotel and watch television. We were watching an episode of Andy of Mayberry, subtitled in Spanish, when I heard the roar of motorcycles outside. It was the Motorcycles of Moses! Esmeralda hid under the bed crying and praying.

I looked out the window again and there was Shelly, her big white beard blowing in the wind. She yelled “I’m coming up.” I heard her big boots clomping on the stairs. She knocked, and I opened the door. Esmeralda whimpered from under the bed, “Don’t kill me.” Shelly laughed and said “I need your help.” She pulled at her beard and smiled seductively. How can I help you?” I asked. “If we pay them 50 USD, they will let me quit the cult. I left my wallet here, so I couldn’t pay them myself.

She found her wallet in the nightstand, pulled out $50.00 and headed for the door. After a couple of minutes, the motorcycles started up and roared off. Esmeralda climbed out from under the bed. Shelly knocked on the door. “I’m free,” she exclaimed as she entered the room. She threw her beard on the floor and sat on the couch. I introduced Esmeralda and we sat on the couch too. I found another episode of “Andy or Mayberry” and we ordered a Guinea Pig pizza.


Definitions 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.

Antanaclasis

Antanaclasis (an’-ta-na-cla’-sis): The repetition of a word or phrase whose meaning changes in the second instance.


The time was getting late. I was having the time of my life. I didn’t know what to do. It was close to 3:00 a.m. I was supposed to be home by 11:00 p.m. My parents were probably flipping out, maybe even looking for me at the morgue.

Here I was, sharing a joint with my best friend’s little sister. She had just turned 18 and she told me she was ready to do a lot of things that she couldn’t do before because she was too young. I thought that included sex and I was going to try to broach the topic and go crazy with her. She told me she had a passion for politics and could finally participate and “go all the way,” Hmm. It sounded like sex to me until she added “and vote.”

That’s when I went home.

When I got there, there was a police car parked outside. I heard an ambulance in the distance. My father was lying on the front lawn, unconscious, with a pair of binoculars in one hand. Neighbors were gathered around and my mother was talking to the policeman. My mother saw me and came running toward me “When you didn’t come home at eleven, we thought you were missing.” she said. My father is an avid bird watcher. He had climbed up on the roof of the house to see if he could spot me somewhere with his “lucky” binoculars—the ones he had spotted the rare pink-capped Chickadee with.

He slipped and fell off the roof. I knew I would be blamed for what had happened to my father. Mother admitted that he hadn’t taken his Lithium for a week and had started hearing voices and seeing birds circling around the dining room table. The last time he had gotten like this, he had stuck a spatula up his butt and tried to make scrambled eggs. He was severely burned and spent two months in the hospital. But, he always smiled and was always happy to see me (when he recognized me).

Later that afternoon I saw my best friend’s little sister. She said, “I’m ready for you to stuff my ballot box.” I thought “My prayers are answered!” I asked her where she wanted to do it, She said “Right here!” I was shocked. Then she pulled a little locked box with a slit on top out of her backpack. “I’m running for Prom Queen an your vote will help.” She handed me a ballot and a pen: I voted for her and stuffed my ballot into her ballot box.

When my father came out of his coma, the first thing he sad was “Smile at the little birdie.” My mother had given him a stuffed duck to comfort him while he was unconscious. Now, he was holding it. He was back!


Definitions 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.

Antanagoge

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


The most insane spin I ever heard on a bad situation was when my mother was burned over eighty percent of her body. It was my high school graduation party. She was sticking a lit tiki torch in the ground in the back yard when the cap popped off the fuel reservoir and doused her in kerosine, and she caught on fire. My party was cancelled and I was really disappointed, but I knew Mom didn’t do it on purpose, so I harbored no anger

She was in a coma for a week. When she woke up she said, “It’s going to be a long road to recovery, but look at all the weight I’ve lost.” She held up her arm. It used to have a swinging fat roll under it. It was gone, along with at least five pounds. She said, “It was charred so they just snipped it off and stitched it up.”

This was a spinner’s spin! Being grateful for losing weight as a consequence of being a burn victim clearly indicates the value attributed to losing weight in American culture.”I had to have both legs amputated, but by God, I lost fifty pounds.” “I had to have a cinder block implanted in my stomach to kill my appetite, but I lost 30 pounds in a month!” “I have a tapeworm, and the pounds are melting away. His name is ‘Skippy’ because he makes me skip meals.”

Anyway, my mother recovered and is now receiving plastic surgery treatments. She’s having her legs skinned and the skin applied to her face. She knows she’s doomed to wearing pants to cover her legs, but she says “At least I’m getting my face back and I’ll be able to go shopping again without grossing out my fellow shoppers.” Her sensitivity to the sensibilities of her fellow shoppers is admirable.

The worst situation I’ve ever been in was not being able to find a matching sock. It was partially my fault because I just stuffed my socks in my sock drawer without sorting them out. I had a job interview downtown in one hour. I dumped my sock drawer on the floor. I ripped though them, but nothing matched. Then I realized my little brother he played one of his brotherly pranks on me. At least I had socks to wear. Good warm socks. I was blessed. I was sure I would be challenged at the job interview for wearing mismatched socks.

I pulled on my Smokey the Bear sock and my blue, yellow, and red-striped sock. I barely made it to the interview. The first question was “Why are you wearing mismatched socks?” I told him my brother had played a prank on me. We both laughed. He stuck his feet out from under his desk. His socks were mismatched too. “My daughter,” he said.

Needless to say, I got the job. I thanked my brother for mixing up my socks. His next trick was to put a live garden snake in my underwear drawer.


Definitions 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.

Antenantiosis

Antenantiosis  (an’-ten-an’-ti-os’-is): See litotes. (Deliberate understatement, especially when expressing a thought by denying its opposite. The Ad Herennium author suggests litotes as a means of expressing modesty [downplaying one’s accomplishments].


“I am the greatest thing America has ever seen. George Washington would’ve been my court jester, like JD was. Frankly, the new Golden Age is upon us. The deficit is a thing of the past. I saved billions by eliminating all federal entities except for DOGE and the Navy. Random airport crotch checks have gone a long way toward the success of the ‘Two Sexes Mandate.’ I assured the defeat of Ukraine’s dictatorship and kept the price of eggs below $30.00. God couldn’ve done what I did. Frankly, I am perfect.”

These were his final words from the scaffold where he was about to be hanged for treason. As they put the black bag over his head, he yelled “Not one of you deserves to be a pimple on my ass or the toilet paper I wipe it with!” The trap door opened and he swung free, into oblivion. Nobody mourned his death. There was nearly universal jubilation following his execution. How he ever got elected President of the world’s greatest democracy and turned it into an oligarchy, where only two things mattered: personal wealth and fealty, nobody will ever know. Forever, his name will be synonymous with “Traitor” and every foul adjective in the English language.

The VP had been found guilty of treason too and pleaded “I was just following orders.” His last words on the gallows were: “When are you going to thank us?” Everybody laughed and he swung.

Congress had decided it would be fitting to hold new presidential elections. Bernie Sanders has been appointed Interim President.

My favorite candidate is Jorge Jacinto whose ancestors had fought on the side of the Texans at the Alamo, and who helped draft the Republic of Texas Constitution at Washington-on-the-Brazos in 1836. Here’s an example of what he has to say:

“My anscestors were giants, but I am just a man. I stand in awe of their accomplishments, but their accomplishments, while noteworthy, do not credit me. I stand humbly in my own right seeking your support for what I’ve done, not what they’ve done. You tell me I am great, but I’m not great. Rather, I am striving to keep promises that will benefit us all. Please vote for me. I will keep my promises and give credit where credit is due: to you, the people.”

What a difference from the blustering traitor who was hanged. There’s something about Mr. Jacinto’s self-effacing character that I find very appealing. I trust he will not construct himself as a king or dictator like the Traitor did. The Traitor’s executive orders summoned the soul of tyranny, taking our democracy apart piece by piece by piece and alienating our democratic ally’s around the world.

Mr. Jacinto is running as an Independent. This is fitting.

Finally, after three years of oppression, the US is rising from the ashes like a Phoenix. Hope is coursing throughout the land.


Definitions 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.

Anthimeria

 (an-thi-mer’-i-a): Substitution of one part of speech for another (such as a noun used as a verb).


I am Doer. Who do? I do. I am do. Do-Man, the getter of things done. People call me “Do.” Not dude, but Do. I taped every episode of CHPs and made a secret shrine out in the woods where I go and yell “vroom vroom” at night. Then, I look around for criminals in the mall. I wear big black CHPs boots and wrap-around sunglasses. My favorite catch-phrase is “Roger that.” It is the kind of acknowledgement we all need to paper over the walls we build with muted blues and grays printed with snowmobiles and beach umbrellas—in short, images of hope. Everywhere you look in your living room—hope, hope, hope.

But you must find your own images and custom order them from “Rosy Wall” a manufacturer of custom wall coverings.

To each his own. Horses never say “Nay.”

Now it’s time to plan what Mr. Do will do today. Maybe I’ll make an ice sculpture with my lawnmower (I don’t have a chainsaw). Maybe I’ll hop on one foot out to the my mailbox. Maybe I’ll invent something. I’ve been thinking of something to open cans with. My screwdriver works, but not that well. Or maybe, I could invent an electric propeller to make oranges into juice. Hmmm. Maybe I could use my lawnmower to mow the snow off my driveway. I don’t know, there’s so much Mr. Do could do. Ooh. I know! I could take a shower with my dog Skipper. We could be like two birds killed with one stone!

POSTSCRIPT

Mr. Do should’ve been named Mr. Don’t. He never thought of consequences. He would be injured or scammed at least once a week, but the shower with Skipper was the end of the line. Skipper loved the shower. He jumped up on Do and put his paws on his shoulders. Do dropped his bar of soap and fell forward slipping on the soap and smashing his head on the shower faucet and falling through the tub enclosure’s glass doors. They found him slumped over the tub’s side. He was dead.


Definitions 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.

Anthypophora

Anthypophora (an’-thi-po’-phor-a): A figure of reasoning in which one asks and then immediately answers one’s own questions (or raises and then settles imaginary objections). Reasoning aloud. Anthypophora sometimes takes the form of asking the audience or one’s adversary what can be said on a matter, and thus can involve both anacoenosis and apostrophe.


“You may wonder why I’m standing here with a paper bag pulled over my head. Well, surprise! I’m not going shopping!” This was the opening to my first lecture of the semester. It was an English literature course on the oddball writer/philosopher Vaslov “Swordfish” McNulty. He was famous for writing 300-page tomes about nothing. His final book “I Can’t Get a Grip,” won the 2015 Hefty Preface Award, for the longest and most obtuse “Introduction” to a work of fiction. McNulty’s Introduction to “Underpants Eclipsing” was 150 pages long and written in extended similes—like a train-track to nowhere, like a pothole in an invisible highway. Many thought it should’ve won the 2025 Hefty.

I pulled the bag off my head, but there was another bag underneath. It was a shopping bag I had purchased at Hannaford supermarket. It was ornately printed with flowers, a big red barn, and vegetables. Like the other bag, I had cut out eye holes in it.

I said “Underneath. We do not know anything until we know what’s underneath. What’s buried. What’s occluded. What’s covered. What’s underneath.” I ripped off the Hannaford bag. Underneath, I was wearing a balaclava like a thief, or murderer, or an ICE agent wears. I brandished my Swiss Army knife. The sudden unveiling shocked some of the students. One young man in the front row tucked his hands in his armpits and flapped his arms like a bird and mooed like a cow. Another young man started jogging in place. A young woman dumped her backpack out on the floor, stood up, and started stomping on the contents. Numerous other bizarre activities took place, until the entire class was weirding out.

A shoe flew by my head. I closed my Swiss Army knife, and I pulled the balaclava off. The commotion ceased immediately. The students stared, mouths hanging open, fear and weirdness were replaced by awe.

I had a Sufi winged heart tattooed on my forehead. I had a flying saucer on my right cheek and Cher on my left cheek. I had a target on my chin and a question mark on either eyelid. I said, “My face is an aggregate of hope and fear. It weighs the ambiguity of value on its own idiosyncratic scales. At once, it projects the dialectical tensions of idiocy and genius and fabricates a surface for posing wonder.”

Then, I tore off the tattoo mask and revealed my own face. The students groaned with disappointment and one or two even booed. I am a pasty-faced bookworm who never goes outside. My face is shiny and belies my Scandinavian heritage. My last name is Godson, and I take it seriously. I ask my students: “Can you take your masks off? No! You can’t. Without your mask you would have no face—nothing to save, nothing to lose. Nothing to punctuate your life with or register your placidity and anxiety. Like Swordfish, you would be drowning in a sea of non-sequiturs, and, more bluntly, bullshit.

This semester, you will wear bags over your heads to every class. You will not get to know each other. For all we know, a serial killer may sneak in with a desire to kill one of us, or all of us. But, we will learn to trust each other, like Swordfish’s protagonist trusted the hotel doorman to open the door for him and hold it open until he entered the hotel, a key moment in ‘Floating Frozen Turkeys,’ perhaps his most ambitious work. Spanning 9,142 pages, nobody has ever read it all the way through, cleverly protecting it from the back-stabbing insults of literary critics who nearly universally condemn Swordfish’s works as vile, tautological, trivial, vice-ridden, incomprehensible, insulting, liberal, ersatz, puerile, and makeshift. This semester, you will become the bags over your heads.”

The students seemed eager to proceed. I looked forward to the experiment. Yes, it was an experiment. The next class-meeting would be the beginning of my revolution in University teaching—I would win the State University at Cowbridge award for “Believable Instruction” and get tenure. I could marry the student I’ve been living with since her Freshman year. Things were looking up. Then I got the news. One of my students was trying on bags at Hannaford’s and was mistaken for a robber. He was shot 12 times by the newly hired bipolar security guard. Since I had required my students to wear bags over their heads, I was charged with conspiracy to commit robbery. I am serving a one-year sentence. During my trial I was known in the newspapers as “Professor Bag Man.”

The students staged a demonstration protesting my conviction and proclaiming my innocence. They all wore bags over their heads and chanted “We are the paper bags over our heads.” The demonstrations were ineffective. It rained and the bags turned into paper mush. No more bags, no more protest. That was it. Here I am. I have decorated my cell with paper bags. I am grateful to the prison authorities for allowing me to do so.


Definitions 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.

Antimetabole

Antimetabole (an’-ti-me-ta’-bo-lee): Repetition of words, in successive clauses, in reverse grammatical order.


“I love you. You love I.” It wasn’t grammatically perfect, but it clearly conveyed our love. We had been going steady since high school. I wrote the little ditty as a part of Bingo’s birthday. Her real name is Martha. I nicknamed her “Bingo” because that’s what I yelled when I saw her undressing in the girl’s locker room, where I spied from a locker with a peephole drilled in it. It was one of my most successful ventures. I rented the locker for $10,00 per hour. Even Mr. Binge, the shop reacher, rented it out.

Anyhow, when I yelled “Bingo,” Bingo heard me and found me. She yanked open the locker and kissed me. I asked her to go steady, and the rest is history. It was Bingo’s 27th birthday and she was pressuring me to marry her. We still live with our parents and we still go out on dates. We were going on a “walking around” date. We just wander around town holding hands until around 11:00. Sometimes we do “it” in the thick bushes in front of the bank—mostly in summertime.

Her mother greeted me at the front door “Oh god, it’s you again. Martha’s coming right down. Why don’t you just leave her alone?” Bingo’s father was a little more creative. He had installed a fire escape with a ladder outside Bingo’s window hoping some other boys might climb up and visit her and fall in love. It didn’t work. She kept her window locked, and had a “No Trespassing” sign hanging in the window. It was a relief. Love is good and good is love! Nobody was going to steal my girl. Bingo was mine all mine.

I decided to marry her.

I worked in a sliding board factory, testing random slides for speed and smoothness. I had been working there for 15 years and made pretty good wages. Bingo skippered a fishing boat. It was a trawler and they fished for cod, haddock, and flounder. She’d be out for a week at a time with a boatload of men, but I never mistrusted her. Bingo made tons of money. So, we’d be wealthy when we combined our incomes.

We planned for months. Then, one day, in front of the bank, I ran into Mr. Binge the shop teacher who had rented my spy locker. He was bent over a walker and was drooling a little on his hand. He said “I banged her that day, and we’re still goin’ at it. I got these little blue pills. We meet in the bushes over there.” That really hurt. I thought the bushes were our special place. I ripped the walker out of Mr. Binge’s hands and he fell flat on his face yelling “You bastard!” I ran home to hide in my room. I was cleaning my .45 when there was a knock on my bedroom door. I opened the door. It was Bingo.

I was surprised my mother her let her into the house. Bingo was crying. Between sobs, she said “I ran into Mr. Binge in front of the bank today. He told me the lies he told you. Ever since that day in the locker room, he’s wanted to do ‘it’ with me. But, I said no, and I keep saying no, but he has fantasies, even at 82, and he just won’t give up. I’ve reported him for harassment several times to no avail. If you don’t believe me ask the police.”

I was calmed by what she said. I asked the police. Bingo was telling the truth. We went ahead and got married. Every once in a while I would see what looked like walker tracks heading toward the back door. but I knew they were from our son’s baby carriage and I had nothing to worry about. Nevertheless, I installed a tiny security camera and I check it every day. So far, so good.


Definitions 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.

Antimetathesis

Antimetathesis (an-ti-me-ta’-the-sis): Inversion of the members of an antithesis.


“Over and under, under and over, aim right, and shoot the fleeing Plover.” This was my family’s motto inscribed in Latin on all the walls of our family’s castle. The castle is adjacent to Inverness, Scotland on the River Ness—maybe the shortest river in the world. It empties into Loch Ness.

Long ago, we stopped paying attention to the motto. It’s significance was lost in the mists of time, It was deemed stupid. How could it bear witness to our family’s character or provide wisdom to negotiate life’s travails?

Consequently, my father the Duke of Earl, was going to have the motto removed from all the castle’s walls and replaced with a new motto authored by his friend who wrote Rock music. His most famous song was “Don’t Fear the Leper.” It had religious overtones and I never really liked it, except the line “Baby here’s my hand, don’t fear the leper, bag it up because I’m your man.” It was performed by “Blue Duster Rag,” and sold millions of copies and led to a leprosy outbreak in northern England.

I got the idea that before we erase it away, we should do some research on the motto’s origins and meaning. I found out the motto was probably coined in the 1800s when Plovers were mercilessly blown out of the sky to near extinction. Piles of Plovers would be left in fields and alongside creek beds and roadsides by the bloodthirsty bird killers. Their bounty wasn’t donated to the poor, rather, it became fox food for fattening foxes for the gentry’s hunt, slowing the foxes down for easy killing by the hounds.

I was dumbfounded. How could a reference to such a ghastly wasteful practice become a motto for anything but a family of cowardly sadists? With that thought, things started coming together. Now I understood why there was a rack in the basement. My father promised me he would show me how to work it when I turned 21. When we were talking about it, the maid serving us drinks blushed. I thought nothing of it at the time, but now that I am older, I get it.

Now, I urgently desired to change the motto. The songwriter friend hadn’t come up with anything, so I put my creative abilities to work. I tried “Stretching the Truth” but that was a little too close to revealing the basement rack’s existence, so I chucked it. After a week, I came up with “Pleasure Hurts. Pain Heals.” It resonated with our family’s grisly past, metaphorically, and ignoring the rack in the basement, it did not link to sadomasochistic practices, but rather, to praiseworthy monastic practices like self-flagellation or wearing itchy underpants.

Nobody liked my motto. They said it veered too close to the truth. We went with “What’s In Your Sporran?” sort of stealing from Capital One’s “What’s in your wallet?” As a motto, it’s just as useless as the old one. It’s crass—instead of asking “What is in your soul” or “What’s in your conscience?” it asks about the contents of your purse—a ploy to make bragging about the Earl family’s wealth relevant. Disgusting.

In the wake of the family motto fiasco, I have coined a motto for myself: “No motto is a good motto.”


Definitions 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.

Antiprosopopoeia

Antiprosopopoeia (an-ti-pro-so-po-pe’-i-a): The representation of persons [or other animate beings] as inanimate objects. This inversion of prosopopoeia or personification can simply be the use of a metaphor to depict or describe a person [or other animate being].


We called him “The Rock” because he had broken a window with his nose when we were playing hide and seek. He was hiding in an abandoned greenhouse. He had tripped over an old piece of hose and he hit one of the glass panels face-first. He has a big nose, and it acted as a sort of bumper shattering the glass and enabling his face to go through unscathed, although he sustained a small gash on the bridge of his nose.

After that incident, The Rock had an almost magical aura. He was thought of as invincible. He did dangerous things to maintain his cache. He did the usual: bungee jumping, rock climbing, parachuting, bull riding, knife throwing target. But, above and beyond everything else, was sneaking so-called illegal immigrants into the US from Mexico. He had a Jeep Cherokee. He crossed the border with stealth at San Luis in Arizona. He would put two immigrants under the hood, on either side of the engine. For some reason, Customs officers never looked under the hood. The Rock told me it was because they thought anybody hiding there would be dead from exhaust fumes, and they didn’t want to deal with paperwork. So, although it was dangerous, the risk wasn’t that high. The Rock got bored with smuggling people, and found something else, more in line with his moniker.

He became a Middle School teacher. It took a few years to get the required teaching degree and certification. His danger angle was sustained while he was completing his education by cleaning wild animal cages at the zoo, while the animals were roaming around their cages! People loved to watch him run from the lion and lock himself inside the safety cage inside the cage. He almost changed his mind about being a school teacher, but had too much invested in it to give it up.

His first day of teaching was just as he expected it would be. There was a shooting incident in another wing of the school. He was hit by five flying objects, one of which was a pair of scissors that stuck in his left shoulder. He left them there until the end of class to show his commitment to teaching. As he was sitting there going over the math lesson, somebody lit his desk on fire. He climbed up on his desk singing “Fire!” All the students lit their desks on fire and started dancing along with him. His pants caught on fire and he pulled them off, exposing his black bikini underpants. Everybody screamed and somebody pulled a fire alarm. The firefighters hosed down the classroom, put out the fire, and nobody got hurt.

My friend was fired from teaching and more is or less blackballed from the teaching profession for “removing his pants in class.” After the incident, the administration called him “Dead Meat.” He tried to explain that his pants were on fire, but nobody listened.

My friend is trying find some new dangerous thing to do. He told me he’s thinking about becoming a crossing guard.


Definitions 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.

Epicrisis

Epicrisis (e-pi-cri’-sis): When a speaker quotes a certain passage and makes comment upon it.

Related figures: anamenesis–calling to memory past matters. More specifically, citing a past author from memory–and chreia (from the Greek chreiodes, “useful”) . . . “a brief reminiscence referring to some person in a pithy form for the purpose of edification.” It takes the form of an anecdotethat reports either a saying, an edifying action, or both.


“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way.” Charles Dickens

This passage from “A Tale of Two Cities” reminds me of the first time I took acid, seeing the inextricable link between opposites, always existing begging for our allegiance to one, but never both at the same time. We live as victims of a dialectically opposed calculus—in the throes of ‘either or’ as Kierkegaard wrote. We are set up by opposition, the foundation of choice. The choice must be made when we are faced with the dictum that something can’t be and not be it’s opposite at the same time under the same circumstances. Being “the best of times and the worst of times” can be at different times and places, under different circumstances, and perhaps, framed such that they appear best and worst simultaneously, but this not possible for consciousness to perceive—in succession, yes, but not at once while simultaneously discriminating between them. In a way, the perception of opposites takes turns, or they may synthesize into a new whole.

I had a golf club that I had inherited from my uncle. It was beautiful— it’s leather wrapped grip, straight tight grained hickory shaft, and a hand forged iron head. In it’s time, it was the best that money could buy. Now, it was eclipsed by every golf club on the market. Still, I used it. I played all nine holes with it. I was torn between my uncle’s legacy and the new model golf clubs that enabled greater accuracy and distance. I had become a laughing stock among my golf playing peers. It was painful, but my uncle’s club wouldn’t let me go. I didn’t know what to do. My heart was breaking. I wanted to play better. I wanted to honor my uncle’s legacy. I was torn. 

Then, somebody stole my golf club. We found out that it was among the first golf clubs ever made, and it was worth at least $1,000,000. They caught the crook—one of my golf playing “friends.” The club was returned. I decided the best way to honor my uncle’s legacy was to sell the club so it would be displayed somewhere for everybody to see—perhaps at the PGA museum. 

I’m not sure how this relates to a “A Tale of Two Cities” opening lines. I was lucky. If not, I would’ve been the main character in “A Tale of Endless Bogies.” If the club had not been stolen and returned, I never would have realized it’s value. Good came of bad. A sequence of opposites we all hope for. 


Definitions 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.

Antisagoge

Antisagoge (an-tis-a-go’-gee): 1. Making a concession before making one’s point (=paromologia); 2. Using a hypothetical situation or a precept to illustrate antithetical alternative consequences, typically promises of reward and punishment.


“You’re lost in New Jersey, panic stricken and almost out of gas: You keep turning right because you think you’ll eventually come to Pennsylvania and be saved, or you could plug in your GPS and actually be saved. The choice is yours to make: ride around in circles or actually find your way to Redding, where you live with your wife and two children and your pet rabbits Bugs and Mugs.”

I thought for a few minutes. This choice-making seminar was grueling, mentally demanding, and almost impossible to deal with. We were constantly bombarded with hypothetical situations by the seminar leader Mr. Jules Aloney. His nickname was “Either Or” and he had a fork in the road tattooed on his chest that said “Take It” underneath it. We met on the beach, so he could go shirtless. We wore bathing suits and cheap sunglasses to hide our shame.

The seminar members came from all walks of life. There wasn’t a soldier or sailor, but here was a a tailor who had trouble deciding where to put the next stitch. It took him a year to make a pair of pants. Another member had trouble deciding whether to stop or go. She had a number of near fatal accidents at traffic intersections. Then, there’s the guy who has trouble deciding whether to unzip or pull down his pants when he pees. The procrastination often lead to pants-wetting. There’s more, but making bad decisions is a common thread.

I work for an insurance company. The last three people I insured had their houses burn down before making a premium payment. The company lost close to $2,000,000. My boss thought I wasn’t doing a good job of vetting them with good questions before I decided to make them a policy-holder. But I thought that the kinds of questions I asked were right on target, like “Are you planning on burning your house down?” To save time, that was the only question I asked. I found out that people lied. It’s not my fault that people lie. Anyway, the boss said that the choice-making seminar would make me better at vetting clients by asking them decision-making questions designed to ascertain their level of risk as clients. But he had an ulterior motive.

My boss wanted to fire me. He had sent me to the seminar because he didn’t want to fire me without a solid reason. He was sure the seminar wouldn’t help me, so he could cite it as a good faith effort he made to “turn me around” before letting me go.

So, Mr. Aloney’s New Jersey question was intended as a step in the direction of my “rehabilitation” and developing the hypothetical situation-making skill. Putting people in hypothetical situations gives you a glimpse of their decision-making skills. For example: “If you just got fired from an insurance company, what would you do?” Ha ha, I know what I would do.

But, getting back to the lost in New Jersey scenario, I said I would keep turning right. I don’t care if I ever see my family and pet rabbits ever again. My wife is having an affair with the school crossing guard, my two daughters treat me like an ATM, and the rabbits crap on the floor and chew on the baseboards. I told Mr. Aloney that I would throw my GPS out the car window and drive around in circles until I found a new life.

I was ejected from the seminar. But I was lucky. My boss was going through the same “shit” as me and could empathize with my preference for driving in circles. He promoted me to “Office Monitor.” I make sure that most everybody who’s in the office is facing their computer. My vetting days are over. It was the right decision,


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.

Antistasis

Antistasis (an-ti’-sta-sis): The repetition of a word in a contrary sense. Often, simply synonymous with antanaclasis.


I fell on the floor for the third time. It was time for another drink. I pulled myself up and stumbled to the bar with my shot-glass in my hand, it had my name painted on it and it was kept behind the bar for me, where I left it every night.

I met some really nice people on the barroom floor—a catholic priest, a hardware salesman, a millionaire from another town. We would talk in slurred speech about salvation, screwdrivers, and fine art. The millionaire thought art was the end of human existence, judging by some it, I concluded it was the end of human existence too, but not like he meant it!

I was a discount surgeon working at Costco, so I would add cutting and stitching to the conversation.

My surgical abilities were beginning to fail given my nightly regime of excessive drinking. I had not made any big mistakes yet, but it was just a matter of time. Time was not on my side.

I lived in a tiny apartment with no room—but I would tell myself that at least it was my room. When I woke up in the morning I had to struggle to remember where I was—I felt like a truck ran over my head and had crushed it like a melon. The juice on the floor was urine, and I was due at the operating room at eleven. That was three hours away. I was still drunk, and was grateful for the bar’s liberality, letting me meet with my friends on the floor. But I guess I took too much advantage of it.

I thought about hiring a stand-in, but Costco did not allow that. Luckily the surgery I was performing was extremely minor. A woman had a boil on the back of her neck, My job was to lance it—basically, poke a hole in it with a needle. Aside from the boil squirting in the attending nurse’s eye, everything went well.

I went home, showered and changed my clothes, and was back on the barroom floor by around 9:15, slurring words and conversing with my buddies. The hardware salesman wanted to talk about chicken wire. We all agreed that was a potentially interesting topic. We started talking about ways of unrolling chicken wire and flattening it out.

I got a call from the Costco Medical Center. They told me the woman I had lanced earlier in the day was dead. I told them I figured something like this would happen sooner or later due to my drinking problem.

Evidently, I had shoved the lance in way too far and punctured an artery in her shoulder. She died of internal bleeding, not even knowing she was bleeding.

I was convicted of criminal negligence and sentenced to two years in prison. I ran into my hardware salesman friend the other day. It was great running into my old friend. He’s serving a life sentence for killing his wife with a nail gun.


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.

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.


My new wool coat was too big. I was just a kid and it was adult XL. My arms were six niches too short to let my hands stick out the ends of the sleeves. It was yallow and green with a hooge collar and silver buttons. It came down to my knees.

Getting a new winter coat every year was a family ritual. My family was poor. My father was a dishwasher at the “Grits and Gravy Diner” out on Highway Six. If it wasn’t for the pancake mix he stole, we would never have had breakfast. My mother made hand-tailored sports coats. She would sell two or thee a year, usually around prom time at the local high school. All of them were white. She would throw in a pink carnation at no extra cost. It goes without saying, if we had to live off Ma’s sports coat business, we would’ve starved. But my mother had a rich Aunt April who was her mother’s sister.

She had been a judge in NYC in the ‘40s and ‘50s. She had sent so many criminals up the river that they called her “Judge Mississippi.” She had made tons of money and took it upon herself to buy me, “Poor Little Johnny,” a new winter coat every year. It was fine at first, but as she got older the coat-buying adventure had gotten crazier. I thought this was why I was getting the giant coat.

She tugged on it and buttoned the buttons and made me squat down in it. Two years ago, she started naming the coats after people. Last year, my coat was named Howard, after my great uncle. This year’s coat was named Charles, after my grandfather. Aunt April never approved of him. He drove a bakery delivery truck and had a kennel full of Beagles that he ran at field trials, where the dogs chased around rabbit-scented bags that were dragged through the woods and fields. I went to a couple of field trials and loved it. I would hang out in the club house and eat pumpkin pie. Grandpa ended his working days as a security guard, packing a .38 and stealing silverware. It was the highlight of Thanksgiving for me to dig into dinner with a fork stamped with logo of the place where he worked.

Anyway, I was afraid to ask Aunt April why she named my coat Charles. She was short-tempered and such a question would be considered “guff,” a nineteenth-century word for saying something stupid that could be a prelude to a listener’s ire. She waved her cane at me and yelled “I know what you’re thinking!” I apologized, but I wasn’t sure what I was apologizing for.

Aunt April had bought me and my cousin Joe sailor suits when we were really little kids. I have a bunch of pictures of us saluting each other in my back yard. That was the only time I wore it. That was ok with me. I couldn’t understand why she had bought me a sailor suit, but I could understand the winter coat. It was to keep me warm, when otherwise, I would’ve worn the same coat until it was rag. Then, I realized that was her plan with the giant coat. She was getting old and was probably concerned that she may be buying her last coat for me. It had to last a few years.

The coat would certainly last to junior high school, and it did, and beyond. It kept me warm for years. Even though Dad had saved his wages, took out a loan, and bought the diner, and we could afford all the winter coats we wanted, I stuck with the last one Aunt April had bought me.

In a weird way, I miss Aunt April. I did some research on her and found out she was one of the first women to be admitted to the American Bar Association.


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.

Antithesis

Antithesis (an-tith’-e-sis): Juxtaposition of contrasting words or ideas (often, although not always, in parallel structure).


What you do and what you say are not worth observing or listening to. Your brain is a bellows blowing wind—a hurricane of nonsense, a typhoon of baloney, and you want me to follow your advice. You don’t know the difference between good and bad, right and wrong, in and out. Every time I’ve listened to your advice, things haven’t gone well. I’ll never forget my trip to Baghdad. I landed at the airport and the plane was surrounded by soldiers. The pilot was killed and we were captured. I spent 11 days in an Iraqi prison battling rats and cockroaches. The US arranged a prisoner swap and I escaped in a helicopter that came under heavy small arms fire as we exited the city.

I didn’t see a single artifact. All that you had touted went unseen. The trip was a total disaster and I almost lost my life. in fact, death was my companion the whole time I was there.

And then, there was the guided tour of chicken ranches in the southern US. I was excited at the prospect of meeting thousands of chickens. I was very fond of chickens. Back in Pennsylvania, I have five chickens that I collect eggs from. They follow me around the yard—it’s like leading a feathered parade. I thought meeting thousands of chickens would be a peak experience—like winning the lotto or driving recklessly. I was wrong. Bird flu reared its ugly head and I was forced to spend a month quarantine in Bucksnort, Alabama. I didn’t hear any bucks snorting, but I heard a lot of heavy equipment burying dead chickens—life was short for those bucka-bucka chickens, but all of them were destined for slaughter anyway—Colonel Sanders will have to wait: sittin’ in Kentucky pullin’ his beard. Anyway, when I finally got home my chickens were waiting for me. My nbrother had taken care of them for me. Two were missing. My brother told me he didn’t think I would mind if he ate a couple of them. He said he was drying their wishbones on the kitchen windowsill, and we could pull apart them after dinner.

I flipped out. I tied his hands behind him and led him to Crow Caw Cliff. I was going to push him off and see if he could fly. I decided not to push him and I forgave him after I cut him loose. I told him to get in his car and drive as far as he could and never come back. He whined and complained. I drew my little .22 auto and pressed against his forehead and told him to “Drive!” He drove. I never heard from him again.

Oh, then there was “invest all you have in Roundup.” I did. Two days later it was banned in the US for killing people. That’s when I should’ve killed you.

You are the dark at the end of the tunnel and the light from a burning house fire. Why am I still friends with you? I’ve come to the conclusion that it is an unbreakable curse.

Let’s go get a beer and call it a day. My chickens all died of natural causes—why don’t we fry ‘em up have a chicken feast for dinner?


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.

Antitheton

Antitheton (an-tith’-e-ton): A proof or composition constructed of contraries. Antitheton is closely related to and sometimes confused with the figure of speech that juxtaposes opposing terms, antithesis. However, it is more properly considered a figure of thought (=Topic of Invention: Contraries [a topic of invention in which one considers opposite or incompatible things that are of the same kind (if they are of different kinds, the topic of similarity / difference is more appropriate). Because contraries occur in pairs and exclude one another, they are useful in arguments because one can establish one’s case indirectly, proving one’s own assertion by discrediting the contrary]).


There was a time in my life when I was reckless—not careful or caring about anything. I jumped off cliffs. I crawled across deserts. I didn’t plan anything, I just went my merry way through death’s door and out the death’s back door unscathed. It was like magic, but I didn’t believe in magic. I just believed that one day I would die, and I did not care which day it was.

This was a great benefit in the the war. My reckless actions were construed as courage. My demeanor made me a soldier’s soldier. I felt none of it. My valor stemmed from a reckless disregard for my own life and the thrill of risking it.

When I got home, I went to work for the NYC Bomb Squad, finding bombs, blowing up bombs, dismantling bombs. Every mission was an opportunity to knock on death’s door, going through, and coming out the other side unscathed—clean as a whistle, still kicking. I got to know one of my colleagues fairly well. His name was Joe and he had a wife and two kids. He shouldn’t have been in the bomb squad business. His hands would shake when we disarmed a bomb. He was always last on the scene apparently hoping the bomb was safely disposed of. I didn’t care. I really liked him. He had great bomb jokes: “A man put a bomb in his hat. It blew his mind.” That’s pretty damn funny.

One day we were on a call at Grand Central Station. the bomb started buzzing and whirring. I was standing about two feet away. Joe jumped on the bomb and it blew him to pieces. His protective suit did him no good. He was shredded. He could’ve run away, but he chose to save me at the cost of his own life. It was sad seeing the steaming pieces of Joe scattered around on the floor and walls. It would take awhile to clean it up.

At his funeral he was valorized as a hero and his wife got up and told us what a loving family man he was. I was heartbroken. Something snapped in my head. Now I work in the public library shelving books. My risk-taking is a thing of the past—safety first is my motto. When I’m not at the library, I’m watching TV or making potholders in my basement workshop.


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.

Apagoresis

Apagoresis (a-pa-gor’-e-sis): A statement designed to inhibit someone from doing something. Often uses exaggeration [or hyperbole] to persuade. It may combine an exaggeration with a cause/effect or antecedent/consequence relationship. The consequences or effects of such a phrase are usually exaggerated to be more convincing.


Ms. Cleaver was admonishing me again. She was supposed to be my 5th grade teacher, but she was a nag. Almost everything I did was deserving of a warning. No matter what it was that I did wrong, she would say “If you keep doing that, you’ll poke your eye out.” For example, I crumpled up a piece of paper and tossed it into the wastebasket by her desk. I tossed it from my front-tow seat and I never missed. I had no idea how tossing a crumpled piece of paper would poke my eye out. I got the message though. Ms. Cleaver didn’t want me doing the paper-throwing thing, but the poked-out eye consequence was so unrelated to it, that I didn’t listen. The only consequence I could think of was Ms. Cleaver’s ire. But her ire wasn’t enough to deter me. I spent a lot of time after school writing “I won’t . . .” On the blackboard. That had no effect on me whatsoever. I had developed an interest in calligraphy and chalk was an excellent medium for practicing. I could do a typewriter Pica font that looked like somebody had typewritten on the blackboard. Ms. Cleaver was not impressed. She told me if I kept writing like a typewriter “You’re going to poke your eye out.”

Then, one afternoon when I was being detained after class, I noticed Ms. Cleaver was acting like she was twisting something around in her eye. It was her eye! She pulled it out and placed it on a paper towel. It was a glass eye & she was cleaning it with a cloth.

I asked her why she only had one eye. She told me: “When I was your age, I didn’t listen to my mother and poked my eye out playing pick-up sticks with my brother.” Now I understood her one-track warning, “You’ll poke your eye out.” I could see how sad she was sitting there cleaning her eye. I decided to make her a paper snowflake to hang in her window. I grabbed a sheet of paper and Ms. Cleaver’s scissors from her desk. I started walking to my desk. Ms. Cleaver yelled, “No, no! Don’t do that! You’ll poke your eye out!”

She was right, I poked my eye out. My foot got tangled in my backpack on the floor. I came crashing down with the sharp end of the scissors pointing straight at my eye. Ms. Cleaver called 911.


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.

Aphaeresis

Aphaeresis (aph-aer’-e-sis): The omission of a syllable or letter at the beginning of a word. A kind of metaplasm.


That was ‘otter than ‘ell. I need a drink ‘a water before my lips fall off. When you said it was the world’s hottest pepper, I didn’t think it was that hot. Just lookin’ at ‘em makes me feel fire in my face. I asked her who she was, which I shoulda’ done ‘efore I chomped it. She told me she was this year’s “Texas Hot Pepper Queen.” I didn’t know there was any such thing, and I lived in Texas. She told me she won the title for singing “Deep in the Heart of Texas” while balancing a Habanero pepper on her nose like a seal, and having both hands soaking in jalapeño salsa.

As Hot Pepper Queen she is the state’s hot pepper ambassador. I thought that was pretty cool. She gets to travel around the US by private jet introducing Americans to Texas’ hot peppers. In one of the most bizarre twists of fate in my entire life, she asked me to travel with her. She told me her Texas Pepper Queen name was Hotsy, but her real name was Benelle. I was smitten.

We took off the next day for Portland, Maine, a place the Texas pepper industry had tried to break into for years and years, to no avail. They fancied themselves as “Yankees” and wouldn’t eat “no damn foreign food.” On that note, the only restaurants were places that served cod and lobster seasoned salt and pepper, and ketchup in a pinch. Fast food burger joints dominated along with hot dog stands and fried clam huts.

We decided to give it up, but not before we went to a fish house called “Capan’ Jack’s Harbor Fish Fry.” Hotsy snuck around back and threw a handful of jalapeños into the clam chowder. About a half-hour passed, and things got really crazy. People who had ordered the chowder were screaming for water, and rolling around on the floor.

We had done something dreadful to all those screaming people. Hotsy pulled a bottle out of her purse and walked around Capan’ Jack’s sprinkling it on people’s heads. It worked instantly to relieve them of their “hot pepperoisis” a malady that people are susceptible to who were born and raised in states bordering Canada. Hotsy’s remedy was manufactured in Brownsville, TX specifically for people who had emigrated to Texas to help them manage their hot pepperosis symptoms.

Hotsy and I were headed for New Orleans the next day. The state that has a hot sauce named after it should be receptive to Texas hot peppers. We wouldn’t need any ‘elp gettin’ those peppers down their hot sauce soaked throats. Hotsy and I set up a little stand on Bourbon Street. It had a sign that sad “Free Texas Hot Peppers.” We were mobbed and our peppers were gone in 10 minutes.

Our next stop is Rhode Island. We were told the Governor drives a sports car modeled after a Poblano pepper. We’re going to be given the key to Providence and be guests of honor at Chowder Fest, where Hotsy will drop a handful of Habaneros into the communal caldron. This is a ritual dating back hundreds of years. It originated with Portuguese whalers who settled Providence in 1606. Chowder Fest is held in late winter and it is intended to drive away winter with the heat of the peppers. We were honored.

That night, Hotsy did her award-winning act for me. I proposed to her on the spot. She said “Yes.


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.