Tag Archives: definitions

Aposiopesis

Aposiopesis (a-pos-i-o-pee’-sis): Breaking off suddenly in the middle of speaking, usually to portray being overcome with emotion.


“This is, is . . .” I couldn’t finish my sentence. My crazy brother-in-law had duct taped me to a kitchen chair and was holding a corkscrew over my eyeball, twisting it menacingly and saying over and over “Your sister is going to have a baby.” I didn’t know if this was some kind of post-modern celebratory announcement, or if he was angry at me about my sister’s pregnancy—a really perverted view of things. I was squeaky clean and so was my sister—we could never imagine having sex together, the thought of it made my stomach queasy.

He had the corkscrew in one hand and a piece of paper in the other. He held up the piece of paper. It was a DNA test. It had his name on it as the father of the child. I pointed that out to him. He said “Oh. I must’ve read it wrong.” “Wrong?!” I yelled. “”You are the biggest . . . Oh, forget it. I just can’t believe how stupid you are! Get this duct tape off me!”

Just then my sister walked into the kitchen. “What the hell is going on Nolo?” “I was going to gouge your brother’s eyeball out because I thought he got you pregnant.” Nolo said. My sister hit him across the face with a Teflon frying pan—it clearly hurt him, but it wasn’t fatal. Nolo started crying and cutting me loose from the chair. My sister was standing by the refrigerator apologizing to me and cursing out Nolo.

I was beginning to think this could be the end of their marriage. My sister was a genius with a PhD in astrophysics. Nolo was a dull-witted freak. He had trouble tying his shoes and mowing the lawn. He worked loading UPS trucks and frequently misrouted packages, leading to floods of complaints and frequent near-firings. My sister, on the other hand, was an award-winning tenured professor at MIT.

It didn’t add up. There had to be something going on there that I needed to find out about. So, I looked in their window one night. They were playing “Patty-Cake” on the living room couch. I almost screamed with terror. I watched for a half-hour and went home. I drank a half-bottle of vodka and stumbled to bed and passed out. I got up the next morning feeling pretty shitty. I had four cups of coffee and pulled my college textbook on interpersonal relationships down from the bookshelf. I knew it would help me understand my sister and Nolo better. I opened the book and there was highlighted text: “People are unique choice-making beings who are capable of change.” That was it! “Unique!” I had to understand their relationship in its own right instead of comparing it to stereotypical concepts of what a “good” relationship is. Ignoring, abusive relationships, including spousal murder, I had found the answer to dealing with Nolo and my sister. They are unique individuals, even though their baby turned out looking just like Nolo—big hands and a budding unibrow. They’ve named it “Subaru” after their car and have it wear sunglasses (even inside) to conceal its identity from the “Iron Men” who pose a danger to themselves and others. Normally, I would call this crazy, but with my new-found interpersonal sensitivity, I know it is just an expression of their “unique choice-making beings.”

Nevertheless, it is hard to keep an open mind about my sister’s and Nolo’s construction of reality and their sanity. But they are moving right along down life’s highway, although Nolo lost his job at UPS for routing a package to North Korea. He starts his new job at “The Dollar Store” next week. He told me he was impressed with all the different brands of toilet paper they sell and can-openers too. He told me he’s “specializing” in two-year old canned minestrone soup. I don’t know what that means, but I accept it, respecting his uniqueness.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Apostrophe

Apostrophe (a-pos’-tro-phe): Turning one’s speech from one audience to another. Most often, apostrophe occurs when one addresses oneself to an abstraction, to an inanimate object, or to the absent.


“You’re not here. You’re never here. You are there. You are hither and yon. You are at the grocery store. You are working in the garden. You are selling Girl Scout cookies at the Mall. Where are you? You’re not here. You’re never here. you’re always somewhere else, doing something else. Maybe even being somebody else.

I speak to your absence—to the void you’ve created in my life.’

There, that’s what I would tell her if she was here. But she’s not here and I must look up and address the emptiness that encompasses me like a circus ring or a dead end in a middle-class housing tract with five-bedroom homes and giant lawns with built-in sprinklers.

What am I to think? When she comes home I am angry. I ruin the moment of reunion by asking her a series of paranoia-laced questions that culminate in “Who were you with?” She tells me she was with a variety of men. She tells me she was at a motel all day taking care of a line of men—probably 50. I can tell she’s being sarcastic. She tells me to calm down and we both laugh. But I’m faking it.

The next day, I follow her. She has the most boring day I can imagine. I wish I could clear my head of my paranoia. I’ve started drinking and that’s done some good. But, I’ve started having fantasies about killing her. I would never kill her, but I’m pretty sure I could beat her up. I have concluded that I’m mentally ill. I would turn myself in for treatment, but she would run wild while I’m put away.

God, what should I do?


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.

Apothegm

Apothegm (a’-po-th-e-gem): One of several terms describing short, pithy sayings. Others include adage, gnomemaximparoemiaproverb, and sententia.


“When the going gets tough, fools rush in.” I learned this saying from my Uncle Ned. He learned it from Howard the Coward. Howard thought he was wise, that being a coward was a smart move that kept him out of harm’s way—for example, he wouldn’t climb a ladder because he didn’t want to fall and break his neck. When his father’s tool shed went up in flames with his father in it, he stood and watched, certain he was doing the right thing, for himself. His father was severely burned and spent a year the hospital getting skin grafts.

For some reason, Ned became a volunteer fireman. He made sure he was first to the hose and was never expected to run into a burning building. In all the years he’s been a volunteer fireman he’s never saved a single life—it’s just been him and the hose.

He works at the zoo feeding red meat to the carnivorous animals. It sounds dangerous, but he’s made it so it isn’t. He has a huge sling shot mounted on the golf cart he uses to get around the zoo. He can lob a hindquarter of hog one-hundred feet. He does not have to get close to the lions and tigers to feed them—no rushing in for Ned. He has a sideline where he lobs meat over the animal enclosures to customers waiting for the meat on the other side. They leave him cash at a secret place in the zoo’s aquarium. Ned makes a tidy profit from his meat hurling business. Too bad the lions and tigers are so skinny.

My favorite saying is “Life is a bowl of red, red roses.” There is the roses’ fragrance to set our desires on fire. I took a bath in rose petals once and consequently had an unquenchable desire for coconut-covered donuts. I sent my mother to Cliff’s to buy me a box. I ate half the box then it slipped out of my hands and landed in the tub. The remaining donuts sunk to the bottom of the tub, but they left coconut residue floating on the water. It was very frustrating. I had my mother get me a strainer from the kitchen. Using it, I was able to skim a fair amount of coconut back into the donut box, pinch it between my fingers and eat it while my mother showered me with rose petals.

But the rose has thorns too! Be careful when you pick it up by the stem. I take care of the thorn problem by wearing tight-fitting black leather gloves. They make me look masculine and guard me from injury. I often forget, though, when I hand a red, red rose to somebody that they’re not wearing protective gloves. I did that on Mother’s Day last year. My mother’s hand bled all over the kitchen floor and she had a hard time cleaning it up. I gave her a dish towel to sop up the blood and she appreciated it: Happy Mother’s Day!

One last saying: “A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down.” This saying comes from Jamaica where there’s a lot of sugar. It originated with using sugar to sweeten bitter medicine. Over time, it has taken on a figurative meaning. The “spoonful of sugar” has become a metaphor for bribery. This is not to be unexpected given how rampant bribery is throughout the world. For example, just yesterday I bribed my mother so I wouldn’t tell dad about her boyfriend Lance. I got $500 out of her and am headed to the Heaven’s Hooves racetrack to bet on Thunder Pump at 25-1.

So, sayings to live by will guide you into the future and help you explain the past. Get yourself some sayings and live the good life! In the meantime, don’t cry over spilt milk.


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.

Appositio

Appositio (ap-po-sit’-i-o): Addition of an adjacent, coordinate, explanatory or descriptive element.


I was going crazy—hearing sounds, seeing things, descending into paranoia. My hamster was talking to me, complaining about living alone in a cage and his squeaky hamster wheel and shitty brown food pellets. He wanted the expensive green organic kind that they sell in the health food section of the pet store. I was tempted to run him through the garbage disposal in the kitchen sink. He knew what I was up to and started yelling “hamstercide, hamstercide!” So, I put him in the toaster oven. Just as I was going to turn the knob to broil and send him to a gruesome death, he banged on the glass and said “I can pick stocks. You put the stock market page and the financial news in the bottom of my cage. I’ve become good at piking stocks.”

I gave him a second chance and freed him from the toaster oven. I said “Ok Mr. Stock Picker, have at it.” He crawled into his cage, looked at the newspaper and said “I’d put everything into ‘Rose Garden,’ a small company specializing in the manufacture of wooden Dixie Cup spoons. They’re located in Maine where there’s lots of wood.”

He sounded so authoritative. I invested my life savings in Rose Garden. Two days later they went out of business and my hamster had disappeared. I looked all over my house and finally found him under the living room couch snuggled up in a sock I had lost two years go. I asked him why he ruined my life. He just sat there and wiggled his nose and made his happy hamster grunting sound. I picked him up and started to strangle him when I realized he couldn’t talk—that he could never talk, that his speech had been a hallucination—a symptom of my loony hood. I couldn’t believe that I almost murdered my little hamster. Then he said to me, “That was a close call Bozo!” I resisted my desire to wring his neck, but I realized it was a hallucination. I just had to ignore him—it wasn’t real.

But he wouldn’t shut up. All day and into the night, blah, blah, blah. He talked about the weather, the New Testament, his favorite TV show—endless yapping. At first, I was interested, even though I knew I was imagining it. But I got to the point where I couldn’t stand it any more. I threw my hamster out of my third floor window. I saw him hit the sidewalk and die. Poor little thing, but it was for the best. It would help me regain some of my sanity.

It didn’t.

The talking hamster moved inside my head, even though he was dead. I started vocalizing the hamster’s inside-my-head talk. His voice became my voice. I would complain about my squeaky exercise wheel, my smelly cedar shavings, and my constipation from cheap food pellets.

After I burglarized a pet store and tried to get away with a 25 lb bag of high-end food pellets, I was arrested. It was determined that I was suffering from “mental issues.” Now, I am comfortably ensconced in “Pearly Pillow” mental institution in Topeka, Kansas. My hamster voice hasn’t gone away, but I’ve learned to live with it, “Would you care for a handful of organic handmade food pellets?”


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.

Ara

Ara (a’-ra): Cursing or expressing detest towards a person or thing for the evils they bring, or for inherent evil.


I started hating him right after I first met him. He said bad things about other people that weren’t true. He said my little brother was a “mental case.” He said my little brother enjoyed stepping in dog poop and smearing it on the sidewalk. This couldn’t be true. I followed my little brother to find out. It wasn’t true. Actually, my little brother kicked pieces of dried dog poop and yelled “Five points!” There was certainly nothing insane about that. It is hard to resist kicking a piece of dried dog poop. Great Americans have kicked dried dog poop. For example, it was one of Teddy Roosevelt’s favorite pastimes. Thomas Jefferson kicked a pice of dried dog poop around the entire perimeter of his plantation.

After he impugned my little brother, he went after my older sister. She was 20 and was going to divinity school. She wanted to be a preacher—preaching the Gospel and bringing “lost lambs” back to the flock. I wasn’t that happy with the reference to the congregation as sheep—a docile collective of bleating, hairy animals. But that was ok compared to the rumors he started spreading.

He said she didn’t believe in Jesus!

What was his evidence? He said she was a nude dancer at “Ruckus,” a men only strip club overflowing with sensuality, worship of the flesh, and laced with numerous highways leading to adultery. But this was wrong. My sister was working her way through divinity school—stripping was a means to an end. It did good by enabling my sister to get a divinity degree. Not only that, by being among sinners and miscreants she had ample opportunities to minister to them, even if she was naked and gyrating on a pole: she found them as they were and started there, and brought them to Jesus.

I hated this guy. I didn’t understand why he wanted to make other people look bad. I started the rumor that he wore adult diapers, was a chronic liar, and a narcissist. The rumor is slowly gaining traction. I have a new rumor in the works. I will be releasing it on his birthday.


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.

Articulus

Articulus (ar-tic’-u-lus): Roughly equivalent to “phrase” in English, except that the emphasis is on joining several phrases (or words) successively without any conjunctions (in which case articulus is simply synonymous with the Greek term asyndeton). See also brachylogia.


Ha ha ha! Government shutdown, we understand that Trump will be making sacrifices. His supply of Diet Coke will not be replenished for the entire length of the shutdown, which the experts say could last as many as two days. Also, his shoe-shine man will be furloughed, adding scuffed and dirty wingtips to his woes. Worst of all, his cable TV will be shut down, depriving him of the truth and wisdom of FOX News: his anchor, rock, and hope. The very idea of the Presidency is at stake with the diminishing supply of critical beverages, filthy unshined shoes, and a news blackout: the FOX conduit to reality that POTUS relies on to be in touch with reality will be blacked out.

He and his Republican Congressional mental slowpokes are adamant. They will not give up the moral high ground and allow the sick to afford health care. They are adamant that sick people should suffer and amass unpayable debts for health care. It is important to allocate those funds elsewhere. The “moral” thing to do is to spend that money building up ICE and deploying military troops in every major city in the USA—cities torn by crime and rebellion. Also, we need to get to work on the Qatari jet. It will take millions to get it up to speed, but its importance far outweighs the health and welfare of American citizens.

The Democrats are clearly a socialist cancer on the United States that should be banned so people are no longer taken in by things like feeding breakfast to poverty-stricken children. It is wrong to deprive the children of the incentive to get jobs, or panhandle, and not be a drag on the US economy, where money is more important than a full stomach—more important than squandering our money on total losers. This is what Jesus tells us somewhere in the Bible. If we don’t watch out, the losers and suckers will inherit the earth. The Republican muse Herb Spencer said it best: “If there’s a drunk in the gutter, leave him there.”


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.

Asphalia

Asphalia (as-fay’-li-a): Offering oneself as a guarantee, usually for another.


“If you let him go, I’ll be responsible for his behavior, for $5,000 per month.” I was a Professional Miscreant Tender—a PMT. It was like I was a baby-sitter for wealthy evildoers. Teenagers were a real challenge to keep in line—I shadowed them wherever they went watching like a hawk ( or maybe a vulture) for evil- doing. Underage drinking was a frequent offense. When I caught them, which was every time, I duct- taped them to saw horse, stuck a funnel down their throat, and poured copious amounts of diet Dr. Pepper down it. They would choke, and cough, and cry. When they cursed me out, I would pour more soda down their throats and punch them in the stomach—boys and girls alike. The sawhorse treatment usually put them on the right side of the law. When it didn’t work, I would break their fingers or brand them on the shoulders with a “LOSER” logo in red boldface Helvetica front. If that didn’t work, I had them ride in clothes dryers on high five hours per day, seven days per week. Some of them became severely brain damaged, but that helped put them on the right side of the law.

Then, there were the shoplifting housewives. I developed a “caregiving” technique that curtailed their thievery. They loved stealing clothing—mostly dresses—from retail dress stores. They would put two or three stolen dresses on under the dress they wore into the store. They would disable the security tags and nonchalantly walk out of the store. But, I was on them. I would walk up behind them and stick my faithful taser between their ass-cheeks and let it rip. They would do the taser dance and fall to the floor twitching. I would use a box-cutter to remove their outside dress, and then, carefully remove the stolen dresses and return them to the shopkeeper. I would rummage through their purse and find their credit card, push them into the dressing room, give them a new dress and bid them a safe trip home as I waved the taser at them. This strategy worked 99% of the time. They never shoplifted again. When it failed, I sent them to Malaysia to work in a sweat shop making sneakers. After a month, they were ready to never steal clothing again.

So, being a PMT is a pretty good gig. You’ve got to be ruthless and sadistic. The hours a grueling— misbehavior and managing it are a 24-7 proposition. Be prepared to get up in the middle of the night to light somebody on fire or hit them in the face with a blackjack. Whatever works.


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.

Assonance

Assonance (ass’-o-nance): Repetition of similar vowel sounds, preceded and followed by different consonants, in the stressed syllables of adjacent words.


Anthracite coal, black, blue—along the veins, vine-like lines of my shining quarry.

It’s dark and damp below the earth. My dim lamp light barely shows the wall. I drill and plant my dynamite, wire it up, step back and blow it. The coal scatters all around and I shovel it into my coal trolley and start to push it to the mouth of the mine.

I hear music coming from deep in the mine. How can that be? It’s Tennessee Earnie Ford singing “16 Tons.” It was a sort of Union organizing song. Here’s a few lines:

“You load sixteen tons, what do you get?
Another day older and deeper in debt
Saint Peter, don’t you call me, ’cause I can’t go
I owe my soul to the company store.”

What was going on here? Coal mining had gone to hell years ago. There wasn’t much money in it any more. Was I hearing things? I was going to find out. All my colleagues were standing there, frozen in time, carved coal statues. They couldn’t talk. They couldn’t move.

I jumped into a trolley and started the ride down. It seemed like I was going 100 MPH. The walls of the mine shaft were a blur. I couldn’t slow down or stop. The veins of coal turned into smiles and I could hear Tennessee Earnie laughing like a big bass drum.

I got to the bottom and hit the wall hard. I bent my helmet and cut my hand. I was briefly knocked unconscious. When I woke up I was sitting against the wall with a battery-powered 45 RPM record player sitting in front of me. When I woke up, it started playing “16 Tons.” There was no Earnie there, only a portable record player. I turned off the record player and saw that the record was autographed by Earnie. I grabbed the record and stuck it in my jacket. I didn’t care where it came from. It would be worth a lot of money. At that moment, the record player disappeared. I felt my jacket and the record was still there.

A shaft of coal rose up from the floor. It said, “Take the record son. Sell it. Send your kid to college. Don’t make him come to work down here.”

I sold the record for $150,000 to the Tennessee Earnie Ford Museum. My son graduated from UPENN and became an accountant for a grocery store chain. He hates his job. On Saturdays, he dresses up like a miner and digs holes in his back yard.


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.

Assumptio

Assumptio (as-sump’-ti’o): The introduction of a point to be considered, especially an extraneous argument. 

See proslepsis (When paralipsis [stating and drawing attention to something in the very act of pretending to pass it over] is taken to its extreme. The speaker provides full details.).


We’ll have to work all night to get this order of jelly donuts done for the town donut fest. 1,000 donuts is a record, a record that is too difficult to achieve. What is it about night-time jelly donut-making that is appealing? Is it the sweet smell of raspberry jam in the calm night air? It is! Take it away and there’s just dough and powdered sugar—which does have, but will never eclipse the heavenly smell of—the sweet heavenly smell—of the angel-scented jam, injected into the donuts like a vaccine permeating the donut’s doughy body and providing a barrier against a bittersweet nexus of flavor causing pain to the tastebuds and producing a dreary oral cave, dripping spoiled saliva and other sorts of indigestible mucous.

On to the jelly donuts now! On to victory! Knead. Sprinkle. Squirt. It’s 11.00 and we’ve knocked off only 85 donuts. You all have jelly on your lips. You are licking the jelly! Not only is it unsanitary, but it is slowing you down. So—stop it! If I catch you licking the jelly, I will give you a heavy blow on the head with my marble rolling pin. It is likely to kill you, but there is a lot at stake here—without this contract we go out of business—after 200 years, gone!

Three baker’s helpers were killed that night. The poor fools just couldn’t resist licking the jelly. They were brutally beaten in front of the other workers. The beatings put the jelly donut factory further off schedule.

The Foreman gave each worker 3 large cups of espresso to speed them up. The workers became like windmills spinning out jelly donuts at an unprecedented rate. The Foreman couldn’t slow them down. Dawn was breaking. The workers were up to their necks in donuts—they couldn’t move their arms, but that didn’t matter. The foreman and his wife drank 6 large cups of espresso and started boxing jelly donuts. They were champion boxers, winning the boxing prize at the state fair year after year.

They went wild boxing. Soon, the 1,000 donuts were boxed and being wheeled to the waiting delivery trucks. The sun had peeked over the factory wall, casting a shadow on the parking lot. “Roll ‘em!” hollered the Foreman. The trucks took off in a line on time.

The business was saved! The three murdered workers were rolled up in chains and dumped into the bay from the Foreman’s new cabin cruiser. Nobody said a word. Everybody got a pay raise.


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.

Astrothesia

Astrothesia (as-tro-the’-si-a): A vivid description of stars. One type of enargia.


“Twinkle, twinkle little star.” That was the first poem I ever learned. I would look out my bedroom window and recite it with my hands against the glass. Sometimes my sister or brother would join me.

On a moonless night, it was like the stars could draw me up into the sky. I could feel my body lifting into the night sky, although it wasn’t. It was just my little boy imagination.

Now, I am an old homeless man. When the weather’s warm, high on gin, I sit on a park bench and watch the stars. They swirl and change colors and reach down for me like pin pricks keeping me awake in the lonely night. I lay on the bench and watch the sky spin like a wheel of fortune, or in my case, a wheel of misfortune.

When I got home from Vietnam I was damaged. I started drinking heavily, cried all the time and punched my friends for no reason, out of nowhere. The VA made a valiant effort trying to help me—psychiatry and medications. But, I couldn’t stop drinking no matter what they did. As a drunk, I couldn’t take medications. So I dank gin and drifted further into mental disrepair. I cried. I punched.

It all came to a head when I managed to drag myself to my nephew’s 8th birthday party. I was drunk and had no present for Chuck. He asked me where my present was and I punched him in the nose. He was bleeding like crazy all over his face and down his Elmo T-shirt. He was crying too. I yelled “You deserved it you f*king brat.” My brother threw me on the floor and punched me in the face over and over. Then, he threw me out the front door and told me never come back or he would shoot me.

As I tumbled down the front steps, I realized I was hopeless. I realized I was a violent drunk. Now, I’ve been arrested countless times for being drunk and disorderly. Being locked up over night nets me a decedent meal and a shower, and I can watch the stars out my cell window—the sparkling little pinpoints embroidering the sky.

Despite my infirmities, I can clearly remember watching stars from a rock with my brother and sister at the mouth of the Damariscotta River in Maine. Before war poisoned my mind, I was a good boy. I loved my dog Bingo. When I was 19 I disappeared into the abyss of the US Army and have never been able to climb out. I will never be well. I’ll probably die on a park bench watching the stars spin around.


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.

Asyndeton

Asyndeton (a-syn’-de-ton): The omission of conjunctions between clauses, often resulting in a hurried rhythm or vehement effect. [Compare brachylogia. Opposite of polysyndeton.]


The street was bumpy, narrow, filled with potholes, almost impassable, cracked, and dirty. But, my FedEx truck could go anywhere. This street was a joke. I down-shifted to second gear and gave it a good helping of gas. I drove right into the pothole, thinking my intrepid truck could traverse it with a minor bump. I was wrong. The pothole opened and engulfed my truck. I was falling at least 100 MPH into some kind of abyss. I knew I was going to die. I shouldn’t have been so overconfident as I drove up the little street, but I had faith in my FedEx truck. We had ridden many roads together and never had a problem. Once we had ridden through a wildfire in California and successfully delivered a bathroom carpet set to a grateful woman on her front porch hosing down the front yard.

Or, there was the time we fell off a ferry boat docking in Seattle. We had all the doors and windows closed. We bobbed around for 10-15 minutes until the Coast Guard hauled us out with a winch. Nothing was damaged. My truck started right up and off I went to make my deliveries. There was a lobster lodged under my windshield wipers and my first customer let me boil it in their kitchen and we ate it together out on their deck. It was a wonderful experience, but now, I was on my way to my death. I made sure my seatbelt was tight and all my packages were secure.

Suddenly the walls of the pothole started to look like peacock feathers—beautiful glittering colors. My truck landed gently at “Pete’s Peacock Farm.” It was the next scheduled stop on my manifest! I was delivering a peacock egg to Pete so he could supplement his farm’s gene pool. Pete reached out and grabbed the egg and ran into his barn.

Well, my job was done there. I got back on the little road and started off for my next delivery. It was a fairly large bomb. I was a little worried, but what I had been through had prepared me. What could go wrong with a bomb?


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.

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.


His feet were as long as Long Island. Size 22–22” long! His shoes were custom made in England where a lot of people had oversized feet. For example, Oliver Cromwell wore a size 19 UK. His feet were to some extent responsible for the Roundheads winning the English Revolution. When he marched with his troops he stamped his jumbo feet. They made a loud thudding sound like a group of troops twice as big as they actually were, routing the Royalists and sending them running for the hills. Cromwell had six cousins and uncles marching with him who had large feet too—one of them, Nigel, had a size 22 UK. Before the Revolution he worked as a grape squisher in Northumberland. Together, the Cromwells were a formidable presence on the battlefield. Not only could they stomp, but they could kick. Natty Cromwell was known far and wide for lofting a Royalist 30 feet and breaking his neck, killing him. Prince Trembler’s entire Royalist company retreated at the sight of the booted trooper, giving Natty an unprecedented victory with his foot.

Now that Oliver’s head rested on a pike outside Parliament, his feet went missing.

They had been delivered to the Spanish Armada to be displayed from a ship’s mast in grieving for his death. Unfortunately, they were struck by lightning and broiled, shoes and all. This turn of events induced the Spanish to believe they were cursed and they sailed away, throwing the remains of Cromwell’s feet overboard where they were devoured by crabs.

The Royalists rejoiced when their spy, Del Fuego, reported the events and how the lackluster superstitious Spaniards had fled to their colonies in Florida where they have managed to build alligator-proof castles and marketplaces with ladders that can be climbed to evade attacking alligators. They were called “Alligator Escapes” and were later adapted for use in hovels and were eventually modeled into “Fire Escapes” that residents could climb down to escape fires, unfortunately to waiting Alligators. This problem has never been remedied where, in contemporary Florida, many Floridians are torn to pieces and eaten by Alligators at the bottom of their fire escapes. As long as there are Alligators in Florida, this problem will persist. Blame it on the Spaniards.

You may have guessed—I am a bearer of lengthy feet. They are 22” US. I have remedied my gun boat feet with Mexican Tribaleros—a very fashionable shoe with curled up toes that can be made as long as 50” as a fashion statement. I had a pair made that conceals my foot size and I’m good to go. The women love them. I dance the night away.


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.

Bdelygmia

Bdelygmia (del-ig’-mi-a): Expressing hatred and abhorrence of a person, word, or deed.


It made me sick watching him scratch his dog behind the ears. It was a boar hound, bred to kill or be killed. So far, Pluto had killed 55 boars. He was vicious and his collar was stained with blood. His previous owner, Marlon Spoon, had died from an infected wound on his leg. A boar had grazed him in the ring in a bout at “Imperial Boar Fights,” held every Friday night at the YMCA. It was a tradition in our small town of Boardale, named after the hoards of boars that populated the woods and fields around our little town.

Like I said, every Friday there was a boar vs. human fight at the “Y.” The tradition had begun after WW II when troops returning from the Philippines brought the sport home. Then, our town was named Lilly Dale. It was a kind and gentle place to live. Everybody went to church and liked strawberry ice cream. Then, the troops came home, bringing their short-haired pet boars with their curled tusks and curled tails. It was only a matter of time before the troops started keeping pig dogs and fighting them against boars imported from the Philippines. Half of the boars escaped and engaged in a mating frenzy that drove the population through the roof.

Dogs became passé as boar fighters and people became the boars’ opponents. The boars would go snorting down the sidewalk waving their tusks at pedestrians. That’s when the “Imperial Boar Fights” began. For some reason, people thought they could significantly reduce the boar population by slaughtering them in the ring. Professional boar fighters would do the honors. They would go into the ring with 50 boars at a time that had been trapped that morning. Each boar fighter had a razor-sharp meat cleaver in each hand and would chop up the 50 boars. The boars didn’t have a chance. Their remains were barbecued and fed to poor people.

It was working out until a boar that was named “Choo-Choo” showed up. He was as big as a locomotive. A cleaver couldn’t penetrate his skin. The professional pig fighters started resigning left and right. Choo-Choo showed no mercy. His foot-long tusks put the meat-cleavers to shame. People started calling for peace, and after a series of meetings at the YMCA, peace was proclaimed.

As a matter of population control. The mature boars agreed to have a set number of sucklings made into hot dogs and capicola. In return, the people agreed to feed them boar food and dig and maintain mud pits throughout the woods and fields for their pleasure.

Personally, I hate what they’ve done. All the boars could’ve been wiped out with a few well-targeted drone attacks. On the other hand though, the boar-meat hotdogs are delicious—perfect for family gatherings. And the capicola is like mana from heaven in a Muffuletta or on 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.

Brachylogia

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


Goddamn hell bastard dog butt accordion! It blew out again. I shouldn’t have bought the cheap-ass brand “Paper Pumper.” I had had it patched 18 times—it was turning into one big patch. But I couldn’t afford a better brand like the “Supreme Squeezer” made totally by hand in Italy for $1,200.00. My pumper cost $12.95 at WalMart. They were displayed in a big bin with a sign saying “$12.99 today only.” “Today only” was every day, every season, every hour, every minute. The repair kits were for sale on the shelf behind them. The kits were $15.00. Every time I went to get one I thought “What a scam!” But what did I do about it? Nothing. Nothing. Nothing. I went with the flow, put a repair kit in my shopping cart and headed for the check-out register. So far I had spent over $620.00 on “Paper Pumper” repair kits. I could’ve had a “Supreme Squeezer” for another $580.00, but I could never afford it unless I burned my “Paper Pumper” and stopped paying for repairs. With a modest savings plan, I could have a “Supreme Squeezer” in 5-7 years.

That was too long.

They kept the “Supreme Squeezers” at WalMart in a special bulletproof, bombproof, fireproof showcase. It had golden columns and a gold vine motif winding around the doors. If you touched it an alarm went off and it became electrified. It could kill you. Taking all this into account, I came to the conclusion that robbing the “Supreme Squeezer” showcase would be a suicide mission. So, I got a credit card with a $2,000.00 credit limit.

I bought a “Supreme Squeezer” and some music sheets. My favorite is “That’s Amore” sung by Dean Martin back in the day. Then, wouldn’t you know it, my “Supreme Squeezer” ripped. Here I was in debt up to my ass, and the damn thing ripped. I went to WalMart and showed them the ripped accordion and demanded a replacement. They laughed a told me the 2-day warranty had run out. I pushed the clerk up against the electrified showcase and he started to smoke and scream. He burst into flames and ran out the front entrance. He didn’t make it across the parking lot before he fell into a smoking heap on the asphalt.

I’m sitting in a small uncomfortable cell with my “Supreme Squeezer.” I repaired it with a piece of duct tape. Now, it works again. I am awaiting trial for manslaughter. My lawyer tells me, given the circumstances, I’ll only get 8 to 10 years.


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.

Cacozelia

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


His face looked like an ocean of rancid bubbling mayonnaise pulsing with waves of infected flesh. He tried many many remedies—an antiseptic sponge, a rag saturated with Neosporin, buffalo dung, gleanings from the bottom of a birdcage, maggots, and leaches. We have to say again: “His face was a mask of hot shit, a pancake of flexing rot, a puddle of corn-laced diarrhea. There needs to be a new word invented to denote the mess. For now though, comparisons will have to do. I will try to come up with more comparisons to put the catastrophic face into words so it can be communicated in email and post-it notes and other paper media. I am willing at some point to use photographs, and drawings, and sculptures. But for now, the face smells too bad to get close enough to use those media. Words continue to be my “voice” as I track the face from hell, from another planet, from another dimension.

“Ooze” is a good word to describe the constant dripping—a fleshy drain running down his chest, sticky and slow—a sort of bacteria-laced syrup that courses through his chest hair and pools in his belly button to be swabbed away by his nurse who throws up while she’s doing so—added to the ooze, her puke gives off a gray smoke that smells like putrefying flesh which makes everybody in the man’s room puke and cry out for God’s mercy.

Suddenly, the man rubs his rotted face on his pillow. Pieces of his face rub off on his pillow and glisten in the room’s harsh light. The man yells “God take me!” into his pillow and it catches on fire. The flames jump to his head and it crackles as it burns in the fragments of his face. God didn’t take the man. He survived his burning face. His face is cauterized. His troubled face is cleared of pus. However, his head has shrunken to the size of a tennis ball with a leathery texture, a mouth, a nose and eyes. He is “cured,” but his little head can only speak in a high-pitched tones.

His ordeal has given him wisdom. People come to him from far and wide. He has a stand like a lemonade stand where he dispenses wisdom, coughing, while chain-smoking expensive cigars. The line at his stand stretches for 10 miles. His patrons ask him questions like “What did your pus taste like?” He has small vials of pus that he had collected before the fire. He offers them for free so his patrons can taste his pus for at no cost. His generosity is valorized far and wide.

With his new name “Leather Head” he is no longer shunned when he leaves his stand and goes for a stroll down the street. Everybody knows who he is and loves him. He spends a lot of time thinking about how having his head catch on fire saved his life. Before it happened there was no way of imagining it would happen. “That just goes to show you,” he says.


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.

Catachresis

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


The sun fell into my sandwich, fluttering and making growling sounds. the white bread curled up like a mayonnaise-soaked baby bonnet, prepared to shield the bald child’s little head from the wicked rays of the sun, the big shining frisbee arcing through the sky, headed west for sundown, sinking into the horizon like a foundering ship slipping into the depths of the silent blue Pacific and beyond, beyond the scope of time with the visions of angels seeing the deity sitting on a throne where the buffalos roam and the beer and the antlers play. You don’t know it, but this is heaven.

I died of cancer and I made it to the Big H—that’s Heaven, not Hell. I should know the difference since I’m not in flames. I’m reclined on a large powder puff that smells like jasmine, settling in for the eternal good smell and absence of bodily functions, and they’ve changed my name from “Mack the Screwdriver” to “Carl Pinkston.” It feels good to be dead. But nevertheless, memories of living have become 3-D versions of Hell that I have to learn to cope with. I am going to classes where I learn to say “That isn’t real” when I have a fantasy, a dream, or a vision. That doesn’t leave much to the imagination. What’s not left is tap dancing lilies, water turning into wine, dead people coming back to life and going for a hike across a desert for a swim in the Red Sea, buying new hair-on calf skin sandals and hiking back to their powder puff to relax and watch TV.

Their Favorite show?

“Moses of Mayberry” every time. It’s about a rural oasis where Moses is a chariot mechanic who fights crime. In the most recent episode, Mayberry’s shibboleth is altered by a suspected teenaged vandal so nobody can get into downtown Mayberry to shop any more. Moses has to recreate the code from memory by yelling in a well many combinations of letters and recording the echoes as they lurch back up at him. Finally, after thirty days and thirty nights, the right combination arises from the well. Moses writes it down and hides it under his bed disguised as a Joyvah Sesame Crunch wrapper. That will keep it safe from thieves. He leaves his bedroom and goes to sit by his pool. He forgets his sun screen and goes back inside to get it. There is his fat-assed wife rummaging around under his bed. She is the thief! He texts God and she goes up in a cloud of dust.

What an episode!

God, what must Hell be like? I’m so glad I followed the Ten Commandments (most of the time). I coveted my neighbor’s wife 50 or 60 times. That was my only transgression, and clearly, it didn’t matter. Here I am in Heaven, living the good afterlife.


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.

Catacosmesis

Catacosmesis (kat-a-kos-mees’-is): Ordering words from greatest to least in dignity, or in correct order of time.


It was 1 o’clock. It was 2 o’clock. It was 3 o’clock. No matter where I was —California, Germany, Ontario, Argentina. 1,2,3 and all the rest. The same time at different times. Slipping into the future. Like clock work—ha ha!

How would the world change with no time? Nobody would be late. Nobody would be early. Nobody would be on time. Nobody. We would have night and day, and twilight and dawn. With a looser sense of what time we would have more leeway. The elimination of clocks and watches would put everybody on the same timeless standard. People would wander around aimlessly “showing up” when they felt like it—every time but “on time” unless that is an expectation for being there that is a projection of being somewhere now; not an expectation, just a presence called “there now,” with “now” meaning “here” with no temporal connotation, just a spatial denotation.

Ok—I admit that the absence of time is impossible to imagine. What made me think I could imagine it? Probably my disgust with having to be on time. A sort of dictatorial mandate that rules my life. The worst, I think, is appointments. Their only purpose is to constrain me—to make me show up at a predetermined time—to make me be there and relinquish my autonomy. The appointment is not for my benefit! I’d like to show up whenever I want to show up, given the complexities of my life and my comings and goings. I’d like to call my probation officer and tell him when I’m planning on showing up for our usual meaningless same old conversation about my desire to steal and beat up my next door neighbor’s husband and maybe burn down their house. I always ask “What’s wrong with that? What’s wrong with wanting to do something bad as long as you don’t do it?” Sometimes I think there’s something wrong with the wanting even if I don’t follow through with acting. I mean, wanting to eat my sister’s dog a-poo Norbert is a pretty weird desire. I’m wondering if and when I’ll jump the desire gap and end up doing. The hard part would be killing and butchering Norbert: I’m not very skilled in that area, but as a cook I am stellar. Dog a-poo loin roast would probably be fantastic with a good Shiraz, boiled salt potatoes and rutabaga. My mouth is watering. I think I’ll take a visit to my sister’s and gaze upon Norbert while we sit in the living room.


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.

Cataphasis

Cataphasis (kat-af’-a-sis): A kind of paralipsis in which one explicitly affirms the negative qualities that one then passes over.


This place smells like a dumpster somewhere in the sun in a parking lot. Rotting disposed meat from the Jolly Burger and rancid fish cakes from Sailor Tim’s seafood restaurant. There might be a dead body in that dumpster but security guards like me don’t have jurisdiction. We track down shoplifters and report them to the real police who lock them up with psychopaths and perverts who give them what they deserve.

Nevertheless, the underground parking garage needs help. I will overstep my jurisdiction and look around for the source of the stench. Uh oh, it’s that bloated old lady lying in that shopping cart over there, with one leg hanging over the side. I’ll go over there and sniff her and see if she’s the source of the stench.

He went over to her and stuck his nose between her breasts and took a deep whiff. It smelled like lavender. She stirred and he asked her if she was all right. She answered in the affirmative and told him to f*ck off. He started to walk away and noticed a duffle bag under her shopping cart. He asked her what was in the bag and she pulled a Glock and aimed it at his forehead. He said, “Look lady, I don’t get paid enough to put up with this kind of shit.” She shot him between the eyes and climbed down from her shopping cart. She unzipped the duffle bag. “God Carlisle, you stink. A week in the bag has done you wonders.” She stuffed the security guard in the bag alongside Carlisle and ran away. She was afraid the gunshot would attract attention, but it didn’t. She had a vague recollection of killing Carlisle with a an iron skillet during a heated argument over Carlisle’s new tattoo of a pig captioned “My Wife.” He called it “a picture perfect portrait” of her character. She snorted when he showed it to her, picked up the iron skillet, and slammed him over the head with it. His head cracked like an egg and he made a gurgling sound and died. His blood made a mess on the kitchen floor. She drew a smiley face in it and parked him in the duffle bag and dragged him to the mall where she put him under the shopping cart.

Now she was back home—a kindly old lady whose demented husband had disappeared. When the police found his dead body stuffed in a duffle bag alongside a security guard they proposed further investigation to the Chief. She agreed and further investigation commenced. It is currently in its 3rd year. The old woman has moved to Costa Rica where there’s no extradition. The police paid no attention to the “My Wife” pig tattoo, believing the old lady’s story that it was Carlisle’s first wife who the tattoo pictured, who he hated. Together, they supposedly laughed about it all the time. The police never bothered to check and see if Carlisle ever had a “first wife.”

The old lady has learned how to surf and make ceviche. Her Social Security is more than enough to keep her going, as is Juan Carlos her “special friend” from Mexico.


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.

Cataplexis

Cataplexis (kat-a-pleex’-is): Threatening or prophesying payback for ill doing.


My parish priest told me: “You’re on the highway to hell. Eternal burning is your fate. You will sit on a barbecue grill turned up all the way until the end on time—until Armageddon. Now, go home, there’s no reason for you to be sitting here in a pew. Go, Go home!”

I was hurt. I lived in a town without pity. When it came to religion, I got no pity whatsoever. I had been born with two little horns on top of my head. I wore a hat, but everybody knew I had horns. This was so because I wasn’t allowed to were a hat in many venues “out of respect.” Why didn’t people respect me and let me wear my hat to hide my deformity? Father Flanagan told me in no uncertain terms that it was the other way around and if I didn’t tow the line I’d end up buried way deep in hell and Satan would make me into a urinal. Once again, I felt the pain of my status as a horned boy. I decided to have them sawn off and then move out of town. I did a go fund me site to raise money for the surgery. People laughed at me. They called me “Horny Man,” inflicting more pain. So, I had to go DYI and saw off the horns myself. My father had a bandsaw in the garage. I had used it to make a duck lamp and wooden box to hold my small collection of baseball cards.

I flipped on the band saw’s power. It cranked up to full speed in about five seconds. I held a mirror over my head so I could see what I was doing. I shoved my head toward the blade. Suddenly the band saw shut down. A voice said, “What the hell are you doing son?” I looked up. It was Satan standing there holding his pitchfork. I was elated. I was saved. I was immortal. Satan said, “Get back to school. You have a big future ahead of you. Anybody who won’t let you wear your hat, I will strike them dead and ship their souls off to hell before they know what hit them.”

I quickly developed a diabolical laugh and was easily able to scare the crap out of my tormentors. Having Satan as my Dad was a real Godsend—ha ha. That’s a joke.


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.

Charientismus

Charientismus (kar-i-en-tia’-mus): Mollifying harsh words by answering them with a smooth and appeasing mock.


She: “You’re an asshole. A big puffy asshole.”

He: “I’m not so much an asshole as you’re a hole-in-one. Ha, ha! Get it?”

She: “That’s exactly what I mean. You’re an asshole. It’s over. I’m tired being all you need, like some kind of Army recruitment poster.”

He: “That’s easy for you to say. With your looks you’ll rebound like a basketball while I cry in the shadows of love—like a dog without a bone, an actor out on loan, like a bowl of cornpone, like a stale ice cream cone, like a . . .

She: “Shut the hell up! You’re not a “rider on the storm” or even a rider on the subway. You are such an asshole. Why don’t you go home?”

He: “Home? Where’s that? I thought I lived here with you. This is where my heart is, so I must be home. 167489 Crutch Road, just around the corner from the hospital where I have my dialysis every day to help my kid knees—get it? It’s actually kidneys. I know, when I say it you can’t tell the . . .”

She: Shut up, Shut up! Go down in the basement and get in your cage. I filled your water bowl this afternoon and put down fresh paper shreds. Go!”

He was an asshole. It was only through the kindness of her heart that she kept him. She considered the cage an act of kindness along with the filled water bowl and shredded paper. These pretty much constituted the limits of her kindness. Someday she’d get around to buying a blanket for the asshole at Salvation Army. But as long as he persisted at being an asshole, the blanket will be postponed. She had standards! Oh, then there was food. All of it was scavenged from fast food dumpsters. This saved her money, and often, the dumpster food was still warm, especially if she scavenged it late at night.

Every night when she was going to bed with Nick the Plumber she felt warm and cozy in her big king-sized bed. The asshole, and the hassle of keeping him, would flee from her head. It was almost as if her life was normal. Every night she would dream of the asshole. She would remember how it used to be—it was even worse than it was now. She didn’t know what to do. He was such an asshole.


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.

Chiasmus

Chiasmus (ki-az’-mus): 1. Repetition of ideas in inverted order. 2. Repetition of grammatical structures in inverted order (not to be mistaken with antimetabole, in which identical words are repeated and inverted).


I was going crazy—mad as a mental patient. I do not know what happened to my psyche. I am nut and nuts is me. Nuts up. Up nuts. Nuts, nuts, nuts. I am chattering like an aggressive squirrel. My psyche is like a dog who had moved in, fleas and all. My brain was barking and growling and whining and scratching at the door.

I felt hopeless. I decided to jump from the roof of my apartment building. I climbed the stairs and came out on the roof. I was ready to fly. I was trotting to the edge when I noticed a beautiful woman sunbathing on a blanket. I stopped and said hello to her and told her that I was going to commit suicide by jumping off the roof. She laughed and said I must be joking. I was the third suicide she was going to witness that day. I was taken aback—she was laughing and flapping her arms like wings.

I didn’t think it was funny—I was going to end my life! I was infuriated. I dragged her across the roof and was going to heave her over the side. She told me she thought I was crazy. I told her that was true. I let go of her and she ran back to her blanket and started crying. I sat down alongside her and tried to comfort her. I held both her hands and looked into her eyes. She put her arms around my neck and gave me a big kiss.

At that, my mental illness started to subside. It was what I was waiting for for the past five years when all this started when my pet hamster Hammy had died on his exercise wheel from cardiac arrest. This strange woman was bringing me back from the abyss.

We went down to her apartment and got drunk on Martinis. We got married 5 days later and went on a honeymoon to Ecuador. She ate some bad ceviche and died.

I became crazy again, but with the memory of her I didn’t want to harm myself. Instead, I wanted to harm other people. I became a thug and enjoyed wearing a balaclava and beating people on the back of the head with a piece of pipe. Oh, I still enjoyed martinis even though I had become cruel and rude.


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.

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.


I grew up in Georgia. We had no air conditioning. We became a nudist family so we could sleep naked and be a little cooler and feel moral. I had nine fans on a bench by my bed. The wind helped me be a little cooler. I would set my alarm for midnight and take a cold shower in our one bathroom, running the shower until the well ran dry. Then, I’d go downstairs and stick my head in the ice box. Then, I’d take my blanket outside and sleep on the ground where it was cooler. There was a skunk that lived under the back porch. From time to time I had to flee inside to get away from him.

But summer was generally pretty nice anyway. In addition to the smell of fresh-cut grass, chlorine, and hot dogs, we had a big garden. We grew zucchini’s and tomatoes. We would let the zucchini’s grow to 4-feet long. Mom would carve them like pumpkins—she would make them into facial expressions, mainly of Presidents and movie stars. She had a little shed in the front yard where she sold them. It was called “Zucchini Memories.” She also carved likenesses for weddings and funerals. She would also make the zucchinis into Viking ship models. They even had sails made out of lasagna. After they were too ripe to sell, we would eat Mom’s works of art. It was great having George Washington or John Kennedy for dinner!

In addition, we grew what were called “mammoth tomatoes.” They’d flourish in the Georgia summer, growing as large as basketballs in the constant heat. We propped them up with tomato cages made of 2X4s. We used them to make tomato juice that we sold to the hippy weirdo health food store. We had two big wooden vats that we had “borrowed” from Vincente’s Winery a few years ago. We stomped our tomatoes like grapes and bottled the juice in gallon plastic milk jugs. It was a lot of work, but we made enough money to stay in a motel in Florida in winter. As bad as it was, we just couldn’t get enough of that warm wether.

As the days got shorter, we’d get ready to go. We’d get the garden ready for next summer—a summer of giant zucchini’s and tomatoes. it was hellish hot, but the heat made our garden grow.


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.

Climax

Climax (cli’-max): Generally, the arrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in an order of increasing importance, often in parallel structure.


I woke up with a slight headache. When I was eating breakfast it started to throb. By lunch it was banging in my head like a hammer driving a nail into my brain. I passed out. I woke up again about five minutes later. I was on the floor. I pulled myself up and stumbled to my phone. I couldn’t remember how it worked. I went out on my front porch and started yelling “Help! I think I’m dying.” The first person walking by ignored me, so did the second and third. My neighbor the cat lady came out and asked me over the fence what was wrong with me. I told her I was dying and I needed an ambulance. She shook her head and said, “I don’t know what the kitties will think with all that siren noise. I just don’t know.”

I begged her to call 911 and she did. She went inside and pulled down all her shades. When the ambulance came with sirens blaring, the cats went crazy, climbing up and shredding the window shades into ribbons. It was horrific.

I climbed onto my comfy gurney and headed out to the hospital. When I got there, I filled out a pile of paper and sat and waited. A teen-aged looking girl pushing a wheelchair told me to get on, we were going for a “little” ride. We got to a room that had a big machine-looking thing in it. Another teen-aged looking girl told me to get in the machine and get like a horsy on my hands and knees and put the black hat with wires sticking out on my head and pull it down tight. I told them I was claustrophobic and they told that was too bad, but don’t pull off the black hat when the machine’s running or your hair will burn off. Before I had a chance to say anything, the machine was switched on. Jimi Hendrix was singing “Purple Haze” on a low budget stereo set. I think it was relevant to my problem—“purple haze all around my brain.” I was feeling well taken care of.

I got out of the machine just as the doctor arrived to diagnose me. He told me they had run the Hendroscopic Diagnosis to determine the state of my brain—whether it was up or down. They had determined that it was perfectly normal—nob purple haze or whatever.

I was skeptical. I caught an Uber home. When I got home, there was a note on my front door from the cat lady. It was a bill for $400.00 for her shredded window shades.


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.

Coenotes

Coenotes (cee’-no-tees): Repetition of two different phrases: one at the beginning and the other at the end of successive paragraphs. Note: Composed of anaphora and epistrophecoenotes is simply a more specific kind of symploce (the repetition of phrases, not merely words).


I was rolling along. I was on my bike and Jersey was my destination. I was rolling along. My legs were sore. Jersey was my destination. I shifted into low and. I rolled onto the Pulaski Skyway. It had an air of danger. I got dizzy looking down. I was rolling along. Jersey was my destination. Oh my God. I was already in Jersey! That’s when I decided to go Delaware Water Gap. Some day Pulaski Skyway will collapse and kill everybody on it as their heads get stuck in mud below. This is a fact. Don’t ignore it.

I started pedaling faster. I had to get off the damn bridge before it went down. There was a man standing with a sign that said, “THE END IS NEAR.” I decided to jump to save myself from the collapse. I was about midpoint across the bridge. Cars were cruising by as I set my bike down on the pavement. Some guy pulled up in a station wagon and asked if he could have my bike. I was going to die, so I told him to go ahead and take it. He thanked me politely, loaded it up, and look off with a smoking tailpipe.

I climbed up on the railing and jumped. I landed head first in the mud and it didn’t even hurt, the bridge was still there and my bike was gone.

I read in New York Magazine that the Pulaski Skyway attracts over 300 jumpers per year. It is speculated that jumpers feel spontaneous depression and fear on the bridge from arriving ar the belief that the bridge is about to collapse. They often give their jewelry and other valuables away to professional “collectors” trolling the bridge for people ready to check out. It is a great scam and “collectors” make quite a bit of money.

It’s hard to believe I was conned. In addition to my bike, I robbed of my watch and college class ring from Rutgers University, I’ll never ride across the Pulaski Skyway again.


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.

Colon

Colon (ko’-lon): Roughly equivalent to “clause” in English, except that the emphasis is on seeing this part of a sentence as needing completion, either with a second colon (or membrum) or with two others (forming a tricolon). When cola (or membra) are of equal length, they form isocolon.


I ran. I fell. I bled. This happened all the time. My jeans all had blood stains on the knees. All my friends called me Old Faller, like the dog “Old Yeller” in the exceedingly sad book. In it, Old Yeller gets sick and has to get shot dead by the boy who took him for a pet. Nobody had to shoot me dead, but I felt like it. I was clumsy and fell down all the time. I told everybody that I had sea legs. I didn’t know what it meant, but it went with my aspirations. I would yell “Yo Ho! Yo Ho!Yo Ho!!” at cars when they drove down my street,

Whenever my sister was with me she carried a big bottle of iodine. She would dribble it on my knees whenever I fell. It stung so badly it sent lightening flashes through my head. The bottle had a Skull and Crossbones on it. My sister told me in addition to being healing medicine, it was pirate cologne—they splashed it on their faces when they went on dates.

She never should’ve told me about the pirates. As you may have gathered, I loved pirates—their hats, their boots, the Skull and Crossbones, but especially, their dating skill. They were always dancing in a bar with a beautiful woman in the books I read. Pirate Cologne was a necessity if I ever got a date, to enhance the experience.

The girl next store, Peggy Martin, wore high black boots and a black bandanna on her head with skulls printed on it. She was two years older than me. With my “Pirate Cologne,” I would win her in a second. The smell of the cologne would make her as pliant as a piece of cooked spaghetti. I asked her to go to the “Sugar Bowl” with me. It was a candy store where we ate candy and danced like maniacs to the Rock ‘n Roll music they played. Music like “Great Balls of Fire.”

We arrived at the Sugar Bowl. We walked onto the dance floor. I splashed on my Pirate Cologne.

My face smelled like one of my cuts. Once again my lying sister had done her work. But, Peggy tilted her head back and took a big smell. She said, “God that smells good!” She felt my face and said “You’re a magic man.” I went into the men’s restroom and looked in the bathroom mirror. My face was stained from the iodine with what looked like a robust orange birthmark.

I went back on the dance floor and Peggy wanted to dance all night. I complied and we danced at the Sugar Bowl until it closed at 10.00. In our last dance I rubbed my cheek on hers and the gathered crowd went wild. We bowed to their applause and hoots. Peggy’s Mom picked us up out front.

Pirate Face (my brand of face stain) has become very popular. For example, the facial birthmark look has taken off among hospital orderlies. They say it looks “medical” and makes them more comfortable consulting with patients, who may be stained too.

I have forgiven my sister, but she still plays pranks on me. Last week, she chained me to the steering wheel of a golf cart, put a lead ingot on the gas pedal and turned on the key. I ran over a goose and landed in the lake. I crawled out covered with leeches. It was a pretty bad experience. I wrestled my sister to the ground and fed her one of my wiggly leeches. That evened the score. We went our separate ways laughing. No matter what my psychotic sister does, I will always love her for introducing me to Pirate Cologne. Despite her near-death experience drinking it mixed with gin, she’s a survivor.


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.