Tag Archives: figures of speech

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.


I had . . . it was a nightmare—a timeshare nightmare. All of the people I shared it with were slobs, leaving it for me to take over each summer with trash cans overflowing, dirty dishes stacked up, and bad smells saturating the air. It was like walking into a recently inhabited crypt with a badly embalmed corpse packed in a half-closed drawer.

After spending the day cleaning the place up, I decided to call a meeting with my co-tenants. I had never met them before, so I didn’t know what to expect. I could only imagine! Stained t-shirts filled with holes, shorts caked with hand wipings of every kind, faint odor of excrement, yellow teeth, snow-storm dandruff, etc.

There were three co-tenants. As far as I could see they were all offenders. We met at a restaurant named “Onion Rings on the Lake.” They all showed up 15-45 minutes late. As they shuffled in they didn’t fit my musings at all. Beautifully and sharply dressed, it was like watching a fashion show or a beauty pageant. One woman was wearing a diamond the size of a ping-pong ball.

I was shocked. Then they started lecturing me on time-share hygiene, like I was the offender, when I’d actually been cleaning up their shit for the past five years. They were adamant. I was the super-slob.

Maybe it was true. I had cleanliness “issues” ever since I was a little kid. My parents were mandated by a court order to send me away to hygiene camp—“Shiny Orifice.” Among other things, I had to practice picking up a garbage bag, cleaning my fingernails, scraping residue off my shorts, pooping and wiping silently, and flossing my teeth. It was hard for me as a free range slob. I escaped 9 times and never quite finished the program.

I went into the Onion Rings’ men’s room and took a good look at myself in the mirror for the first time since I was released from Shiny Orifice. It was me! One look and I could tell—my t-shirt, my hair, my teeth, my off-color orifice. I was the offender.

Clearly, though, I thought I’d been cleaning the place up, but I wasn’t. How could that be? I vowed to find out and then remedy it. I got a therapist when I got home. She would unravel the mystery and my insurance would cover it. I told her my story. She pulled an orange peel out of the wastebasket and rubbed it on my nose. I grabbed it and sat on it. She stuck her fingers in the holes on my t-shirt. I yelled, “Stir your fingers around faster.” She did, and I had a very embarrassing orgasm in my crusty pants.

She said “Ooh I know what’s wrong with you! You have ‘Oppopsychopakinosis.’ You think you’re tidying up when you’re making a mess. I am writing a prescription for you that will bring things into the proper order. It is called ‘1,2,3’ and you can pick it up at CVS pharmacy.

The meds have been a godsend, but I’m still seeing my therapist to stay tuned up. I go in for the “fingers in the t-shirt holes” treatment once a month. Needless to say, I have fallen in love with her. I wish we could walk hand in hand in a landfill holding hands together on a swinging bag of garbage.


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.

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.


“Flying through time—flying over dawn’s horizon like a fat bird struggling to stay aloft—measuring the moments, the minutes, the seconds, the hours, the days, the years, the weeks, stopping never, rushing into the future, fleeing from the past, painting the illusion of the present on the surface of nothing—no now, only a stream, a river invisible swirling into yesterday bereft of now. Nothing stops, it only goes until your consciousness dies and you are turned into ashes and scattered on water or earth.”

I was having crazy thoughts. I was driving to Elizabeth, NJ from Toronto, Canada. I was bringing my mother’s ashes “home.” She had gown up in Elizabeth in the 1950s. She grew up in the Polish section of the city. Her dad ran a deli that had sawdust on the floor and a giant pickle barrel.

Her urn started rattling as we neared the Delaware Water Gap. At first I thought there was something loose in the back of my SUV.

Mom moved to Canada when I was eight. She worked in a snowshoe factory. She took care of all phases of gut manufacture and the production of snowshoe webbing. She hated New Jersey—hated it enough to leave me, her toddler, behind.

She left me with Aunt Katrina. Aunt Katrina was very protective. I had to take a bath every night and change my underwear every day. I had to tuck a napkin in my collar when I ate dinner. She accompanied me to school until I graduated so I wouldn’t get “killed” by the members of “Hell’s Kielbasa,” an adolescent banana-seat bicycle gang that picked on smaller people in our neighborhood. They never actually killed anybody.

Suddenly I heard a voice say “Katrina is an asshole. New Jersey sucks.” I heard it clearly from the back seat where mom’s urn was. The voice said, “Stop here!” The voice said, “Dump me in the Delaware River! Do it or I’ll blow up you and you your stupid car!” It was my dead mother, so I complied with her wishes. I carried the urn down to the river and dumped it in—the ashes floated away like time passing into the future until it sunk.

When I got home to New Jersey, I filled the urn with ashes from my barbecue grill—a clever ruse. I felt like a good son. After her funeral, we scattered the ashes in the Elizabeth River. My Uncle Chuck said they smelled like hot dogs, but he didn’t push it. That’s the closest I came to being busted. Mom was on her way to the Delaware Bay, ending her voyage in the Atlantic Ocean.

R.I.P. Mom!


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

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.

Anesis

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


I was going to ride a horse! For 25 cents in the slot it bucked up and down for five minutes. I always wanted to be a cowboy: home, home on the range where the sheep and the beavers play.

I dropped the 25 cents in the slot. Nothing happened. Suddenly there was a cracking sound and I was bathed in red light. My play clothes tore off and I was dressed in cowboy clothes—white pearl snap shirt with horseshoes embroidered on it, broken-in Levi’s and lizard skin boots. Finally, I was wearing a giant white hat that came over my ears. Me and Tony (the horse) were bucking across the prairie. His electrical chord had grown to at least two miles long, so he could buck just about anywhere.

We bucked into a box canyon. We were trapped in it by the “Cannibal Pioneers.” Their story was a sad one. They were on their way to California. One of their members fell off his wagon and was crushed to death. The cult’s credo was “Waste not want not.” So, they ate him. They found him to be quite delicious. So now, they travel the countryside eating hapless travelers and farmers. Given their diet, they are all at least 20-30 pounds overweight, and many of them have heart problems,

Tony and I were going to make a break for it. I had another quarter I could use to get us out of there. I dropped it in the slot and we began bucking like there was an earthquake. We bucked at the assembled miscreants. They made way for us. They were human-eating cowards.

The wind blew and my cowboy clothes were torn off and replaced by my shorts and t-shirt and Birkenstocks. I was excited by my adventure! I told my mother about it and she made me eat a handful of her meds—the ones that keep her sitting on the couch all day. As I sat on the couch all day, I relived my adventure, but I changed it so the “Cannibal Pioneers” ate my mother.


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

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.

Antanaclasis

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


I put my cat down and put him down while doing so. Putting him down was one of the worst things I could do to him. When he was insulted the hair stood up on his back and his tail stuck straight up in the air, and he hissed too.

I had called him a “kitty litter eater”—the equivalent of “shit eater” for a person. He had spilled his water on the kitchen floor for the 10th time. I was wearing my socks around the house and I stepped right in the puddle. I slipped and fell down and hit my head on the refrigerator. I was unconscious for about five minutes. When I woke up, I let him have it, “You fu*kin’ kitty litter eater! Get the fu*k out of here or I’m taking you back to the pet shelter where you belong with all the other bad and idiot cats who can’t find a permanent home!”

He struck his insulted pose and jumped toward my face. I dodged him but he came back at my ear and raked it with his front paws. With my ear bleeding, I got up off the floor and kicked him as hard as I could. He got stuck between the refrigerator and wall. He was struggling like crazy, squirming and yowling.

There was a knock at my door. I looked out on my porch and it was Mrs. Pesky, the nosiest human on earth. She asked me what the noise was. I yelled back “My cat is stuck and I’m helping him get free.” She said in a high pitched voice “I think you are killing him.” Maybe she was right, but I told her to go away, or I would tell her niece she was up to her old tricks again—last time she was polishing peoples’ doorknobs for $2.00 with what she called her “soiled knickers.” She promptly left. She lived with her niece and needed to stay in her good graces.

I noticed Fartore (my cat) had gotten free and was rubbing up against my leg—a sure sign that amends were being made. Somehow I had to figure out how not to insult him. He was sensitive and I was insensitive. I started attending “Blurters Anonymous.” It helped people who spoke before they thought. My goal was to reach the status of “Tongue Biter.” I learned to bite my tongue before I say anything to Fartore. It works, but my tongue is sore. However, we have peace on the home front and I have discovered a mouthwash that effectively soothes my tongue. All is well. By the way, Mrs. Pesky got hit by a car


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.

Antanagoge

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


I was an optimist. I could not see the “bad” in anything. I had cut my thumb off when I was a kid. Now I couldn’t hitchhike. No more wandering. No more getting lost. No more being picked up by weirdos in the middle of no where. All good!

My brother glued my butt to the toilet seat. No more falling off the toilet! No more wiping from behind—I went the clean way from front to back. My father unbolted the toilet seat so I could walk around. I became Mr. Popularity wearing a toilet seat glued to my ass—I even met the mayor of our small town Binnville. He told me to stay away from his daughter or he would have the state police assassinate me.

I didn’t listen.

Now, I was a hunted man. Milly (the mayor’s daughter) loved me as much as I loved her (so I thought). She couldn’t explain her feelings for me and the toilet seat. However, she did say that she might love the toilet seat more than me. I found that to be weird, but love is love any way you put it. She liked to hold on to my toiled seat when we walked together. She said she felt like she was steering us toward a happier life. I was moved.

Then the state police caught up with us. They threw smoke grenades at us and we escaped in a cloud of smoke. This was a turning point in my relationship with Milly. I couldn’t risk her life just so she could fondle my toilet seat covered ass. I told her so. She started crying and sobbing very loud. She sounded like a bear grunting. Then there was a bear grunting. It came running out of the woods knocked Milly down and started dragging her away. I faced my toilet seat toward the bear and ran backwards at it. I hit him on the side of the head and he dropped Milly and started toward me. There was a shot and the bear dropped dead.

I looked behind me. It was Snarky Montana. His flintlock was still smoking. He said, “I’ll be sawing’ thiss baby up for dinner tonight. Care to join me?” Without hesitation we accepted his invitation. We had piles of bear meat smothered in wild mushrooms and Black Walnuts.

My toilet seat had come loose in the encounter with the bear. It fell off when I got up from Snarky’s table. Milly grabbed it and hugged it and kissed it moaning and rubbing it up against her own ass. At that point I realized it was the toilet seat she loved, not me.

As life goes on, there is always something to learn and be grateful for. Since the toilet seat fell off, the State Police have ended their quest to kill me. Milly’s been “put away” where she’ll be better off. They’ve mounted her toilet seat on her toilet in her room, where she spends most of her time sitting and wiggling around. Her father died of a heart attack chasing Milly down Main Street the time she escaped. My dad sells a line of toilet seats on the internet—he sells every kind of seat you can imagine, from heated to sandpaper.

So, if a little rain falls in your life, sop it up and wring it out in your toilet.


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.

Antimetathesis

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


“Bad is good” I say this in the spirit of ass-backwards visionating. Like a dunk slam or candy poison or the sweet stink of mole meat chugging in the garbage disposal. Well, maybe not. I’m struggling to mean what I said. Maybe I should just shut up, like a zip lock bag or a lunch box or a can of tuna.

I’ve tried a week to break my head jam. It’s like a log jam woven into neurons twisted, glowing, floating. My hairdresser Manitoba Pete tells me I need a therapist and drugs to keep me on track— small little pills to comfort me and maybe give the opportunity to meet angels.

I did it.

My therapist was so beautiful I could hardly keep my dick in my workout pants. She looked me in the eyes and asked me if I felt uncomfortable managing the bulge in my pants. I told her it was temporary and would go down in a minute. She nodded and asked me why I was seeing her. I told her my hairdresser Manitoba Pete had recommended it right after cutting my hair and farting real loud.

She said “Hmm, I’m going prescribe to a rocking horse and some very small pills.” She wanted me to ride the rocking horse three time a day for one hour each time, and take 11 little pills per day. I couldn’t do the math on the pills, so she told me to take one per hour.

If I said anything while I was riding the rocking horse I was to taser myself in the armpit and keep on riding.

I’ve been at for six months now. My therapist tells me I’m doing well; maybe in a year I’ll be cured: “Keep riding cowboy,” she says “and keep taking those little pills.” I love those little pills!

Every time I take a handful I imagine I’m having sex with my therapist. I think it may be better than the real thing—she moans in my head and everything. I will be telling her about it next week. It is high time. I bought her candy.


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.

Aposiopesis

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


I was riding my electric bike. Humming down the highway of life, I felt the wind in my hair and my pants flapping around my legs—like a pants leg massage, keeping me limber, although the electric motor made it unnecessary.

I was rolling along at 3 MPH, the landscape a flying blur. I was on my way to Home Depot to buy a clamp. I wasn’t sure how it would work. I was thinking that maybe a nail or a screw would work just as well, but I did’t have a screwdriver or a hammer. It had to be a clamp.

The door jamb to my upstairs bedroom closet had come loose and the doorknob had stopped working. It took too long to get a shirt out of my closet.

Suddenly the battery went dead on my bike. Its big fat tires made it nearly impossible to pedal manually. I was in front of Mrs. Breenlap’s house. She was always really friendly to me so I figured I would ask if I could charge my bike up in her house. She told me it was ok, but I had to take off my shoes before I came inside. I complied.

When I got inside a man wrapped the charger wire around my wrists and told me to stand with my nose against the wall. He handed me two string beans and told me to stick them in my ears. I couldn’t do it with wired wrists. Mrs. Breenlap apologized for the man’s behavior and told me he had invaded her house 2 years ago and wouldn’t leave. She told me he was harmless as he pulled the clamp out of the Home Depot bag. He clamped my legs together and pushed me down. He covered me with a blanket and ran out the door. Mrs. Breenlap yelled “You, you look. . .” She helped me up and untangled the wire from my wrists. We sat on the couch waiting for my bike to charge. She told me to put my head between her legs and make growling sounds. I complied out of curiosity.

Soon, my bike was charged and I went my merry way. I shouldn’t have given Mrs. Breenlap my phone number. She has been sending me a steady stream of nude selfies. She looks pretty good for a 70-year-old woman. I have 200 selfies of her. I pasted them on the ceiling above my bed.


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.

Apocope

Apocope (a-pok’-o-pe): Omitting a letter or syllable at the end of a word. A kind of metaplasm.


I’m goin’ crazy. My world is comin’ apart. Yesterday, I had a conversation with my dog Buffer. He wanted to tell me how shitty his dog food is. I told him I get it from Dollar General and it’s only a year past the sell by date. There’s a nice picture of a smiling golden retriever on the bag. It’s red though. It makes his poops red and even though I scoop them right up, they embarrass him. God. What a pain in the ass.

After I got done with Buffer, I took a look in the mirror before I went grocery shopping. What I saw scared the hell outta’ me. My face had turned into 6-inch wide lid from an olive jar. All the writing was backward, but I was pretty sure they were Mezzetta brand Italian olives. I used them in my tuna and egg salad sandwiches, but I never imagined their lid would replace my head. But now, as a certified psycho, I was used to having these kinds of experiences. The shock quickly wore off and I just walked away to take the bus to the grocery store,

I got on the bus. An elderly woman looked at me and screamed and passed out. I looked at my reflection in the bus window, and holy hell, my head was the lid of an olive jar. The passengers were all cowering and begging me not to kill them. I tried to assure them I would not kill them, but I spoke in Italian and they couldn’t understand me. Next, there was a voice outside the bus. It was a policeman with a bullhorn: “Everybody off the bus with the exception of Lidhead. Lidhead, put your hands up and don’t move.” I had an itch on my butt. I scratched it and he shot me in the lid. Scratching my butt was considered moving. I found out the hard way.

But, I woke up. It was all a dream! I ran into the bathroom to look in the mirror. Now, my head was a yellow golf ball with a permanent smiley face and crossed eyes. I smashed the mirror with my shoe and ran downstairs to talk to Buffer about what to do. He said he liked my Scottish accent and recommended I get a job in the pro shop at Green Meadows Golf Course. I followed his advice. I am doing well. I had surgery on my crossed eyes and now I drive a golf cart and caddy for some of our celebrity clients like Donald Trump, who screamed like a little girl when we first met. He denies it, and I don’t care.


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.

Apodixis

Apodixis (a-po-dix’-is): Proving a statement by referring to common knowledge or general experience.


“This blister on my heel is the result clog dancing with my clog dancing club the “Free Form Floor Bangers.” She said it was “only common sense” to come to the conclusion she did. She’s been clog dancing since she was 3. She was 46 now. You’d think with all those years of floor banging, she’d have the right answer about her heel’s blister. But she didn’t. It was her 18-year-old son.

He resented her almost constant clog dancing. She’d clog dance into the living room. She’d clog dance to the kitchen. She’d even clog dance to the car to drive him to school. He was deeply embarrassed when then went grocery shopping and she would clog dance up and down the aisles handing him things to put in their shopping cart. Things came to head when she showed up at the door with a little named Riley. He was smoking a clay pipe and his clogs had huge brass buckles. They went upstairs to Mom’s room and “clogged” for a half-hour. There was no music—just the squeaking of the bed. After they were through, Riley came down the stairs buttoning his pants. As he went out the door he leered and said “She’s me pot ‘o gold, son.”

That’s when he decided enough was enough. He put on an ice skate to stomp on her toes and cut them off, and end her clog dance days forever. But, he slipped on the stairs and spent 2 months in the hospital. When his mother visited him, she would clog dance into his room. She couldn’t understand why he threw his bedpan at her and told her to stop visiting.

So, she hired their next door neighbor’s daughter Flourine to visit him. She had just turned 20 and was hyper-aware of her beauty—she was like Venus with arms. The son, Mort, was aware of it too. She would sit on the side of his bed and twirl her fingers in his hair. It drove him crazy and he vowed to make her his girlfriend when he got out of the hospital.

The day came.

Due to his fall, they had had to take a 2” section out of his left leg. Needless to say, he had a severe limp. Flourine dropped him like a hot potato, or more like a crushed up Kleenex into a trashcan. He was devastated and angry too. That’s why, in his feeble mind, he decided to “go after” his mother and try again to put an end to her clog dancing once and for all.

That’s when he put the tiny pebble in her clog. It gave her the blister that stopped her clog dancing. But he knew it was only temporary. The blister would heal and she’d be back at it again—endless clog dancing from hell. Then, he got the idea to “prune” her—to trim off one of her feet. He had a set of battery-powered pruners that his father had left behind when abandoned the family. He decided to “harvest” her left foot because she always said she had two of them—he’d leave a spare—ha ha.

That night, she told him she was giving up clog dancing! He was filled with joy. She was getting too old to dance in a line with 12-14-year-olds at fairs and on St. Patrick’s Day. But what was worse, the blister on her heel had caused “complications” that affected her clogging capacities in a negative way—causing excruciating pain and vomiting whenever she danced.

Her pain and vomiting was the best news he had ever had! However, every once-in-awhile he would hear her crying out in pain and vomiting late at night down in the kitchen. It was so infrequent that he was able to ignore it.


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.

Apophasis

Apophasis (a-pof’-a-sis): The rejection of several reasons why a thing should or should not be done and affirming a single one, considered most valid.


After the hitchhiking disaster—trying to hitch from Topeka to Bombay—I decided to do something about my decision-making skills. I didn’t even get out of Kansas on my way to Bombay. I was holding a sign that said Bombay. People blew their horns as they drove by by, some giving me the finger. It was depressing. Somehow I knew I’d never make it to India, but I wasn’t sure why. Then, this weird looking guy driving a vintage yellow Oldsmobile from the 60s pulled up. He was wearing a white turban with a huge ruby pinned to the forehead. His teeth were red and he was smoking a hookah mounted in the middle of the car’s front seat. He told me he was from Bombay, and he would gladly drive me there. I thanked him. After ten minutes he pulled over and kicked me out of his car. He yelled “Om Namah Shivaya” and burned rubber as he pulled away. I was really mad. I gave up on going to Bombay.

That’s when I realized that I needed to contemplate my decisions and think just as hard why I should not do something as why I should do something. It is called “pro and con.”

Hitchhiking to Bombay from Topeka:

Cons:

  1. Standing by the road too long
  2. Being subject to the weather
  3. Crossing the Pacific Ocean
  4. Having adequate snack foods

These are all powerful cons. If I had thought of them in the first place I would’ve decided not to go and saved myself a lot of trouble. Worse, I should’ve thought why I wanted to go to Bombay in the first place. In fact, it is not even called Bombay any more. So, I didn’t even know where I was going!

So, thinking of the cons has really affected my decision-making in a positive way! So far, I’ve filed for divorce, given my cat away, and run for office in my district. In each case, I couldn’t think of any cons, even though I tried. My wife is serving time for trying to kill me. My cat is a furniture shredder and a night howler. Being a Representative will benefit my constituents by electing a fantastic decision maker. I call myself “The Chooser” now as a tribute to my pro and con outlook on life.

So, when you’re trying to make a decision, consider both sides. Right now, I’m trying to decide whether to take bribes from rich people who want me to do their bidding as their Representative. I’m considering two-step decision process. One, I take their money. Two, I move to Costa Rica, where I can’t be extradited. Ha ha! This is why I’m called “The Chooser.” See you on the beach.


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.

Apoplanesis

Apoplanesis (a-po-plan’-e-sis): Promising to address the issue but effectively dodging it through a digression.


“How many roads must a man walk down before you call him a man?” This is an important line relating to the Cvil Rights movement, what I want to talk about.

I was walking down a road yesterday. It cut through to the middle of town. It was filled with potholes so deep you could lose an Amazon delivery truck in them. As I walked along, I slipped and fell into one of the potholes. There were already ten or fifteen people down there. Some of them had been there for a week and were close to starving to death. They had no cellphone reception so they couldn’t call for help. I told them to get into a pile and I would climb up on them and go get help. One of them yelled “There’s no help for us. We were pushed down here by our boss when he decided to fire us and ‘reconstitute’ the accounting firm we all work for.”

They piled up anyway and I was able to climb out.

The first thing I did was go to the police. They told me to go fu*k myself—“It’s no crime to trap people in a giant pothole. This is a personnel decision beyond the scope of the law. You need to talk to Diane Ice at ‘Clik-Clak Accounting,’ She made the decision, she can undo it.” I was doubtful, but I didn’t want to see those people die. However, they were passive and did nothing to resist being pushed in the pothole. Why didn’t they pile up and climb out on each other themselves?

I met with Ms. Ice that afternoon. She had plastic replicas of human heads decorating her office walls. It was grotesque, but so was she. She wore stainless steel funnels on her spandex top. They were positioned over her breasts like a sort of external metal bra. I didn’t dare ask her any questions. She was fondling a bayonet and she wore a patch over one eye. I thanked her profusely and ran out the door. I heard her yell “Wise decision!” as I ran for the elevator.

I rented a tow truck to pull the people out of the pothole, but as fast as they were pulled out, they jumped back in. It was insane. I gave up after a couple of hours, hopped in the tow truck, and rode away. I went back to the pothole a couple of weeks later. It was empty, but it smelled funny.

The “Pothole Incident” was the craziest thing I’ve ever dealt with, with the exception of my mother’s “Mexican Makeover.” She came back from Juarez looking like an angry, but wrinkle-free, turtle. I had warned her, but she didn’t listen. She had read the brochure and met with Dr. Scallopini. For $500.00 it was a dream come true. But it wasn’t.


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.

Aporia

Aporia (a-po’-ri-a): Deliberating with oneself as though in doubt over some matter; asking oneself (or rhetorically asking one’s hearers) what is the best or appropriate way to approach something [=diaporesis].


I was in a quandary. There were competing points of view plaguing my head. I couldn’t ignore them. I had to make a choice. But this wasn’t the usual choice like a red tie vs. a blue-striped tie. Sure, there’s a difference that needs to be resolved with the ties, but it is trivial, innocuous, of minor consequence.

But now, I was saddled with a decision from hell—the kind you read about in novels or see on TV detective shows.

I am damned if I do and damned if I don’t.

If I rat out my boss I lose my job. If I don’t rat out my boss, I go to jail. It seems like losing my job is a small price to pay vs. going to jail. But it isn’t. Losing my job comes with the possibly, the strong likelihood, of being whacked by one of the boss’s pistol-packing thugs. So there: the possibility of being hit should push me way far away from taking the jail option. People get whacked in jail all the time. So what’s so safe about that anyway?

I had been working in the meth lab for the past 8 years. Why the hell should I want to see it busted and closed down? It was all about “Bombo” the boss’s son. I was jealous. I made $600,000 per year. Bombo made a million. He did nothing for the money. He took no risks and just sat on his ass surrounded by 100-dollar bills. I, on the other hand, was out on the street collecting from dealers and kicking their asses when they couldn’t pay, and making them disappear when stiffing me became a habit. I risked life in prison while Bombo played video games and went shopping for custom-tailored suits.

Bingo! Get rid of Bombo, get rid of my problem. I can’t believe I didn’t think about this before. I invited Bombo to my place in the Adirondacks for a couple days of fishing on Cranberry Lake. He got off his ass and packed his bags and was ready to go the next day. He was grateful. He loved fishing.

We got to the dock early the morning, untied the boat and headed out on the lake. When we got around the middle of the lake, I pulled a gun and shot him until I was sure he was dead.

Since I killed Bombo, life is much better. His absence is a source of happiness for me. I’ve been questioned several times by the police, but they’ve got nothing on me. Bombo’s body washed up near my place. I told everybody I knew nothing about it and they believed me—especially Bombo’s father who seemed relieved by Bombo’s disappearance.

So now, I’ve got another murder on my resume. It has worked out well for me. It broke my double bind. It was the right decision.


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.

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.

Aschematiston

Aschematiston: The use of plain, unadorned or unornamented language. Or, the unskilled use of figurative language. A vice. [Outside of any particular context of use or sense of its motive, it may be difficult to determine what’s “plain, unadorned or unornamented language.” The same is true of the “unskilled use of figurative language.”]


“Give me a library or give me death.” It is hard to believe that a librarian actually said this. She was 87-year-old Mrs. Mildred Cage. She had been harassing patrons with overdue books for around 60 years and patrolling the library basement’s periodicals section in case “those teenagers were doing more than reading down there.” She made people pay their fines before they were allowed to leave the library. Alfonso, her thug grandson, intimidated them with a raised OED and threats of a fractured skull. 99% of the patrons capitulated, the rest were treated by EMTs on the library’s front steps. If people didn’t have money she made them pay with their jewelry—brooches, wedding rings, cocktail rings, earrings, pearls. Alfonso helped her “collect” and she bribed a judge to rule “it was well within the law” to confiscate goods to pay library fines, and to cover administrative costs.

Then it happened.

A patron saw Mrs. Cage leaving the library with a book without checking it out: she just took it without leaving a record of its withdrawal. In short, she had stolen it! The police obtained a search warrant for her home. When they opened the front door and entered, they were horrified. Mr. Cage was sitting at a table eating a sandwich made from white bread and owner’s manuals for electric appliances and lawnmowers. He said, “Please help me. These are not very nutritious.” But what was worse: the house was filled with books—upstairs, downstairs, the basement. Nearly every surface was stacked high with books. A cursory look established that the books were stolen from the town library—including a first edition of Tom Swift and His Rocket Ship, a signed copy of Porky Pig Sells Mousetraps, and a leather-bound edition of Herbert Hoover’s Freedom Betrayed. There were probably 100s of additional valuable books stolen by Mrs. Cage over the years.

Mrs. Cage was arrested, tried and convicted of robbery. She was sentenced to 100 years for her crimes. Ironically, she was put in charge of the prison library. The prison library had only 12 books. She complained to no avail. Soon, all the books went missing. Given her crime, you would think that Mrs. Cage would be the primary suspect in what looked like the books’ theft. But she wasn’t, due to a massive oversight.

The mystery remained, until a routine search for prison contraband found the stolen books under Mrs. Cage’s mattress. She was deemed incorrigible and was thrown into the hole, serving the remainder of her sentence in solitary confinement. She had one naked lightbulb hanging from the ceiling. By the kindness of the warden, she was given an L.L Bean Catalogue to pass the time reading.


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.

Asteismus

Asteismus (as-te-is’-mus): Polite or genteel mockery. More specifically, a figure of reply in which the answerer catches a certain word and throws it back to the first speaker with an unexpected twist. Less frequently, a witty use of allegory or comparison, such as when a literal and an allegorical meaning are both implied.


A: “I’m going to church today. How about you?”

B: “The only place you’re going is to Tipples to get drunk like you do every Sunday. I, on the other hand, am going bowling with Barbara-Jean, my one true love.”

I knew he’d be crocked by 10:00 a.m., bragging about his PhD in Russian literature. His dissertation, which barely passed, was titled “Vodka in Lermontov.” In it he argues that in “A Hero for Our Time” if the soldiers had drunk vodka instead of champagne, and didn’t play with guns, the story would’ve ended differently. That’s a pretty safe bet for a thesis! His dissertation committee at Miles Standish University thought his thesis was a little thin and made him rewrite the final chapter three times. They say money changed hands on the day he successfully defended his dissertation.

He got a tenure track job at Small Town Community College after a series of one-year appointments at private religious colleges with cult affiliations, and also, teaching in prisons. He was elated with the tenure track job. He worked hard writing unpublishable essays on obscure topics only he cared about, and teaching like Socrates, asking only obscure questions, humiliating his students, and leaving them wondering, with all the questions and no answers, what they were supposed to be learning.

Tenure and promotion time came around and he was denied. He was told to pack up and “get the hell” off campus by the following morning. He was furious. He went to the library and peed on the reference section—where there were only six reference works. He was arrested and escorted off campus by the local sheriff’s deputies.

That’s when he started drinking and moved back to his home town, which is my home town too. I encouraged him to go live someplace else, but he refused. He got a job bussing tables at “June’s Spoon.” June loves him a takes care of him. Nobody can figure out why. They’re due to be married next month. Maybe he’s “The Beautiful Loser” Bob Seeger sings about, but more likely, he’s “Nothin’ But A Hound Dog.”


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.