Period: The periodic sentence, characterized by the suspension of the completion of sense until its end. This has been more possible and favored in Greek and Latin, languages already favoring the end position for the verb, but has been approximated in uninflected languages such as English. [This figure may also engender surprise or suspense–consequences of what Kenneth Burke views as ‘appeals’ of information.
I was looking hi and low, far and wide, above and below for my toothbrush. After I tore the bathroom apart, I looked in my bedroom. There was my cat sitting under my bed with my toothbrush between his paws purring loudly. When I reached for it he put it in his mouth—like a dog with a bone. I yelled at him to give me my toothbrush and he just sat there. I got a mop out of the utility closet and tried to push him out from under my bed with it. He wasn’t going anywhere—he kept hopping over the mop when I swept it past him. I went and got his treat bag and dropped a couple of treats in front of him. He would go for treats, open his mouth, and drop the toothbrush. I would grab it.
Backing further under the bed, using the toothbrush like a rake, he dragged the treats and himself out of my reach. I gave up. I would put toothpaste on my finger and use it as a toothbrush. When I stood up, my cat popped out from under the bed and dropped my toothbrush on the floor. I picked it up and went and brushed my teeth.
When I got home, my cat had torn a hole in one of the couch’s cushions and was curled up sleeping in it. He looked so serene, black fur with one white foot. Looking at him, I almost forgot that he had destroyed a couch cushion. But I was getting used to this kind of stuff. He’s started using the kitchen door’s jamb as a scratching post. I’m not sure what’s next, but when he curls up on my lap, he looks at me with his green eyes, and purrs, I feel like I have the perfect cat.
Some friends told me if I get a second cat the two of them will be too busy to make mischief. I had no idea what “keeping busy” would have do with anything., or if “busy” would even factor in to having a second cat. I did what my friends advised.
When the to cats tipped over my plant stand, I realized the new cat would help with mischief involving heavy lifting. For example, as a team they could open my bottom dresser drawer and run wild with my socks and underpants.
I’ve given up. I’ve started trying to beat them to the punch. Yesterday, I pushed everything off my dresser. Tonight I knocked a couple of books out of my bookcase onto the floor. I wonder what they are planning next. Light the house on fire? Invite hundreds of other cats to live here? Find a way to trip me up on the stairs? Maybe I should try to load them up with catnip.
Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).
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