Rickshaw aircrafts reminds me of glider aircrafts. When younger these gliders were often featured on TV. They were pulled in air, by engine aircraft then let loose to glide along.
Shamehole. What a charming appellation! I predict that I will soon begin calling people shameholes and that it will become a new thing on the interwebs. I can hardly wait to see what they decide it means!
kakistocracy (English pronunciation: /kækɪsˈtɑkɹəsi/) is a system of government which is run by the worst, least qualified, or most unscrupulous citizens. … It was also used by English author Thomas Love Peacock in 1829, but gained significant usage in the 21st century.
William Burroughs would cut random words from newspapers and throw them into a hat. Then he would blindly take one out after another and make sentences.
This quaint bricolage reminds me not so much of Lawrence Ferlinghetti (A Coney Island of the Mind) or Ezra Pound, il miglior fabbro (as T.S. Eliot acknowledged in an appropriated phrase), two (or three, with Eliot) of my favorite 20th century poets, as it does rather of Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) and some of his word salad verse. As for meaning hidden behind turns of phrase or collocations, only Sr. Teresa of the Perpetual Lame, your distinguished author, can know for sure, if in fact anyone can. The associations must be intensely personal, as they were in my poetasting days….
Three times the charm of a missed flight, but that’s alright; snacks such as sardines on a flight isn’t so plentiful. Now watch your step as you return back into the lobby..
Randy B Premium Member about 7 years ago
I had no idea that cryptids wore underANYTHING.
Meh~tdology, fka Pepelaputr about 7 years ago
… Burma Shave.
*Hot Rod* about 7 years ago
Rickshaw aircrafts reminds me of glider aircrafts. When younger these gliders were often featured on TV. They were pulled in air, by engine aircraft then let loose to glide along.
Brass Orchid Premium Member about 7 years ago
Shamehole. What a charming appellation! I predict that I will soon begin calling people shameholes and that it will become a new thing on the interwebs. I can hardly wait to see what they decide it means!
*Hot Rod* about 7 years ago
I got thru it, like a Betty Davis movie.
The Old Wolf about 7 years ago
I am reminded of a certain James Joyce novel.
Radish... about 7 years ago
Random words asparagus.
Linguist about 7 years ago
Is Teresa channeling her post Larry Ferlinghetti/Ezra Pound haiku ?
coltish1 about 7 years ago
Some childhoods yield only the torture of scarecrow props.
Radish... about 7 years ago
kakistocracy (English pronunciation: /kækɪsˈtɑkɹəsi/) is a system of government which is run by the worst, least qualified, or most unscrupulous citizens. … It was also used by English author Thomas Love Peacock in 1829, but gained significant usage in the 21st century.
Kakistocracy – Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakistocracy
Radish... about 7 years ago
William Burroughs would cut random words from newspapers and throw them into a hat. Then he would blindly take one out after another and make sentences.
http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88v/burroughs-cutup.html
Arianne about 7 years ago
The faded argyle wallpaper does little to ameliorate the dreary, desultory frame of shamehole of mind.
.
Don’t worry, Aunt Nessie, I’ll buy you more Depends, and we can laugh at those brainless idiots on the telly.
Arianne about 7 years ago
“And as you join the Good Ship Earth,
And you mingle with the dust,
You’d better leave your underpants
With someone you can trust."
Arianne about 7 years ago
Scarecrow “props”, as in-
a) supports
b) propellers
c) decorative items on a stage
d) respect
e) all or some or none of the above
f) yeah, like that’s the important question to focus on!
nathanbtlr about 7 years ago
Thanks, Teresa.
*Hot Rod* about 7 years ago
Yes Thank You Treesa!
Sisyphos about 7 years ago
This quaint bricolage reminds me not so much of Lawrence Ferlinghetti (A Coney Island of the Mind) or Ezra Pound, il miglior fabbro (as T.S. Eliot acknowledged in an appropriated phrase), two (or three, with Eliot) of my favorite 20th century poets, as it does rather of Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) and some of his word salad verse. As for meaning hidden behind turns of phrase or collocations, only Sr. Teresa of the Perpetual Lame, your distinguished author, can know for sure, if in fact anyone can. The associations must be intensely personal, as they were in my poetasting days….
INGSOC about 7 years ago
Three times the charm of a missed flight, but that’s alright; snacks such as sardines on a flight isn’t so plentiful. Now watch your step as you return back into the lobby..
painedsmile about 7 years ago
SHAMEHOLE. Another addition to my Frog Applause vocabulary book.