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Showing posts with label definitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label definitions. Show all posts

Saturday, January 27, 2024

A YOUNGER NETANYAHU RETURNS TO ADDRESS HIS OLDER SELF

by Gordon Gilbert


"What terrorists do is target the innocent deliberately, and therefore my definition of terrorism is… the systematic and deliberate attack, murder, maiming and menacing of innocent civilians for political goals.... You can tell a lot about terrorists and what happens when they come to power. Those who fight for freedom and come to power do not impose terrorism.  Those who do, who fight in terroristic means, end up being masters of terroristic states."  —Benjamin Netanyahu to William F. Buckley on Firing Line, May 30, 1986.


Ah, Bibi, habibi!
 
You are not the man I thought I'd be,
no, not the one I find I have become.
I always knew how absolutely
power does corrupt.
I see now how just knowing that
was not enough to keep me
on a path of righteousness,
or save me from myself,
my own worst enemy.
 
So much suffering for all,
and in the end,
so much worse for Israel,
even now, as I,
the man you used to be,
confront you!
 
But no, I must say "we."
I am the former you.
Can you not see
you once were me?
 
We are taking down with us
our own beloved Israel!
 
Ah, Bibi, habibi,
what have we become?


Gordon Gilbert is a resident of the West Village in NYC who got through the pandemic taking long walks along the Hudson River.

Sunday, May 10, 2020

PANDEMIC: A DICTIONARY GUIDE

by Pauletta Hansel


John Tenniel illustration for "Jabberwocky"


In poetry talk we call it “word-play,” 
tricking nouns up adverbial,  and verbing the adjectives  
till they gyre and gimble in the wabe,
but there’s no play at play here.

Example of PANDEMIC in a sentence:
In the middle months of 2020, the use of the former adjective as noun
was pandemic.
Facebook posts about the COVID-19 disease, AKA coronavirus
were pandemic.
Grief over the untimely death of (fill in the blank) was … 
You get the point.  Let’s move on.

There’s no place to go. 

Time Travel for PANDEMIC: 
The first known use was as an adjective in 1666.
See more words from the same year:
            Irresoluble
            Uninstructive
            Grotesquerie
            Auld lang syne

Take your choice of neighbors: PANDEMONIUM or PANDER.
Example of PANDER in a sentence:
A few Republican governors chose to stop pandering 
to their country’s demagogue (the frumious Bandersnatch
and serve the people instead.

A Dictionary Guide to Coronavirus Related Words: Deciphering the Terminology You Are Likely to Hear:
            Social Distancing
            Superspreader
            Contact Tracing
            Fomite “Rhymes with ‘toe blight.’” (Yes, the dictionary really says that.)
            Martial law (The martial part of which 
            comes from Mars, the god of war, whereas the pan
            in pandemic is unrelated to the goat-headed god 
                        The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
            of the wild.)

History and Etymology for PANDEMIC
            From the Greek:
            pan      +          demos 
                        =
            all        +          people
            More at DEMAGOGUE

(Told you: No place to go.)      


Author's Notes: Obviously, the italicized lines are from Lewis Carroll’s “Jabberwocky.”  The dictionary used for this poem was https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/pandemic.  While there are a number of news sources for the demagoguery in our nation, here’s a recent one about a Republican governor continuing to take a reasonable stance: https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2020/05/06/coronavirus-ohio-dr-amy-acton-house-limit-power/5175125002/. I also find it interesting that the dictionary chose “toe blight” as its rhyme example before the news appearance of COVID toes: https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2020/05/06/850707907/from-loss-of-smell-to-covid-toes-what-experts-are-learning-about-symptoms


Pauletta Hansel’s seven poetry collections include Coal Town Photograph and Palindrome, winner of the 2017 Weatherford Award. Her writing has been featured in Rattle and Still: The Journal, and on The Writer’s Almanac, American Life in Poetry, Verse Daily and Poetry Daily. Pauletta was Cincinnati’s first Poet Laureate (2016- 2018). In Poetry Month 2020 she worked with the current Poet Laureate to curate Cincinnati’s Postcards from the Pandemic Project