

With Big O & Eurydice being the theme this year, it feels a little like every day/poem explores the issue of grief so at times I’m not sure whose writing what about whom or when. The only thing I am sure of is why.
dream
always know when you dream
of me — it’s why i never sleep.
abandon the rasping light of day
to pretend you’re calling my name.
the hazy lamps murky blue
dragging me from the road.
walk on without knowing the way
repeating thought eternally fast, faster.
tracing back black stone steps
down again into echoing caves.
the dog by the great gates
barks three times, or once each.
the blood river creases & curdles
with endless ponderous energy.
always knowing i’ll never find you
— we exist in incompatible worlds.
Day 15 – NTBLAIL about more than a forgotten letter of the alphabet
In Celebration of &
the ampersand’s formed
from the ligature
of the letters ET —
the Latin word for “and”
… & the term “ampersand”
is a corruption of
and (&) per se and
which literally means
“(the character) & by itself
(is the word) and”
… & this small odd looking
character was actually once
(kind of) the 27th member
of the English alphabet*
… & when reciting the alphabet in the 1800s
long-suffering schoolchildren would
sing-song-say, “X, Y, Z, and per se and”
so the students were essentially chanting
“X, Y, Z, and by itself and”
… & being lazy children this was
routinely slurred to the mondegreen
ampersand & thus entered common usage
… & there’s a graffiti & in Pompeii from 79 CE
… & when it appears as &c
where it means etc.
(the ampersand time travels
back into its E & T bones)
… & in screenplays, an &
denotes a writing team
[the word and designates
the writers wrote separately,
read: someone rewrote,
& if there’s more than three
ands on a credit, it’s a good sign
you should probably stay
the hell away from that movie]
… & when creating new type
faces the & character
allows designers to inject
a little joie de vivre & artistic
flair into proceedings
… not to mention some quite nice
poets really love it & if that’s not
a cause for celebration — then there isn’t one
*the thorn and the wynn are also members of the Former Members Of The Alphabet Club
but sadly we don’t have time (in this pome) to learn what led to their demises
2 Bob’s worth: a bonus poem
i. Jerk Bob
that old bundle of chuckles
the joy-killing chump
Robert Hartwell Fiske
in his dreary, dull AND utterly unreadable
Dictionary of Unendurable English:
A Compendium of Mistakes in Grammar,
Usage, and Spelling with Commentary
on Lexicographers and Linguists
believes ampersands should only exist
in proper names, business names,
book titles, and the like
never in place of the word and
he further opines:
aside from the hurried, the only
people inclined to use & in place of and
are those who have scant sense of self
and scant sense of style,
and believe using &
somehow swells them both.
ii. Lovely Bob
Robert Nares in his far more charming
highly erudite & intellectual work
A Glossary; or, Collection of words,
phrases, names, and allusions to customs,
proverbs, etc., which have been thought
to require illustration in the works
of English authors, particularly Shakespeare
and his contemporaries. Vol. I. A new ed.,
with considerable additions
both of words and examples
believes the ampersand’s calligraphic qualities
make it a compelling design element
that can add visual appeal & personality to any page.
So go suck on them eggs Mr Hartwell Fiske