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  • amolosh
  • Sep 9, 2025
  • 1 min read

Latin convincere to refute, convict, prove, from com- + vincere to conquer —cognate “victor.”

Latin persuadēre, from per- thoroughly + suadēre to advise, urge — cognate, “sweet.” 


 

Convince, persuade, those words marched

In tandem for long years, but in our time

They've separated. (When did you last use

persuade??) Ever since Dubya 1's regime,

It's been convince, convince, convince

All the livelong day: prove, refute, convict!

No more sweet urging's gentle groove;

Our ways became the victor's: zero-sum.

Try to employ persuade more often, then,

And deflect convince from its fateful run!

 

Note: Etymologies from Merriam Webster, which observes, inter alia: “the live in livelong derives from lef, a Middle English word meaning ‘dear or beloved.’” Word trajectories from Google's Ngram Viewer, https://ngrams.org/ngram-viewer.html.


 

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

 
 
 
  • amolosh
  • Sep 7, 2025
  • 1 min read

A knight in chain-mail spears a griffin. "Alphonso" psalter, 1284 CE.



Si’l y a des griffons, n’en mangeons point;

si’l n’y en a point, nous en mangerons encore moins.*

—Voltaire, Zadig



Franks on the Fourth Crusade (thirteenth century),

Diverted from the Holy Land by the Venetians,

To sack Constantinople, the great city,

Like all rapists, sought a rude name for those they fucked,

Pejoratively calling Greeks "griffins," their

G-word. They'd come to steal an Empire,

"Chrysostom's** foreskin—sworn genuine!—and a True Cross splinter was what I got."


It was the Venetians who looted that lion and the four horses of the Hippodrome

That tourists gaze at in Saint Mark's Basilica;

(Be only right to return them, I say,

along with the Elgin Marbles—

The British Museum must surely give those back some day!)

"If there are griffins, we don't eat 'em;

if there are none, we'll eat 'em even less."*



The Crusaders' attack the City. Miniature from a manuscript of Geoffrey de Villehardouin's De la Conquête de Constantinople. Venetian MS, ca. 1330.


**John Chrysostom (ca. 347–407), Church Father, archbishop of Constantinople and Christian saint, author of Adversus Judaeos ("Against the Jews").



Sunday, August 7, 2025

 
 
 
  • amolosh
  • Sep 7, 2025
  • 1 min read

For Kiki Sammarcelli (1938–2022)


Sexual intercourse began

In nineteen sixty-three

(which was rather late for me) —

Between the end of the Chatterley ban

And the Beatles’ first LP.

—Philip Larkin, “Annus Mirabilis”

 

Slavery abolished (just in Dubai, I fear);

Lady Chatterley's trial's a tinker’s treat;

Hear tell of JFK's murder on Great Portland Street,

Let's face it, for me '63 was a delicious year,

Route 66's kicks subside in Bel Air

(mea maxima culpa, to be fair);

Revolution over, royalties beguile

Uprising's Thermidorean* smile,


Confused in love, still wanting dates,

Rusticated in Berkeley, quoting Yeats

("Could I but have my wish, [I'd be]

Colder and dumber and deafer than a fish"), †

I want more better stories:

O tempora! . . . O mores!


John Leech, Cicero Throws Up His Brief, in Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, The Comic History of Rome (1851)
John Leech, Cicero Throws Up His Brief, in Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, The Comic History of Rome (1851)

 

* The final phase of the French Revolution after the fall of Robespierre and the radical Jacobins in Thermidor (roughly November in Fabre d'Eglantine's Jacobin calender) 1794 is known as the Réaction thermidorienne.

† William Butler Yeats, “All Things Can Tempt Me . . .” (1916).

‡ Cicero, speech to the Roman Senate against Catiline (63 BCE): O tempora! O mores! = "Oh, the times! Oh, the morals!"



Sunday, September 7, 2025

 
 
 
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 Cyclops by Christos Saccopoulos, used by kind permission of the sculptor.

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