POLONIUS’ OBSCENITIES TO ATTENDANT WRITERS
(to upstage the work of William Safire)
And these precepts in thy memory
Look thou character. For a writer
Must not shift your point of view.
And you yourself have of your
audience
Been most free and bounteous with
long words
When diminutivoes will do marvellous
wisely.
By the by, ‘to discombombulate’ is a
vile clause.
Now mark you: meet it is to avoid clichés like the plague,
Admit no run-on sentences, so hard
are they to apprehend,
Never ever beguile with repetitive
redundancies,
For brevity is the goal of
writ. Ay, and aver
‘Aroynt’ at
all awkward and affected alliteration.
And harpeth
not on superlatives unqualified,
The most
unkindest cut of all.
Marry, I
charge you to never unseam an infinitive.
A verb,
contrary to kings of shreds and tatters,
Have to
consort with their subjects.
Do not give
offence with sullied forms of verbs
That have
snuck crabwise into the language.
Pronouns
should be plac’d hard by,
Certainly in
sentences puff’d and laboursome,
Videlicet ten
or more words, their antecedents.
Be somewhat
scanter of your un-necessary hyphens,
Use
semi-colons according to their desert,
Not after some
swinish phrase; trifling of their flavours.
Be thou
familiar but by no means vulgar, with commas
For it is they
that have made your readers mad.
Confine the
apostrophe to it’s proper use,
Not to be
flouted like reechy drab’s in stews’.
This above
all: to thine own proofing be true,
Lest, by the
mass, you have words out.
Such wanton,
wild and usual slips
Are companions
noted and most known to youth.
Look to’t, I
charge you. Come your ways.
Michael Small
pub. idiom, April, 1911, AUSTRALIA
pub.University of Windsor Review, Feb, 1992, CANADA
pub. idiom, April, 1911, AUSTRALIA
pub.University of Windsor Review, Feb, 1992, CANADA
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