Dead body
From Plastic Tub
(Difference between revisions)
| Revision as of 03:12, 19 Aug 2005 Payne (Talk | contribs) ← Go to previous diff |
Current revision Undule (Talk | contribs) |
||
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
| ---- | ---- | ||
| - | "Over my dead body are they going to make me go back." | + | :"Over my dead body are they going to make me go back." |
| - | "I knew he was having dreams, nightmares," Lisset said. "He would wake up at night really sweaty." | + | :"I knew he was having dreams, nightmares," Lisset said. "He would wake up at night really sweaty. When I popped around the next day for a few drinks, he had become a dead body. I can't explain it." |
| == Extrapolation == | == Extrapolation == | ||
| Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
| ---- | ---- | ||
| - | The dead body just sat there. A weight on top of the world. No past, no future; just a dead constant present - one of the lucky ones. | + | :The dead body just sat there. A weight on top of the world. No past, no future; just a dead constant present - one of the lucky ones. |
| - | The dead body was an [[AA]] member since [[Stimes Addisson|Stimes]]' day. The dead body knew [[Dutch Forkes|Dutch]], Dutch did not know the dead body. AA was the connection - but there was no link - and the dead body enjoyed the new found life as a dead body. It's not such a bad job after all but the foie gras reeks. | + | :The dead body was an [[AA]] member since [[Stimes Addisson|Stimes]]' day. The dead body knew [[Dutch Forkes|Dutch]], Dutch did not know the dead body. AA was the connection - but there was no link - and the dead body enjoyed the new found life as a dead body. It's not such a bad job after all but the foie gras reeks. |
| - | The dead body used to sing children's songs for a living. [[Spaghetti Worm]] was a popular tune among 3 year olds and earned the dead body honors among peers. The dead body could reflect on this and smile. But the dead body was not the dead body - rather "some Accidental Associationalism mind bender" ''(Johnson, p. 13'') - the dead weight of the world is upon us. There may be no forgiving this time around. | + | :The dead body used to sing children's songs for a living. [[Spaghetti Worm]] was a popular tune among 3 year olds and earned the dead body honors among peers. The dead body could reflect on this and smile. But the dead body was not the dead body - rather "some Accidental Associationalism mind bender" ''(Johnson, p. 13'') - the dead weight of the world is upon us. There may be no forgiving this time around. |
| - | Dutch probed further back in time and remembered a favorite poem he used to sing in choir school: | + | :Dutch probed further back in time and remembered a favorite poem he used to sing in choir school: |
| :''Lo and behold the Father'' | :''Lo and behold the Father'' | ||
| Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
| :''of Wrongful Righteousness....'' | :''of Wrongful Righteousness....'' | ||
| :''(etc)'' | :''(etc)'' | ||
| + | |||
| + | == See Also == | ||
| + | |||
| + | ---- | ||
| + | * [[Death]] | ||
| </td> | </td> | ||
| Line 38: | Line 43: | ||
| ---- | ---- | ||
| <font style="font-size: 90%"> | <font style="font-size: 90%"> | ||
| - | + | [[Jonathan Trenchwheat]] was celebrated in his High School Yearbook as "Most Likely To Animate A Dead Body." | |
| </font> | </font> | ||
Current revision
| dead body n.v. 1. Narrative space, defined by fucking idiots. 2. A state of future being, devoid of consciousness; a potentiality of any sort, usually dreadful. 3. A dramatical totem of immense popularity, signaling the engagement of a puzzle, a journey or a jolly romp, and otherwise initiating a series of elaborate narrative shake-downs.
[edit] Usage
[edit] Extrapolation
[edit] See Also |
[edit] DesiderataJonathan Trenchwheat was celebrated in his High School Yearbook as "Most Likely To Animate A Dead Body."
|
