
Here is an old building down here in Salamanca that now houses luxury apartments, an art gallery, a gym and a hair salon. I'm not sure that the old crowd of convicts, prostitutes, drunken sailors, scallywags, scoundrels, reprobates, degenerates, ne'er-do-wells, rouges and rotters would be welcome around these parts any more. It’s all three hundred dollar sunglasses and designer pooches these days.
I have been looking at a report that I am currently working on, and pleasantly note that I am trying to do my best to keep the use of lovely words alive and well in the sterile, mundane and (frankly) pitifully constructed word of public policy. That said, I’m not sure what the insipid automatons of the field make of me talking about ameliorating harm, adroit policy shifts, a conflation of interests, diffuse reasoning, ephemeral outcomes, eschewing simplistic solutions or indeed the preponderance of nebulous ideas set before us.
I have a propinquity for beautiful words but this seems an anathema to the blandishments of modern, public communication. Of course, the opportunity to scintillate the dry, dull page with a redolent rhapsody of prose is my own little surreptitious way of easing the day’s labour.
If I can squeeze crepuscular in, I’ll die a happy man. Sadly, the Mercury has choosen not to quote me in this regard.
16 comments:
Lovely words, all. I hope they make it.
Tut-tut, I figure that if I keep using them, they might take off.
lovely architecture, love the color on that building.
answering to your question
they usually only get a small fish, it difficult if you want to get a big fish in this river.
Considering the indiscriminate rearranging of paper by a multifarious group of pencil-pushers, I am quite assured that your exquisite missive will be groped no less than ten times. Read? Well, now, that is the divergent point of your dispatch’s peregrination. Should scrutiny rear its repellant head, a case of bureaucratic apoplexy could occur! Remember, prudence and perseverance are our creed, oh mole of the underground beautiful word revolution … !
(I must fess up with one manicured hoof on the waterin' trough, i cheated with a the-sau-rus. Mules need lernin' too! And the sau-rus bringed me chocolates...)
rdm
Nanak, it's on old one (in Tasmanian terms).
Good to hear that they're catching something!
Glad to meet you! gonna come by more!
Red dirt mule, unerringly prescient as ever!
Colette, we are but a click away!
Ahhh, crepuscular - possibly my favouritest word in the language. It is a difficult one to squeeze into regular conversation, or even conversations about cats, let alone public-service-related documentation. Let me know if you ever manage it...
Me, since I shared my love for the word, I have slipped it in here and there. No formal reports yet, but there remains time...
After a full day of learnin' with the 'special' children ...your words are like music to my ears! We very rarely budge from 'good', 'bad' and 'nice' when needing adjectives (and even then I have to give hints on how to spell 'em!!!)
Did I ever tell you that my favourite book is the thesaurus...
i forgot to add that automaton was one of my 13 yr. old's vocabulary words this fall ... and i used 'ameliorate' once in a blog response and was thrashed soundly for utilizing 'big words.'
sigh.
not so prescient, after all.
rdm
ps. lovely photo of you and your son!
Sue, I've always wondered about these "special" children, and "special olympics" and all that. Hell, I could do all that shit quite ealry far better , and I was nuthin' special.
Red dirt mule, I never thrash anyone who doesn't ask me to thrash them.
Actually, I am inclined to criticise anyone who tries l33t speak. Not 'big 'words though.
My god my son I didn't realize that a university education would have you using words that went out of fashion nearly 200 years ago. Looks like my money was well spent. If you can't out argue them then confuse them totally.
Roddy, but I can always out argue them.
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