tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24746593.post3659452195096864051..comments2024-01-06T08:38:28.019+00:00Comments on Blaugustine's Other Blog: ANOTHER ONEUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24746593.post-43820524027494157602016-01-29T18:23:57.639+00:002016-01-29T18:23:57.639+00:00I know it's a Biblical quote! I was just wonde...I know it's a Biblical quote! I was just wondering if you were using it as double entendre, satire, re the corniness of my random poems?Natalie d'Arbeloffhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07757081405040926647noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24746593.post-34126590885185621252016-01-29T17:48:45.767+00:002016-01-29T17:48:45.767+00:00Alien corn: biblical quote.Alien corn: biblical quote.Roderick Robinsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16828395545197001637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24746593.post-74343161308497691632016-01-29T16:33:11.200+00:002016-01-29T16:33:11.200+00:00Don't want to say I told you so but I told you...Don't want to say I told you so but I told you so (in a comment) that you'd change your blogonym when you got into singing lessons. I even suggested FKATD (Formerly Known As Tone Deaf). Tonic Sol-Fa does lack gin. Maybe simply Tonic has more fizz? Or FKATD. <br /><br />You say I've fallen among alien corn: did you mean corn as in corny?<br /><br />Yes Gibran was a he. I used to like him a lot. Still like him but his writing, not so much.Natalie d'Arbeloffhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07757081405040926647noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24746593.post-39969762000982758752016-01-29T08:28:52.113+00:002016-01-29T08:28:52.113+00:00You appear to have fallen among alien corn. Me too...You appear to have fallen among alien corn. Me too recently. Never mind, I have discovered that Khalil Gibran was capable of using a naughty word; perhaps this might redeem him in my hideously prejudiced view of the world and I may yet read him. Or is he a her?<br /><br />There is another piece of verse to be written about Lear whose rhyming potential you have revealed. A rich baggage of words all with the ability to go in dark directions: sere, sneer, blear, drear (but not clear), gear (not your cup of tea), mere, meer (for linguistic variety), spear (too melodramatic), fear (Aha!), leer, rear, revere (clearly a child born on the wrong side of the blanket in this family), weir (a regular source of drowning in nineteenth century novels), year (a symbol for time passing vindictively), rear (up, as with snakes), and so on.<br /><br />I am, as you see, become another person. I am contemplating a new blogonym: Tonic Sol-fa. Do you like it or do you think it lacks gin?Roderick Robinsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16828395545197001637noreply@blogger.com