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Friday, October 11, 2024

Mageeks For Dummies: A Tutorial

The Mageek begins with an anagram pair and develops from there ala Ogden Nash, arriving finally at a rhyming couplet.    
   To create one, first select a subject -- a book, a celebrity, a famous town etc. Second, build a matching anagram by rearranging the letters of the subject selected to form another word, clause or phrase to follow the subject. Together the subject and its anagram line form an opening clause or phrase. Third, compose a line to rhyme with that opening clause or phrase -- ideally one of some length -- as a colloquy on the opening subject/anagram pair.

Example I:
 
(1) Select a subject:
 
The Iliad 

(2a) Build its anagram:
  
THEILIAD
HAITLIED

(2b) Form the opening phrase: 

The Iliad...? Ha! It lied. 

(3) Compose a rhyming line: 
        
‘Twas young Hektor who thrived; 
'twas Achilles who (Homer sang) died. 

(4) Voila! A Mageek! 

The Iliad...? Ha! It lied:
'Twas young Hector who thrived
and Achilles who (Home sang) died. 

     (As can be seen in this example, 
a mageek may not alwaays reflect reality.) 

Example II:
 
The Odyssey doth (yes, yes!)
tells us more about Homer than 
uninform’d readers might guess. 

Borrownyms For Dummies: A Tutorial

The borrownym is a series of stanzas each of which consists of three pentameter lines. The first line of each stanza is identical or nearly...