An Abject Adjective
This week I am using the Collins English Dictionary, First
Edition 2006, for my random word selection. It is a straightforward text: main
entry words in bold type, variant spellings and pronunciation given
phonetically only for words deemed difficult. Parts of speech abbreviated, in
italics.
Section A is sectioned out: eyes closed, pages flicked:
the finger jabs. The first word is not especially encouraging.
Abysmal adj
Informal extremely bad, awful. (Abundant is only a column away, one notes, perhaps therein
the lesson?)
It is the morning, and the sun is clearing
through mist. Drink tepid coffee; perform classic finger tap, ponder at the
scene from the windows here. At the bottom of the abyss, Joseph Campbell
asserts, there lies salvation. But abyss is a noun. Abysmal
suggests that which belongs to the abyss, to the dark and distressing press.
Which makes one think of media reporting and how once it had seemed serious and
related to real lives and these days it is hard to tell if one is viewing a
newspaper or some celebrity baiting pamphlet. Sometimes these things are such
nonsense that the comedy of it almost outweighs the soul encroaching slime. At
the bottom of today's abyss is a toilet for abysmal trolls. And the sooner we
stop feeding them the sooner we can reach salvation.
Comments
Visiting from A to Z ~
I'm piggy-backing off of Wendy's comments to visit you for the AtoZ Challenge. I'm a new follower as well, and will be back.
Sue at CollectInTexas Gal
"The first word is not especially encouraging. Abysmal adj Informal extremely bad, awful. (Abundant is only a column away, one notes, perhaps therein the lesson?)"
This is very much the tack I'm taking for A to Z this month--balancing the negative and the positive.