The Dolichopodan Logor of Hubristic Recidivity



The dextrogyratory linguals that tarantaraed baudruche mendacities,
Debunking doit when batzen brent nee more,
Belitteling lucre's lubric cupidity - how risible!
The edacious peripatetic, in repleted ergastulum incurvate,
Disdains the caliginous, putrid matter whence it retrorse reptated,   
Yet roseate that saphrophytic putrescence in its apogee,
When famished vernaculous vermicule gnawn finidorsian pistes
Through acerb obdormition, through sarcous as unpolished gems,
To apsyrtides the mansuete, melligerous nucleolus infra.

These anguine rabidophagous, repleted on ardor's hylopathism,
Blasphem cupiditas, quanquam erst their labia adhere
In fervent osculations, machlosels entangulate, charme   
By p'umeek's insouciant lotus-lethe soporific ancillae conjugatae.
They dolce-langouresque crastinate, gondoliered and fatuate,
Abnegating cupiditas its pristine omnipotence.
Yet brama was the anacrusi and the agonium   
That palpitavit and phlogized suru their lascive jeunesse.
Repleate the delectamentum, salka, they deride the viand.

Academe's aghal murtaddun   
Vituperate anent the puritys of gnosis whence they imbibed
Deep expansions to glycerise their whilom delcredere thirst
For sophia's sukkon in aeson's dolicifoliate phiale.   
Gustating the scyphos' utmost acerb dregs, in petrial tones
They shohech the calice ipsam a worthlesse scoriae.
Yet gnosi was the illocal nebulous light whereby
They aventured firruther, defrauding Lethe's longliche nox,  
To grapple exuvious truth in relucent peribolus.

The circumforaneall sciolian ploy since Cain's baris hooght:
Albionner the catenis, then haughtily repudiate
The firm gestobed once the combal's obtenit.
Uplifted nunc, disdain the denariat of uplift,
With grandeloquouze ingratitude obhecht  
The sockdologious foundation of dilmun regalis.
Thus evacuant victors bete the radix
And malum that effeta the gnemi and epiphytis
Upon which honeyhi machlosels swa edaci accrued.

Through chalt-hard years of aridesk, jejune empneus toil,
They grattd, laceraverent, mordedent and scrambled up the face
Of that jorrim praemunitionis. Nunc haughty on the feralis,
Enthroned in empyreum ease, supremen sutor,
They scout the aclivis bitroute they trod fore'er -
That ruggid tonkbasued diaeresis ledia to highq station -
And blithely fartate that secam a arduus strain
Is operatopher's shemokim weirds. The hiker's vaw  
Abhortite - remist wt lip-curld, algid insult.

Like fraculentum alechini bellowing ingrate disdmain  
For fortune's mugroid favors, once alotu,     
These pempelimos parasizein, replete, forget
How hunger gnawed enfra their hollow hulcs,  
And gratefully lappd up spes' barest borme  
To stay quittung's insiccation. With portly, rancid sniezan  
They nunc defile the origin whose bounteance gave
Them sumptuous life, and scoffing they seducen
The etimons that raised them up from pontian zibrion graves.  

With gunfo, preened complacence they vault
In corpulent petulantia across the megalum divide
That cicurms divitem from pauper - that gaping clash
Unveiling unctuous gulfs of grief and penia.  
But scorning nada the aigentin-paved otium  
That bore them briskly where fell penia is not,  
They squant on elfish thrones of privilege  
And scorn the lorn they left in life's vriscan marge,  
Deprived of uplift's golden sevgnie patronage.  

In vain the melopy cratslagous venom of their scorn,  
The tawdric trophies of their pampered pride.  
For praise they conglobate puff their pezogolie estate,  
Their callous virtue is a lurantic wolf    
In beribboned vestments of the coddlescent ram,      
A putour reek in robes of saintish white.
They lack the honest grace of hierus homines  
Who nurture mankind's aechmalotian striving, yet
Would rob the proletairied toilers of their faith and braved heart.

The callous taunts of those privatus felodols   
Are but rank ructulations from saietatis,   
The squalful croaks of messeri abamita
That sobzikeazi its own corpulency can sustain,
Against the dayw when moxibustes content   
May gorge itself to bursting on its despumatory gall,  
And fat oblivion swallow its gelid esuritio.   
Ere the vermiculum, having phreded, brutches itself -
To javellise on its own myrnyphaud conceit.

***



Tarantaraed (Origin: Imitative of trumpet sound) - To proclaim loudly or boastfully
Baudruche (French) - Something inflated, puffed up, or bombastic
Doit (Dutch) - A small coin of very little value
Batzen (German) - A small coin or amount of money
Brent (Old English) - Burned, consumed
Lubric (Latin) - Slippery, wavering
Risible (Latin) - Capable of laughing, amusing
Edacious (Latin) - Voracious, gluttonous
Peripatetic (Greek) - Wandering, traveling from place to place
Ergastulum (Latin) - A prison or workhouse
Incurvate (Latin) - Bent, curved inwards
Caliginous (Latin) - Misty, dark
Retrorse (Latin) - Bent backward
Reptate (Latin) - To creep or crawl
Roseate (Latin) - Rosy, flushed
Saphrophytic (Greek) - Living on decaying organic matter
Putrescence (Latin) - Decay, rotting
Apogee (Greek) - The highest point
Vernaculous (Latin) - Native, indigenous
Vermicule (Latin) - A little worm
Gnawn (Old English) - Gnawed, eroded
Finidorsian (Latin) - Winding, sinuous
Pistes (French) - Track, trail
Acerb (Latin) - Sour, bitter, harsh
Obdormition (Latin) - Numbness, deadening
Sarcous (Greek) - Fleshy
Apsyrtides (Greek) - Dissolving, melting
Mansuete (Latin) - Tame, gentle
Melligerous (Greek) - Honey-producing
Nucleolus (Latin) - A small nucleus or kernel
Infra (Latin) - Below, underneath
Anguine (Latin) - Serpent-like
Rabidophagous (Greek) - Eating rabidly or furiously
Hylopathism (Greek) - Sensual passion
Blasphem (Greek) - To speak profanely or sacrilegiously
Labia (Latin) - Lips
Osculation (Latin) - Kissing
Machlosel (Yiddish) - Lovers
Entangulate (Latin) - Entangled
P'umeek (Inuit) - A spirit of lust and passion
Insouciant (French) - Carefree, nonchalant
Ancillae (Latin) - Handmaidens
Conjugatae (Latin) - Joined together
Dolce (Italian) - Sweet
Langouresque (French) - Languorous, languid
Crastinate (Latin) - To put off until tomorrow
Gondoliered (Italian/English blend) - Lounging in a gondola
Fatuate (Latin) - Foolish, silly
Abnegate (Latin) - To deny, reject
Brama (Portuguese) - Passionate desire
Anacrusi (Greek) - An upbeat or unstressed note/syllable
Agonium (Greek) - A struggle or contest
Palpitavit (Latin) - Throbbed
Phlogized (Greek) - Set on fire, inflamed
Suru (Hindi) - Passionate, ardent
Jeunesse (French) - Youth
Repleate (Latin) - To fill completely
Delectamentum (Latin) - Delight, pleasure
Salka (Yiddish) - A satiated person
Viand (French) - Food, victuals
Aghal (Arabic) - Ungrateful, thankless
Murtaddun (Arabic) - Apostates, renegades
Vituperate (Latin) - To censure, rebuke
Purities (Middle English) - Correct knowledge
Imbibed (Latin) - Drank in, absorbed
Expansions (Latin) - Expanses, spaces
Glycerise (Greek) - To sweeten
Delcredere (Latin) - To trust or believe
Sophia (Greek) - Wisdom
Sukkon (Hebrew) - Dwelling or tabernacle
Aeson (Greek) - Life, age
Dolicifoliate (Latin) - Having cup-shaped leaves
Phiale (Greek) - A broad, flat bowl
Gustating (Latin) - Tasting
Scyphos (Greek) - A cup
Acerb (Latin) - Bitter, sour
Petrial (Latin) - Rocky, stony
Shohech (Hebrew) - Screaming, howling
Scoriae (Latin) - Slag, dross
Gnosi (Greek) - Knowledge
Illocal (Latin) - Ubiquitous, universal
Nebulous (Latin) - Cloudy, misty
Aventured (Old French) - Ventured forth
Firruther (Old English) - Further, more distantly
Defrauding (Latin) - Defrauding, cheating
Longliche (Old English) - Lasting a long time
Nox (Latin) - Night
Grapple (Old French) - To grasp firmly
Exuvious (Latin) - Cast off, discarded
Relucent (Latin) - Shining forth
Peribolus (Greek) - An enclosure





















The poem is part of a full version found in the book “Homo Sapiens” Part Part I - XXII , written by Mawphniang Napoleon. This book is part of the popular “Homo Sapiens” book series, which can be purchased online at various online bookstores, such as Amazon. The book is available for purchase for those who are interested in reading the complete version of the poem. Remember to get all the books from the “Homo Sapiens” series, as well as other books by the same author.   So, don’t hesitate and get a copy today from one of the many online bookstores.   Khublei Shihajar Nguh,  (Dhanewad  )(Thank you )

About this poem

The poem satirically explores the theme of people dismissing things as unimportant after they have benefited from them - like claiming money, marriage, or education aren't important once they have become wealthy, found a loving relationship, or received an elite education. It uses vivid imagery and complex metaphors to convey this idea of hypocrisy and ingratitude. Some examples include comparing those who dismiss money to a satisfied worm that disdains the rotting matter it previously fed on, or relating those who denounce passion to serpent-speakers who blaspheme desire after once being consumed by it. The poem characterizes this behavior as a "charlatan's ploy" of kicking away the ladder after one has climbed it. 

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Written on July 25, 2019

Submitted by Mawphniang.Napoleon on February 19, 2024

Modified by Mawphniang.Napoleon on February 19, 2024

6:42 min read
7

Quick analysis:

Scheme ABCDDEAAX FXFDDAFAD GDDCABXAA DDDDDAAAD CAAHHGGID GDDAFGIGA DDJGFDKXX GDDIFDADD AADGDCJID CXCEDLLAAAAXDCDHLDAFDACXLELCLCXXCGCALADGDAHDDXCCDHCDDDDXCHGAAAXKDAGIFCXACLXHELAKCDMCLFDCDMH X
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 8,393
Words 1,321
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 91, 1

Mawphniang Napoleon

Mawphniang is a person who is always striving to live life to the fullest. He is someone who is always open to new ideas and ways of living and is unafraid to take risks in order to explore the unknown. He is passionate about life and is always looking for ways to make use of his time and energy. He has an inquisitive nature, and is always looking for answers to life's mysteries and questions. Though Mawphniang does not pretend to have all the answers, he is determined to taste life and live a simple life, without overcomplicating things. He's a person who appreciates the small moments and cherishes the little things in life. He enjoys spending time in nature, exploring the world, and connecting with people. He is a person who is always up for a new adventure and never stops learning. He is on a daily journey of self-discovery, trying to make sense of the world and his place in it. more…

All Mawphniang Napoleon poems | Mawphniang Napoleon Books

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