Stimes: A Remembrance Based On Association, Not Truth, Thus True.

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-by [[Wilhemina Forkes]], 1990+__TOC__
 +[[Wilhemlina Forkes]] book on [[Stimes Addisson]], more forthcoming.
-"The best book pretending to know me I've ever read....and there have been many."+== Curious and Amusing Anecdote, no. 1: Stimso Adid and the Lonely Widow (excerpt)==
-[[Stimes Addisson]] in [[Strafe!]], 1990 review.+----
 +<pre>
 + There was once a lonely widow who spent her hours needling the neighborhood
 +children in desperate tones. Her vituperances were borne of an all-encompassing internal
 +malaise. The entire village resented her, and the hopes of securing another husband
 +seemed entirely dashed. It is true that she was beautiful, but her shrill voice made her
 +seem the shrew.
 + In truth, she was kind and gentle, but her torrential mania constantly swept her into
 +disastrous exchanges with the local youth, who often threw stones and glass. Eventually,
 +her brother, who was a rich oil magnate, decided to put an ad in the local newspaper. The
 +ad read as follows:
 + 
 + WOMAN SEEKS HUSBAND. 31 YRS. SEXY. CAN COOK
 + PATIENCE A MUST. DIAL #76
 + 
 + As clever as the ad seemed, it yielded but a single call. The lonely widow and her
 +concerned brother listened eagerly to the recorded response. It was a voice full of
 +rumbling passion, if it a bit tilted. It rang with the promise of never-ending pleasure, of
 +evenings lost in sweet reverie. They were overjoyed to hear that the respondent, a certain
 +Don Stimso Adid, had suggested a meeting in a local eatery, at seven o'clock.
 +Adid and the lonely widow hit it off accordingly. They drank wine and supped
 +resplendently. The laughter rolled from their mouths, and all seemed very sporting. But
 +then, as they walked out into the cool evening air, the lonely widow espied a
 +straggling group of picaros.
 + Immediately, her face folded in two. Her mouth screwed up tight. It seemed as if
 +she were containing within herself a thousand-foot earth tool, which ground and spit with
 +a terrible fury. Finally, it burst forth.
 + "You sodden loins, you! Dirty-mouthed jigs! You boils, you Pigs!" the lonely
 +widow shrieked.
 + She put her hand to her mouth, gasping. She looked at Adid. His smile was
 +perhaps larger than her bosom, which was then heaving with embarrassment and chagrin.
 +Go forth with the fishes, he was reputed to have said, and he touched her forehead
 +gently. She swooned and collapsed into a tufted heap. Adid felt her sleeping breasts.
 +Sleep my love, and when you awaken, your horrible malady will have departed.
 + Such he is rumored to have spoken.
 + And truly, when she arose she arose anew and her being no longer burned in the
 +hot thrall of never-ending disease. Her brow was smooth and cooled. The sun struck it in
 +such a way that the townsfolk were agape.
 + Soon, the lonely widow found another husband, and she forgot about Don Adid
 +and his powerful magic. But whenever she saw little children playing wildly in the streets,
 +she smiled secretly to herself and whispered: "God bless you Adid, and may the Forge of
 +Tininess never labor too near your doorstep."
 +</pre>
 + 
 +== Critical Appraisal ==
 + 
 +----
 +"The best book pretending to know me I've ever read....and there have been many." -[[Stimes Addisson]] in [[Strafe!]], 1990 review.

Revision as of 08:28, 6 Aug 2004

Table of contents

Wilhemlina Forkes book on Stimes Addisson, more forthcoming.

Curious and Amusing Anecdote, no. 1: Stimso Adid and the Lonely Widow (excerpt)


	There was once a lonely widow who spent her hours needling the neighborhood
children in desperate tones. Her vituperances were borne of an all-encompassing internal
malaise. The entire village resented her, and the hopes of securing another husband
seemed entirely dashed. It is true that she was beautiful, but her shrill voice made her
seem the shrew.
	In truth, she was kind and gentle, but her torrential mania constantly swept her into
disastrous exchanges with the local youth, who often threw stones and glass. Eventually,
her brother, who was a rich oil magnate, decided to put an ad in the local newspaper. The
ad read as follows:

		WOMAN SEEKS HUSBAND. 31 YRS. SEXY. CAN COOK
		PATIENCE A MUST. DIAL #76

	As clever as the ad seemed, it yielded but a single call. The lonely widow and her
concerned brother listened eagerly to the recorded response. It was a voice full of
rumbling passion, if it a bit tilted. It rang with the promise of never-ending pleasure, of
evenings lost in sweet reverie. They were overjoyed to hear that the respondent, a certain
Don Stimso Adid, had suggested a meeting in a local eatery, at seven o'clock.
Adid and the lonely widow hit it off accordingly. They drank wine and supped
resplendently. The laughter rolled from their mouths, and all seemed very sporting. But
then, as they walked out into the cool evening air, the lonely widow espied a
straggling group of picaros.
	Immediately, her face folded in two. Her mouth screwed up tight. It seemed as if
she were containing within herself a thousand-foot earth tool, which ground and spit with
a terrible fury. Finally, it burst forth.
	"You sodden loins, you! Dirty-mouthed jigs! You boils, you Pigs!" the lonely
widow shrieked.
	She put her hand to her mouth, gasping. She looked at Adid. His smile was
perhaps larger than her bosom, which was then heaving with embarrassment and chagrin.
Go forth with the fishes, he was reputed to have said, and he touched her forehead
gently. She swooned and collapsed into a tufted heap. Adid felt her sleeping breasts. 
Sleep my love, and when you awaken, your horrible malady will have departed.
	Such he is rumored to have spoken.
	And truly, when she arose she arose anew and her being no longer burned in the
hot thrall of never-ending disease. Her brow was smooth and cooled. The sun struck it in
such a way that the townsfolk were agape.
	Soon, the lonely widow found another husband, and she forgot about Don Adid
and his powerful magic. But whenever she saw little children playing wildly in the streets,
she smiled secretly to herself and whispered: "God bless you Adid, and may the Forge of
Tininess never labor too near your doorstep."

Critical Appraisal


"The best book pretending to know me I've ever read....and there have been many." -Stimes Addisson in Strafe!, 1990 review.