A Simple Solution
I have free advice
for those who don’t like Twitter:
give it a wide berth!
Stay away therefrom,
and give it just as much time
as you think it’s worth!
You’ll feel no loss, I
assure you, and its users
will notice no dearth:
everyone wins.
We have more important things
to address on Earth.*
I have free advice
for those who don’t like Twitter:
give it a wide berth!
Stay away therefrom,
and give it just as much time
as you think it’s worth!
You’ll feel no loss, I
assure you, and its users
will notice no dearth:
everyone wins.
We have more important things
to address on Earth.*
* see a discussion at Catallaxy Files wherein, inter alia, I submitted these verses:
Limit characters
to one hundred and forty,
and yet still inform
effectively? Yes,
and it can be done using
some poetic norm.
to one hundred and forty,
and yet still inform
effectively? Yes,
and it can be done using
some poetic norm.
A poster—Oh come on—has said
that Twitter is better not read;
thus critics have gibed
at words circumscribed,
preferring the prolix instead.
that Twitter is better not read;
thus critics have gibed
at words circumscribed,
preferring the prolix instead.
The haiku’s a verse,
of seventeen syllables,
meaningful, but terse.
(The original
form had to contain a word
which is seasonal;
but the modern kind
can be very expressive
without that, I find.)
UPDATE I: a recapitulation:
Twitter: “seven score
characters should suffice for
pithy points, no more”.
characters should suffice for
pithy points, no more”.
UPDATE II (11 August): an encapsulation:
The critics’ complaint?
brevity’s unfair constraint,
and what Twitter aint.
brevity’s unfair constraint,
and what Twitter aint.
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