This week's theme: words about poetry.

palinode (PAL-uh-noad) noun

   A poem in which the author retracts something said in an earlier poem.

[From Greek palinoidia, from palin (again) + oide (song).]

The illustrator and humorist Gelett Burgess (1866-1951) once wrote a
poem called The Purple Cow:

   I never saw a purple cow,
   I never hope to see one;
   But I can tell you, anyhow,
   I'd rather see than be one.

The poem became so popular and he became so closely linked with this single
quatrain he later wrote a palinode:

  Confession: and a Portrait, Too,
  Upon a Background that I Rue!

   Oh, yes, I wrote 'The Purple Cow,'
   I'm sorry now I wrote it!
   But I can tell you anyhow,
   I'll kill you if you quote it."

It was the same Burgess who coined the word blurb.

-Anu Garg (garg wordsmith.org)

  "The more lighthearted palinodes were more successful, such as Geoff
   Horton's recantation of his youthful view that a martini should be
   shaken rather than stirred."
   Jaspitos; I Take It Back; The Spectator (London, UK); Jan 24, 2004.

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