| The Modern Buff Barbarian set to
A Modern Major General (Gilbert and Sullivan)
[We join our operetta already in progress. The infamous Pirates of Pergamum have just seized a bevy of beautiful Mytilenean maidens, and are attempting to carry them off for matrimonial purposes. Gabrielle intervenes, with a recitative (well, it's better than a pan flute solo):] >>
Gabrielle: Hold, scoundrels! Ere ye practice acts of villainy >>
Pirates: We'd better all rethink our cunning plan; >> Maidens: Yes, yes, she is a buff barbarian. >> [Xena leaps in from the wings, with a tremendous war cry, does a mid-air somersault, and lands on her feet on the Pirate King's chest.] >> Xena: Yes, yes, I am a buff barbarian! [The orchestra starts up.] >>
I am the very model of a heroine barbarian;
>>
Chorus: To tell if their relationship's sororal or sapphistical! >>
Xena: My armory is brazen, but my weapons are ironical; >>
Chorus: To find out what that means, we'll have to study Indo-Aryan -- >>
Xena: I wake up every morning, ere the dawn is rhododactylous
[6]
I hurtle towards each villain with a recklessness ebullient >> [The music crashes to a halt, as the Chorus stares at Xena in utter confusion. She sighs.] It's *Greek*. It means "Warrior Princess"! >> [Light dawns on the Chorus, and the music resumes.] Sheesh . . . >>
Chorus: He knows that his opponent is the _Basileia Makhetes_! >>
Xena: Because I've got my armor, which is really rather silly, on >>
Chorus: It isn't any use against attackers sagittarian -- >>
Xena: In short, when I can tell you how I break the laws of gravity,
And why the tale of Spartacus appears in Homer's versicon [12], >>
Chorus: We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripides! >>
Xena: But though the kinked chronology, confusing and chimerical >>
Chorus: 'Twould give a massive heart attack to any antiquarian -- >> [As the orchestra plays the final chords, a wild Xenaesque melee ensues, and the curtain has to be brought down.] >> >> Notes: >> [1] Actually, "Mytilene" would properly be accented on the third syllable; Gabrielle always did have trouble with rhymes. (Mytilene, incidentally, is a city on the isle of Lesbos -- the hometown of the poet Sappho, as a matter of fact. It is not clear what, if anything, Gilbert is trying to imply here.) [return] >> [2] parthenian: virginal. >> [3] Linear Mycenian: Mycenian is the ancient dialect of Greek which was written in Linear B (a form of Greek writing that predates the adoption of the alphabet). The implication is that Gabrielle does her writing in Linear B; if _Xena_ takes place around the time of the Trojan war, this is chronologically reasonable. [return] >> [4] yonical: "Yonic" is the female counterpart to "phallic". >> [5] Indo-Aryan: The language group consisting of Sanskrit and its close relatives. Both "chakram" and "yonic" are of Sanskrit derivation. [return] >> [6] rhododactylous: rosy-fingered. (Homer makes frequent reference to _rhododaktulos eos_ -- "rosy-fingered dawn".) [return] >> [7] _sensus tactilis_: Latin for "the sense of touch". >> [8] "Alalaes" are war-cries (the Greeks spelled a Xena-like war cry as _alala_ or _alale_) and "ululient" is a coined term, apparently meaning "characterized by ululation". [return] >> [9] sagittarian: archer-like. >> [10] omphalos: belly-button. [return] >> [11] Omphale: Legendary queen of Lydia. From context, we must assume that she had a cute belly-button; however, no known classical source seems to address this vital issue. >> [12] versicon: a coined term, apparently meaning "collection of verse". >> [13] _Lycopersicon_: the biological genus to which tomatoes are assigned. (The tomato is a New World plant, and was entirely unknown in the Old World in pre-Columbian times. Thus, having tomatoes in a _Xena_ish context is an even greater anachronism than having Homer tell the tale of Spartacus.) [return]
Joseph D. McDowell Tir gan teanga, Tir gan anam! ================== RFC 822 Headers ================== Received: from gold.wvnet.edu by hermes.intel.com (8.8.4/10.0i); Tue, 15 Apr 1997 11:32:26 -0700
You might want to add the credits to "Modern Buff Barbarian". Its actual name/s are "G&X Meet G&S" or "Heroine Barbarian", and its author is Kevin Wald. (Who is a real stitch, and a linguist, too. Check out "Babylon Fif" and "Cole Porter Does Indo-European".) http://zaphod.uchicago.edu/~wald/lit/ is his page.
I now have multiple sources and credits for this quote, taken from a listserve that is open domain. For some really interesting filk materials, visit Maureen O'Brien at http://www.dnaco.net/~mobrien/filk/filklink.html
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