On Thursday, August 3, 2023 at 11:02:41 AM UTC-4, George Dance wrote:
> On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 8:11:18 PM UTC-4, Monkey "Michael Pendragon" wrote:
> > On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 5:44:55 PM UTC-4, George Dance wrote:
> > > On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 3:33:55 PM UTC-4, Michael Monkey aka "Michael Pendragon" wrote:
> > > > On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 2:50:32 PM UTC-4, George Dance wrote:
> > > > > On Sunday, July 30, 2023 at 8:39:36 PM UTC-4, Michael Monkey aka "Michael Pendragon" wrote:
>
> > > > Apparently you're as clueless as to what your words mean as... Will Donkey is about his.
> > > > Here is what you wrote: "you and your buffoon didn't find any "errors" in the poem...".
> > > > My not finding something necessitates my having looked for it.
> > > But, Lying Michael, your team -- which now looks down to "you and your buffoon" -- is actively looking for real and imagined "errors" and start troll threads about them. The fact that your buffoon has to do all the work, while you're confining yourself to cunty trolling, doesn't obviate that.
> > > > > > >
> > How does one "look down to" someone?
> > I may be drunk when I post, but you're either grammatically incompetent or stoned.
> > > > Whatever label you wish to place on "Mamories of the Irish Franciscans," the title still remains embarrassingly incorrect.
> > > No, Lying Michael; that typo doesn't "remain" anywhere but in the screenshot of it that NG posted. The title of O'Donnell's debut collection is correct on the wiki, and has been for all the time you've been bitching about it being "wrong." But that's a minor lie. Your major one, that we're talking about, is your lie (which I notice NG backed up) that it appeared on my blog. Since you're trolling about the blog being "full of errors" it's natural that you'd attribute every error that NG finds or either of you imagine to the blog, but don't expect your lies to pass without correction.
> > >
> > What is the screenshot of, if not your blog /page/wiki/whateveryoucallit?
> It's a copy of something that used to be on PPP, no different from this:
>
https://web.archive.org/web/20180406134835/http://pennyspoetry.wikia.com/wiki/Michael_Pendragon
> > > > > (1) your current trolling is all about real or imagined errors on the blog; but
> > > > > (2) for this particular poem, you were unable to find anything you could call an error on the blog; so
> > > > There you go again, George.
> > > >
> > > > In order for me to have been "unable to find anything," I would have to have attempted to do so.
> > > You have to be playing the peabrain again here, Michael Monkey. I can't believe you're unaware that "you" is a plural pronoun as well as singular one; and that when I said "you couldn't find any errors" I was referring to both you and your troll colleague.
> > >
> > It makes no difference whether you were claiming that I did it on my own or with my colleague. Either way you were still saying that I did it -- and denying that you'd said it today.
> Lying Michael, no one said that you (singular verb this time) did any work at all. I said that none of your team found any. Which includes you: you did not find any erros. If you didn't find any errors because you were too incompetent, or because you were too lazy to look, makes no difference: you were still unable to find any. Learn what words mean and how to use them correctly,
> > > > I did not check your blog/wiki/post/whatever for typos. AFAIC, you can "publish" all the typos you want. Your editorial ineptitude is always good for a chuckle.
> > > As noted: on your team, it's NG's job to look for typos, and yours simply to "chuckle" (ie, to troll) about them, like you're doing here.
> > I'm not laughing at NancyGene's comments, George. I'm laughing at yours.
>
> > > > > (3) you're scrambling around looking for something, anything, that you can pretend was an error on the blog.
> > > > As previously noted: I wasn't even checking your poem for typos. I certainly haven't "scrambled" anywhere else.
> > > As previously noted, my previous use of "you" was plural (which you probably know, and are just pretending to have forgotten. But you certainly have been part of the "scrambling around" -- it was you, in fact, who came up with the bullshit that it's "highly probable" that I'd attributed the poem to the wrong author.
> > >
> > And, also as previously noted, it makes no difference whatsoever. I either did it, or I didn't. Whether I did it on my own, in tandem, or in a group is of no consequence.
> In this case, the only "error" your team found on the blog post is one that you came up with: not by looking for and finding it, but by simply making it up.
> > > > > IOW, I was correct: you haven't looked at any of the evidence yourself, but are just supporting your colleague.
> > > > MMP: I wasn't even checking your poem for typos.
> > > > G"MB"D: I didn't say you were Lying Michael. Please stop the strawman arguments.
> > >
> > > > Please make up your mind and stick with it (regardless of the inaccuracy of said choice).
> > > My previous statements stand: NG is looking for real and imagined errors, while your contribution to your joint effort has been to troll about them.
> And, of course, to make up the only alleged error the two of managed to come up with for this blogpost.
> > Your previous statements (by which I'm assuming you mean yesterday's falsehoods) are contradicted by today's denials.
>
> > > > > Of course, since you haven't looked at any of the evidence, that means your opinion of it is worthless; you're just an ignorant troll trying back up your more-informed troll colleague. Your admission of that helps one evaluate your contribution to this discussion.
> > > > >
> > > > One doesn't need to look at your blog to realize that "Mamories of the Irish Franciscans" is incorrect.
> > > And, of course, not looking at the blog allows you to pretend that "Mamories of the Irish Franciscans" was ever on it. But it is not, and never was; you're just trolling about another piece of bullshit you made up.
> > >
> > There you go again, George. I didn't make anything up. NancyGene posted a screenshot of your blog/wiki/page/whatchmacallit that showed the error.
> Lying, Michael: you can't prove anything about the blog by posting screenshots of something else.
> > I laughed at the error ("Mamories of the Irish Franciscans" is funny). That's all.
> No, Lying Michael, that is not all. You also claim to have found (but in fact simply made up, as per your m.o.
> > > > > > > Well, let's look at the "errors" you and your colleague claim to have found in this poem. Exactly one: you're now saying I got the author wrong simply because NastyGoon (who, according to you, "knows how to do a little research") did too little of it this time and came up empty-handed. So the two of you 'speculated,' and decided that O'Donnell "probably" did not write it. You couldn't find any errors in this poem, so you made up a "probable" one.
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > I didn't say that you got the author's name wrong, George.
> > > > > For a second time I'll ask you to stop the stupid strawman arguments, Lying Michael. No one claimed that you'd said I got O'Donnell's "name wrong." What I'd claimed you said -- what you did say -- is that it was "highly probable" that O'Donnell wasn't the author, and that I'd made a "mistake" in attributing the poem to him. For no other reason, since by your own admission you haven't looked at the evidence, than the one I just gave: You couldn't find any errors in this blogged poem you're trolling about, so you're scrambling around trying to make up pretend errors instead.
> > > > >
> > > > You're doing it again, Georgie.
> > > >
> > > > G"BM"D (Yesterday): "you're now saying I got the author wrong..."
> > > Exactly. You were saying I'd put the wrong author's name on the poem; that calling O'Donnell the author was my mistake. As noted, you were bullshitting again, scrambling around to find some real or imagined "error" to justify your trolling.
>
> > I never said any such thing, George.
> >
> > Stop lying. Stop whining. Then post proof or STFU.
> Sure thing, Lying Michael. From one of NG's troll threads:
> "it's highly probable that a mistake or two had been made. One cannot blame George "BM" Dance for this"
>
https://groups.google.com/g/alt.arts.poetry.comments/c/nFip5oRlWL8/m/5MSOZS9qCQAJ?hl=en
> > > > G"BM"D (Today): "No one claimed that you'd said I got O'Donnell's 'name wrong.'"
> > > Exactly. I nevever claimed you'd said that I'd misspelled O'Donnell's nam.
> > You're stuttering like a frantic... monkey, George. You're gonna bust a blood vessel if you keep this up.
> > > But you tried to pretend that's what I'd claimed, making up a strawman rather than defend from your bullshit about my alleged "mistake."
> > How does one "defend from [one's] bullshit"?
> >
> > For the sixth time, I have never claimed that you got the author's name wrong.
> So now you're not questioning the authorship?
> > I said that you were remiss in your editorial duties in not having noted that some question regarding the poem's authorship exists.
> Michael, if you want I can include as a blog comment that "a couple of trolls on aapc are questioning the poem's authorship." But I can't have been "remiss" in not including that before you began questioning it, back when I published the poem, could I?
> > > > I'm calling it like it is, George.
> > > You're throwing monkeyshit, like you always do (which is how you got the nickname Michael Monkey). Most of which, like your claim about O'Donnell not being the author, turns out to be untrue (which is how you got the nickname Lying Michael Monkey).
> > >
> > "Dunce" is your nickname because the majority of AAPC members have been calling you that for years.
> I was going to call that another lie on your part, Lying Michael, but I'll ask you to PPoSTFU instead. You don't seem to have a clue how many "AAPC members" we've had here for years, it may be good for you to do some research for a change.
> > The same holds true for "Mensa Man." You cannot say that one has a nickname when you're the only person who calls him it.
> Oh, are you pretending that it's not *really* your nickname because I haven't got anyone else to call you that? I could get that changed, if you wish.
> >
> > Once again, I'm forced to remind you that the world does not revolve around George Dunce.
> Nor does it revolve around Michael Monkey Peabrain. What's your point?
> > > > Look at the lies you were caught in today: claiming that you hadn't said something that you'd said just the day before.
> > > No, Lying Michael Monkey. See above.
> > Are you referring to this?
> > G"BM"D (Yesterday): "you're now saying I got the author wrong..."
> > G"BM"D (Today): "No one claimed that you'd said I got O'Donnell's 'name wrong.'"
> > Speaks volumes, doesn't it?
> Sure. It shows you can post edit.
> > > > You're either an imbecile or a pathological liar. There's no other explanation for your behavior.
> > > In fact, there's a simple explanation: I'm calling it as I see it.
> > No ... you're just repeating a line I said to you in this same thread.
> > > > > > I said that given the questionable nature of the authorship, you should at least have made mention of the same.
> > > > > Lying Michael, there is no "questionable nature of the authorship" -- and if you'd actually looked at the evidence, you'd know that.
> > > > >
> > > > Several contemporary (with the author) sources listed the poem as "anonymous" or of unknown authorship.
> > > No, Lying Michael. Unlike you, I've been through all of NastyGoon's "sources". The only actual source they found was /Chambers's/ magazine, which simply printed the poem without any attribution. (NG's other three "sources" all coped the poem from /Chambers's/, or from one of the other copiers.)
> > >
> > If they "coped" the poem, wouldn't they have done so from "the other copers?"
> > One should strive for consistency in their writing, George -- even in their errors.
> I'm glad you found another typo, Michael. But at least you didn't deny that NG found only one "source" -- which (despite your lie) did not list the poem as either "anonymous" or "of unknown authorship".
> > > >The poem was uncollected during the author's lifetime, and added to a posthumous collection due to its having been included among some newspaper clippings discovered by his son.
> > > No, that is not what you were told, Lying Michael; you're bullshitting again. What both NG and I discovered was that "Mr John H. O'Donnell, son of the poet, placed at Mr Kelly's [the editor's] disposal a collection of his father's verses cut from magazines and newspapers" (presumably a scrapbook).
> > >
> > How is that in any way different from what I just said?
> Lying Michael, you just said that the poem was "added to a posthumous collection due to its having been included among some newspaper clippings discovered by his son." That is not in what I just quoted, or anywhere else. You made up a pretend "fact" again. As usual, I'll give you a pass the first time and not call it a lie (I'm quite familiar with your reading problems), but if you repeat after being corrected I'll be forced to call it a lie going forward.
> > > What we both also know, but NG did not report, was that "For months Mr Kelly devoted the scanty leisure of his days to the object he had at heart. He ransacked the British Museum, transcribed hundreds of poems, and entered into correspondence with people who could give him copies of verses, or supply information 'on the subject of his research." Kelly could have found this poem could have been found by any of those sources -- you don't know, so you're once again bullshitting. .
> > >
> > Wait a second... "Kelly could have found this poem could have been found..."? That's a lot of "could haves" for someone who's trying to establish authorship.
> >
> > I'm sure that Kelly could have found that he could have found conclusive evidence if conclusive evidence were there for him to could have, could have find.
> Of course he could have. You don't know whether he did nor not.
> > Conversely, the possibility that he could have found that he could have found that no evidence of authorship existed means that the poem's authorship could be found to be could have suspect.
> If he had found "no evidence of authorship," then he wouldn't likely have included it in the book he was editing, would he? I thought you said you'br worked for editors; didn't they teach you that?
> > On the other hand, he could have found that he could have found that you are the biggest dunce on the planet.
>
> > > > This is certainly cause for one to *question* the authorship of the poem. I would not deny the authorship based on the same, but I would note that there is some question regarding its authenticity.
> > > No, neither of the actual facts that NG correctly reported -- that /Chambers's/ published the poem without a byline, and that O'Donnell kept a collection of his published verse -- is a reason to question the authorship of the poem. The magazine regularly published poetry without bylines, which does not mean they considered the authorship of them unknown. And even if the poem were in O'Donnells' collection of his published verse (something that NG did not discover), that would be no reason to doubt that it was [...] this published verse.
> > And by the same token, it would be no reason to assume that it was his.
> >
> > The poem appeared anonymously in the journal, and remained uncollected during the author's lifetime.
>
> > The sole basis of including it in the collection (at least insofar as any of us are aware) is that it was included in the clippings (possibly a scrapbook) provided by O'Donnell's son.
> Lying Michael, you're the only one "aware" (because you made it up) that the poem was "included in the clippings (possibly a scrapbook) provided by O'Donnell's son." Then you claimed that "fact" you made up was the "reason" Kelly included the poem; and made up another "fact" that he had no other reason to include it.
> > Is it impossible that the clipping had been saved because O'Donnell thought it a very good poem? I have saved copies of poems that I wished to reread and/or memorize.
> >
> > Is it impossible that the clipping had been saved because O'Donnell had been a close friend of its actual author? I have saved copies of poems written by my friends as well.
> Sure, both are "possible". It's also possible that there was no such "clipping."
> > AFAICS, the poem's authorship has not been conclusively established. It is *most likely* Mr. O'Donnell's work, but there is nevertheless a reasonable doubt that he did not.
> You can doubt all you want, but there's nothing "reasonable" about it.
> > > The only reason you're claiming that O'Donnell is "probably" not the author, in the process besmirching the editor's name, was so you could claim that I made a "mistake" in attributing the poem to him. As I said: you couldn't find any "errors" in this blog post you're trashing, so you're scrambling around trying to invent some.
> > >
> > No one has said that he was "probably not" the author, Dunce. Learn how to read.
> Again, see the troll thread: "Since Mr. O'Donnell's posthumous collection was put together with the help of his son, who provided newspaper clippings, it's HIGHLY PROBABLE that a mistake or two had been made." (stress added).
Did you miss this post, Pendragon?