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[Banter] Xena parody
Poster: "David H Ritterskamp" <dhritter@dpcmail.dukepower.com>
[Once again, them what don't think it's funny don't have to read
this.]
[After some thought and consultation, I decided to crosspost this from
the Trimarian mailing list. It's a hoot if you enjoy, or even just
know anything about, "Xena: Warrior Princess."]
[It's to the tune of "I am the Very Model of a Modern Major General",
BTW.]
So, with absolutely no apologies whatsoever, enjoy!
Ld. J. Blackbow
House O'Shannon
On Mon, 14 Apr 1997, Swordmom@aol.com wrote:
>Greetings, all:
>
>I received this from the Ironrose mailing list and thought it was
worth a
>giggle or two.
>---------------------
>Forwarded message:
>From: grainne@peak.org (Andra Barrow)
>Sender: owner-ironrose@peak.org
>Reply-to: ironrose@peak.org
>To: ironrose@peak.org (Ironrose)
>Date: 97-04-12 01:53:06 EDT
>
>I found the entire version complete with credit and suitable for
forwarding.
>The footnotes are almost as funny as the song. :)
>
>Grainne
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>[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
> Upon the peaceful and agrarian,
> Just bear in mind, these maidens of My-TIL-ene[1]
> Are guarded by a buff barbarian!
>
>Pirates: We'd better all rethink our cunning plan;
> They're guarded by a buff barbarian.
>
>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;
> Through Herculean efforts, I've become humanitarian.
> I ride throughout the hinterland -- at least that's what they
> call it in
> Those sissy towns like Athens (I, myself, am Amphipolitan).
> I travel with a poet who is perky and parthenian[2]
> And scribbles her hexameters in Linear Mycenian[3]
> (And many have attempted, by a host of methods mystical,
> To tell if our relationship's sororal or sapphistical).
>
>Chorus: To tell if their relationship's sororal or sapphistical!
> To tell if their relationship's sororal or sapphistical!
> To tell if their relationship's sororal or
sapphisti-phistical!
>
>Xena: My armory is brazen, but my weapons are ironical;
> My sword is rather phallic, but my chakram's rather yonical[4]
> (To find out what that means, you'll have to study
Indo-Aryan[5]).
> I am the very model of a heroine barbarian!
>
>Chorus: To find out what that means, we'll have to study Indo-Aryan
--
> She is the very model of a heroine barbarian!
>
>Xena: I wake up every morning, ere the dawn is rhododactylous[6]
> (Who needs to wait for daylight? I just work by _sensus
> tactilis_[7].)
> And ride into the sunrise to protect some local villagers
> From mythologic monsters or from all-too-human pillagers.
> I hurtle towards each villain with a recklessness ebullient
> And cow him with my swordwork and my alalaes ululient[8];
> He's frightened for his head, because he knows I'm gonna
> whack it -- he's
> Aware that his opponent is the _Basileia Makhetes_!
>
>[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_!
> He knows that his opponent is the _Basileia Makhetes_!
> He knows that his opponent is the _Basileia Makhe-makhetes_,
>
>Xena: Because I've got my armor, which is really rather silly, on
> (It's cut so low I feel like I'm the topless tow'rs of Ilion,
> And isn't any use against attackers sagittarian[9]).
> I am the very model of a heroine barbarian!
>
>Chorus: It isn't any use against attackers sagittarian --
> She is the very model of a heroine barbarian!
>
>Xena: In short, when I can tell you how I break the laws of gravity,
> And why my togs expose my intermammary concavity,
> And why my comrade changed her dress from one that fit more
comfily
> To one that shows her omphalos[10] (as cute as that of
Omphale[11]),
> And why the tale of Spartacus appears in Homer's versicon[12],
> [She holds up a tomato:]
> And where we found examples of the genus _Lycopersicon_[13],
> And why this Grecian scenery looks more like the Antipodes,
> You'll say I'm twice the heroine of any in Euripides!
>
>Chorus: We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripides!
> We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripides!
> We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripi-ripides!
>
>Xena: But though the kinked chronology, confusing and chimerical
> (It's often unhistorical, but rarely unhysterical),
> Would give a massive heart attack to any antiquarian,
> I am the very model of a heroine barbarian!
>
>Chorus: 'Twould give a massive heart attack to any antiquarian --
> She is the very model of a heroine barbarian!
>
>[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.)
>
>[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.
>
>[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.
>
>[6] rhododactylous: rosy-fingered. (Homer makes frequent reference to
> _rhododaktulos eos_ -- "rosy-fingered dawn".)
>
>[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".
>
>[9] sagittarian: archer-like.
>
>[10] omphalos: belly-button.
>
>[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.)
>
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