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Times Roman Font Announces Shortage of Periods
By Steve Martin
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Representatives of the popular Times Roman font
recently announced a shortage of periods and have offered substitutes
- such as inverted commas, exclamation marks, and semicolons - until
the crisis is overcome by people such as yourself, who through
creative management of surplus punctuation can perhaps allay the
constant demand for periods, whose heavy usage in the last ten years
(not only in English but in virtually every language in the world) is
creating a burden on writers everywhere, thus generating a litany of
comments, among them: "What the hell am I supposed to do without my
periods? How am I going to write? Isn't this a terrible disaster? Are
they crazy? Won't this just lead to misuse of other, less interesting
punctuation???"
"Most vulnerable are writers who work in short, choppy sentences,"
said a spokesperson for Times Roman, who continued, "We are trying to
remedy the situation and have suggested alternatives, like umlauts,
since we have plenty of umlauts - and, in fact, have more umlauts than
we could possible use in a lifetime! Don't forget, umlauts can really
spice up a page with their delicate symmetry - resting often midway in
a word, letters spilling on either side - and not only indicate the
pronunciation of a word but also contribute to a writer's greater
glory because they're fancy, not to mention that they even look like
periods, indeed, are indistinguishable from periods, and will lead
casual readers to believe that the article actually contains periods!"
Bobby Brainard, a writer living in an isolated cabin in Montana - who
is, in fact, the only writer living in an isolated cabin in Montana
who is not insane - is facing a dilemma typical of writers across the
nation: "I have a sentence that has just got to be stopped; it is
currently sixteen pages long and is edging out the front door and is
now so lumbering I'm starting to worry that one period alone won't be
enough - that I'll need at least two to finally kill it off - and if
that doesn't work, I've ordered an elephant gun from Jessie's, and if
I don't get some periods fast I'm going to have to use it..." The
magazine International Hebrew has offered this emergency statement:
"We currently have an oversupply of backwards periods and will be
happy to send some to Mister Brainard or anyone else facing a crisis!"
.period backwards the in slip you while moment a for way other the
look to sentence the getting is trick only The
The general concern of writers is summed up by this brief telegram:
Period shortage mustn't continue stop
Stop-stoppage must come to a full stop stop
We must resolve it and stop the stoppage stop
Yours truly,
Tom Stoppard
Needless to say, there has been an increasing pressure on the
ellipsis...
"I assure to you," said the spokesperson, "I assure you the ellipsis
is not - repeat, is not - just three periods strung together, and,
although certain writers have plundered the ellipsis for its dots,
such dots are deeply inelegant and ineffective when used to stop a
sentence! ¿An ellipsis point is too weak to stop a modern sentence,
which would require at least two ellipsis points, leaving the third
dot to stand alone pointlessly - and, indeed, two periods at the end
of a sentence would look like a typo, comprende? And why is Times
Roman so important? Why can't writers employ some of our other,
lesser-used fonts, such as Goofy Deluxe, Namby Pamby Extra Narrow, or
Gone Fishin'?"
In fact, there is movement toward alternate puncuation; consider the
New Punctuation and Suicide Cult in Southern Texas, whose credo is
"Why not try some new and different kinds of punctuation and then kill
ourselves?" Notice how these knotty epigrams from Shakespeare are
easily unravelled:
Every cloud engenders not a storm
Horatio, I am dead
Remembering the Albertus Extra Bold asterisk embargo of several years
back, one hopes the crisis is solved quickly, because a life of
exclamation marks, no matter how superficially exciting, is no life at
all! There are, of course, many other fonts one could use if the
crisis continues, but frankly, which would you rather be faced with -
Namby Pamby Extra Narrow or the bosomy sexuality of Times Roman? The
shortage itself may be a useful one, provided it's over quickly, for
it has made at least this author appreciate and value his one spare
period, and it is with great respect that I use it now.
* From The New Yorker, June 9, 1997.
A PERSONAL NOTE: Of all Steve's New Yorker pieces, this is my
favorite. Clever premise, clever execution. It is the piece that made
me decide it was worthwhile to read everything he wrote. The
Compleat Steve owes its existence to this one essay.
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