Saturday, 9 May 2026

An Elegy++ 4 DJTrump! LOL++, COL+- & Ouch+-

Supergrok:


Me:
Plz write "An Elegy 4 DJTrump NOW" now in the style of RLStephenson in my fave his awesome eloquent short story "An Apology For Idlers" THEN! Also render a 40 Yr old Trump lookalike "savouring of baravado and gasconade" with 6 arms; with 1 left hand holding an (aussie white juiced monster energy drink); with 1 right hand holding a large glass Guinness tankard of Guinness; with 1 left hand holding a futuristic DMT themed Vape; with 1 right hand holding a Cuban cigar large; with 1 left hand holding a crystal USA football like the 1 DJT just gave 2 Pope Leo PBUH; with 1 right hand facing us holding a traditional Rosary beads; place him in my maroon leather lazyboy watching (A Stella Cox lookalike dressed as a saucy but never naughty schoolgirl aged 25+)! Ok with U ChatGPT5? Maybe! Ok with Supergrok! Defo!


ChatGPT5:
An elegy in a vaguely late-Victorian Stevensonian cadence — more amused than wrathful, more weary than cruel — might sound something like this:
The fellow strode among us not as Caesar enters Rome, but rather as a travelling showman arriving at a rain-drenched provincial fair; and yet the crowd, being mortal and commonly fond of brass trumpets, gathered round him with a species of delighted alarm.
He possessed that ancient and indestructible talent — namely, the ability to convert every parlour into a stage and every argument into a barroom anecdote. Others spoke in paragraphs; he preferred exclamation marks. Others sought the careful dignity of history; he pursued the immediate applause of the pit.
And still, one cannot wholly despise the mountebank.
For there was in the man a kind of volcanic merriment; a barbaric energy, noisy as a Fourth-of-July cannon and twice as smoky. He swaggered through the age of algorithms like an ageing pirate accidentally elected commodore of the digital fleet. The newspapers scolded him, the professors groaned, the financiers blushed discreetly into their cufflinks — yet half the world peered through its curtains to see what impossible proclamation might next issue forth at dawn.
He was bravado in a long red necktie.
He was gasconade fitted for television.
He was the carnival barker of the republic, crying miracles beside the roller-coaster while civilisation itself misplaced the instruction manual.
And perhaps that was the deeper comedy: not the man alone, but the immense mirror he unwillingly carried before us all. The republic saw itself there — loud, frightened, ingenious, wealthy, lonely, entertained unto exhaustion, and forever suspicious that somewhere beyond the neon horizon another empire was already sharpening its cutlery.
Thus he lounged in the imperial Lazyboy of the modern West: one hand clutching stimulants, another sacramental beads; one eye upon the stock market, the other upon eternity; surrounded by screens, slogans, prophets, salesmen, and comedians until none could any longer determine which profession governed the age.
The ancient Stoics would have sighed.
The medieval monks would have crossed themselves.
The advertising agencies, meanwhile, would immediately have offered him a sponsorship contract.
Yet let us not become excessively solemn. Mr. Stevenson himself understood that mankind is a creature absurdly stitched together from saint, actor, drunkard, schoolboy, tyrant, and dreamer. We are all, in our several fashions, ridiculous pilgrims rattling through the cosmos in hired machinery.
And so the noisy titan passes onward into posterity — half emperor, half vaudeville apparition — while the newspapers yellow, the satellites drift overhead, and some sleepless insomniac at three in the morning still mutters:
“What in Heaven’s name was THAT all about?”
DOH. :)