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waiting for Gogol

if I adopt most of Paul Stewart’s recommendations from his seminal work The Writers Writing Guide maybe I too can join the full gonzo ranks of the iconoclastic glitterati like my hero Paul

By John CoxPublished 3 months ago Updated 3 months ago 3 min read
Nikolai Gogol, Daguerreotype, c. 1845

on March 25th I arrived at the bus stop early and out of breath two other passengers loitering beneath the sign stared at one another’s shoes with the sort of interest and anticipation usually reserved for a pretty lass once I caught my breath I greeted the pair jovially but neither looked up instead continuing to stare at one another’s shoes as if expecting something more interesting than the doubtless smelly feet that hid coyly within them it was all extraordinarily strange I tried diverting my attention to avoid joining them in their staring contest by remarking to myself on the poor condition of the road or the terribly worn pickup times on the bus schedule beginning to wonder with increasing irritation when the damn bus would arrive and speculating on whether my silent staring compatriots would notice and board and then sit together to keep an eye on one another’s feet or if they had other stranger business outside my comprehension but once curiosity got the best of me I blurted out waiting for the umm number six gentleman and the one standing closest to me mumbled no waiting for gawd dam Gogol scratching my head I said do you mean waiting for Google it often makes me curse and other one looked up crossly and loudly exclaimed Gogol we’re waiting for Gogol who is this umm Gogol I replied in turn and he hitched his pants as if he had waited for an excuse to do that all morning and slapped his partner hard on the shoulder and shouted who erm is this damn fool Gogol and the other shrugged and rubbed his great bulbous nose so hard that I feared it might pop and spray us both with some puslike effluvium and I shuddered involuntarily the sight of it disrupted my thoughts so completely that I forgot the two men staring resolutely at one another's shoes were waiting for a man that neither they nor I knew though it was perfectly grotesque once I had laid eyes on his swollen probiscis I could not take them off it again strange thoughts infected my mind my feverous imagination conjuring in his swollen sniffer Hell's fire and poor tiny tormented souls howling like banshees in its eternal flames but once I wrenched my own tortured gaze from its bulbous pitted mass I remembered the gentleman who kept them waiting and thought I had heard his name somewhere before so pulling my phone from my pocket I asked Siri who is Gogol she chirped here is some info about Nikolai Gogol he was a Russian novelist short-story writer and playwright of Ukrainian origin born April 1 1809 and died February 21 1852 I think I see a problem with your plans gentlemen you're waiting for someone who died almost one hundred and seventy-five years ago I said with full-throated triumph bulbous nose said I don't see why that should be a problem and his friend vigorously agreed and I was so flustered by their answers that the number six came and went while I stood like a flatfooted boobie soon I too waited like a double breasted idiot for Gogol flinching every time Cyrano D picked at his monstrous nose hours passed in silence which I spent reading Gogol's fiction on my handy device to determine what we might learn if his ghost actually deigned to visit the bus stop where I missed the number six not once not twice not thrice but every bleeding time it passed by sucked in by that hellacious hound dog of a nose and the imagined torment of the wee folk trapped within it do you suppose Gogol can shed any light on such an enormous nose another man arrived and asked me are you waiting for the number six not me brother I answered I'm reading Gogol is it good he asked I shrugged I couldn't say I don't understand Russian

fin

Pulitzer prize please

...

insincere apologies to Thomas Beckett Nikolai Gogol and Hunter S Thompson

The Writer's Writing Guide

I now await the lavish attention of my master Paul like a puppy who piddled on the floor with excitement in anticipation of pets and a treat

Stream of Consciousness

About the Creator

John Cox

Twisted teller of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Aint got none of that.

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Comments (12)

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  • Dharrsheena Raja Segarran3 months ago

    Wooohooooo congratulations on your Leaderboard placement! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Lamar Wiggins3 months ago

    Man! I don't think I blinked or took a breath the entire time, 😅. You two are hilarious. Going to go read about the unofficial challenge now. Thank you for the laughs.

  • Caitlin Charlton3 months ago

    Out of breath 🤣 🚉Pretty lass. Okay, now this is starting to sound like Paul. - Staring at the shoes is starting to sound funny, especially after being greeted. 🚉 I totally relate. I get sick and tired of getting sick and tired of waiting for the bus. - Gogol 🤣 Google 🚉 Puslike effluvium 🤢 - bulbous pitted mass 🤣🤣 I enjoyed all your phrases used, for this persons nose. 🚉 What a clever way to tell us a little about Nikolai Gogol. - came and went 🤣🤣 🤣 and I really thought he was going to get on. 🚉 'I couldn't say, I don't understand Russian' 🤣🤣 - This was outstanding, especially without punctuations, lol. ♥️🤗🖤

  • Mark Gagnon3 months ago

    I don't want to sound nosy, but what did you step in to put your nose out of joint. Crazy story John.

  • Hannah Moore3 months ago

    Oh that is brilliant - it makes me want to read half a dozen plays and also, perhaps no need.

  • C. Rommial Butler3 months ago

    Well-wrought satire! There are so many levels here, and so many references. I'll speak only to Thompson: past "Fear and Loathing", he was the character and his life and many addictions became the work of grotesque art, whereas the quality of his writing and social commentary seemed to greatly diminish. This seems to be the general trend with those who focus as such on the absurd to the exclusion of the real, as also seemed to happen with many of the Beat poets and the surrealists. I cannot say, for my part, if this is a good or bad thing, but I suspect it is just... a thing.

  • Paul Stewart3 months ago

    Sir. How the fuck is it that you do this and it still reads well? The wriitng is impeccably hilarious and I love the constant jibes that become more andmore irreverent and gross of the poor fella's eyes. Simply letting all comments aside and just referring him as the great Cyranno D was a masterstroke. Although I have yet to dive properly into James Joyce or Hunter S Thompson (I have a stack of books including four Bukowski to get through before I move onto Naked Lunch and Fear and Loathing, Ulysses, Dubliners and Finnegans Wake - cos I'm a glutton for punishment and rulebreaking) it reminds me very much of those. Even Hemingway could do well with the tell don't show side of things. So all in all, please go back to using grammar and point proven. But, also, well done on a seriously good bit of anarchic fiction/faction whatever I just read. I now know more about Gogol than I did before reading this. So thanks for that too. This will likely get a Top Story. ha. Your Master and Hero commends you. lol. I sicked in my mouth saying that. Well done, sir.

  • Lana V Lynx3 months ago

    James Joyce writing style meeting the Gogol's plot of a runaway nose. Terrific story, John, really deserving a literary prize. And still I'm glad we have punctuation marks.

  • Sean A.3 months ago

    Going gonzo for Gogol. Well done!

  • L.C. Schäfer3 months ago

    The poppiing pustule of a nose got me 😬

  • Katarzyna Popiel3 months ago

    What a treat made me think of Joyce rather than PS, but what do I know never read that writers writing guide so no gonzo or anything

  • "rubbed his great bulbous nose so hard that I feared it might pop and spray us both with some puslike effluvium" Lol, I shuddered at that too 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Your story was so hilarious! At first it was quite hard for me to read but I quickly got used to it. I had fun reading this!

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