To be, or not to be, a drabbler, that is the question. Whither the point to suffer the mind, spill ink upon blank page, then feel the slings and arrows of outrageous critics?
(Or worse, feel none, and be unheard, unread, which marks perchance calamity for so brief a composition.)
Devoutly to be wish’d: To be a drabbler no more, and by our silence bid an end to the
heart-ache of a hundred measly words, the contrivances of plot and rickety premise, the sly shuffle with hyphens and compound-words.
To drabble, or not to drabble: ay, there be the rub.
Notes: (1) So far this month we have been on a bee/b/be of sorts. Check the archive here. (2) A “drabble,” by the way, is (according to Wikipedia) “a short work
of fiction of precisely one hundred words in length”—witness the confections
served on this blogsite. “The purpose of a drabble is brevity, testing the
author’s ability to express interesting and meaningful ideas in a confined
space.” We make no claims regarding interesting or meaningful and vouch only
for the hundred words (though sometimes we cheat with sneaky hyphens or made-up
compound words, these end notes being a case-in-point).
Inspired by More Bs. Image of Sarah Bernhardt as Hamlet, 1899, from the Shakespeare Centre Library, Stratford-upon-Avon