cabal <br />e tu brute resounds <br />in my mind <br /> <br />Inspired from: <br /> <br />Word of the Day for Wednesday March 17,2005 <br />cabal \kuh-BAHL; kuh-BAL\, noun: <br />1. A secret, conspiratorial association of plotters or <br /> intriguers whose purpose is usually to bring about an overturn <br /> especially in public affairs. <br />2. The schemes or plots of such an association. <br /> intransitive verb: <br /> To form a cabal; to conspire; to intrigue; to plot. <br /> If you constantly disagreed with Winters, he wrote you out <br /> of his cabal, his conspiracy against the poetry <br /> establishment. <br /> -Richard Elman, [1]Namedropping: Mostly Literary Memoirs <br /> My father always had been a collector. There were the <br /> stamps, National Geographics, scrapbooks filled with his <br /> favorite political cartoons, and booklets justifying his <br /> belief that the world was under the control of a global <br /> cabal of elites unified by such organizations as the <br /> Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations, <br /> and the Freemasons. <br /> -Frederick Kempe, [2]Father/Land <br /> But the new world of toys is by no means simply the product <br /> of a profit-mad cabal of toy pushers discovering new ways <br /> of exploiting the child market. <br /> -Gary Cross, [3]Kids' Stuff <br /> The Anti-Federalists were not simply concerned that <br /> Congress was too small relatively-too small to be truly <br /> representative of the great diversity of the nation. <br /> Congress was also too small absolutely-too small to be <br /> immune from cabal and intrigue. <br /> -Akhil Reed Amar, [4]The Bill of Rights<br /><br />john tiong chunghoo<br /><br />http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/haiku-cabal/
