​Our Dust by C. D. Wright

I am your ancestor. You know next-to-nothing
about me.
There is no reason for you to imagine
the rooms I occupied or my heavy hair.
Not the faint vinegar smell of me. Or
the rubbed damp
of Forrest and I coupling on the landing
en route to our detached day.

You didn’t know my weariness, error, incapacity,
I was the poet
of shadow work and towns with quarter-inch
phone books, of failed
roadside zoos. The poet of yard eggs and
sharpening shops,
jobs at the weapons plant and the Maybelline
factory on the penitentiary road.

A poet of spiderwort and jacks-in-the-pulpit,
hollyhocks against the tool shed.
An unsmiling dark blond.
The one with the trowel in her handbag.
I dug up protected and private things.
That sort, I was.
My graves went undecorated and my churches
abandoned. This wasn’t planned, but practice.

I was the poet of short-tailed cats and yellow
line paint.
Of satellite dishes and Peterbilt trucks. Red Man
Chewing Tobacco, Black Cat Fireworks, Triple Hut
Creme Soda. Also of dirt dobbers, nightcrawlers,
martin houses, honey, and whetstones
from the Novaculite Uplift. What remained
of The Uplift.

I had registered dogs 4 sale; rocks, dung,
and straw.
I was a poet of hummingbird hives along with
redhead stepbrothers.

The poet of good walking shoes—a necessity
in vernacular parts—and push mowers.
The rumor that I was once seen sleeping
in a refrigerator box is false (he was a brother
who hated me).
Nor was I the one lunching at the Governor’s
mansion.

I didn’t work off a grid. Or prime the surface
if I could get off without it. I made
simple music
out of sticks and string. On side B of me,
experimental guitar, night repairs and suppers
such as this.
You could count on me to make a bad situation
worse like putting liquid make-up over
a passion mark.

I never raised your rent. Or anyone else’s by God.
Never said I loved you. The future gave me chills.
I used the medium to say: Arise arise and
come together.
Free your children. Come on everybody. Let’s start
with Baltimore.

Believe me I am not being modest when I
admit my life doesn’t bear repeating. I
agreed to be the poet of one life,
one death alone. I have seen myself
in the black car. I have seen the retreat
of the black car.

Quote of the Day

I accept this idea of democracy. I am all for trying it out. It must be a good thing if everybody praises it like that. If our government has been willing to go to war and sacrifice billions of dollars and millions of men for the idea I think that I ought to give the thing a trial. The only thing that keeps me from pitching head long into this thing is the presence of numerous Jim Crow laws on the statute books of the nation. I am crazy about the idea of Democracy. I want to see how it feels.

–Zora Neale Hurston

word of the day

misocainea  n.
Pronunciation
(mis-oh-KY-nee-uh, mi-soh-)

A hatred of new ideas.

From Greek miso- (hate) + -cainea (new). Earliest documented use: 1938.

“A crucial objective of our program is to remove any innate misocainea ‘hatred of new ideas’, and replace it with the entrepreneurial principle of ‘change is an opportunity to create competitive advantage’.”
Bill Weaver; Change for the Better; Scientific Computing & Instrumentation (Morris Plains, New Jersey); Jan 2005.  

word of the day – parwhobble

parwhobble

(n.) a parley or conference between two or three persons (dialect)
(vb.) to talk continuously, so as to engross the conversation; to talk quickly, to chatter (dialect)

From: An Exmoor Scolding:
In the Propriety and Decency of Exmoor Language,
Between Two sisters, Wilmot Moreman and Thomansin Moreman as they were spinning,
Peter Lock, 1782
An Exmoor courtship
P.20

Word of the Day – minimifidian

minimifidianadj. and n.

That reduces faith to a minimum; having little faith.
Origin:A borrowing from Latin, combined with English elements. Etymons: Latin minimus-i- connective-fidian comb. form.

Etymology: <  classical Latin minimus smallest (see minimum n. and adj.) + -i- connective + -fidian comb. form, after nullifidian n. and adj.solifidian n. and adj.

N.E.D. (1906) gives the pronunciation as (mi:nimifi·diăn) /ˌmɪnɪmɪˈfɪdɪən/.
 Obs. rare.

 A.adj.

  That reduces faith to a minimum; having little faith.

1825  S. T. Coleridge Aids Refl. 356 The Minimi-fidian party err grievously in the latter point.
1854 Harper’s Mag. June 117/1 These attempts to prop up our belief by the endorsement of the politician, or the patronizing certificate of the minimifidian man of science.
 B.n.

  A person who has the least possible faith in something.

1882 Spectator 2 Dec. 1547 Lady Bloomfield’s ‘supernatural’ stories..are not of a kind to challenge the scrutiny of a minimifidian in pneumatology.
Derivatives
 minimifidianism n.

1825  S. T. Coleridge Aids Refl. 207 Again, there is a scheme constructed on the principle of retaining the social sympathies, that attend on the name of believer, at the least possible expenditure of belief… And this expenditure I call Minimifidianism.

Word of the Day – Oil of angels

Oil of angels  n.
A gift or bribe of money, the reference being of course to the coin, angel.

(The angel was an English gold coin introduced by Edward IV in 1465. It was patterned after the French angelot or ange, which had been issued since 1340. The name derived from its representation of the archangel Michael slaying a dragon.)

“Lawyers are troubled with the heat of the liver, which makes the palms of their hands so hot, that they cannot be cool’d, unlesse they be rub’d with the oile of angels.”

Greene, Quip for Upstart Courtier.

“I have seen him
Cap a pie gallant, and his stripes wash’d off
With oil of angels.”

Massinger, Duke of Milan.
A Supplementary English Glossary, 1881

Hand of Glory

Hand of Glory, n.
[‘ Originally: a charm made from or consisting of the root of a mandrake (see the etymology) (now rare). Later: a charm or talisman made from the dried and pickled hand of an executed criminal, used esp. (with a specially prepared candle placed within it) to render the occupants of a house motionless during a burglary.’]
Pronunciation: Brit. /ˌhand ə(v) ˈɡlɔːri/,  U.S. /ˌhænd ə(v) ˈɡlɔri/
Inflections:  Plural  hands of glory.
Etymology: <  hand n. + of prep. + glory n., after French main de gloire (c1436 in Middle French as maindegloire), alteration of mandegloremandegloire (seemandglorye n.) by folk-etymological association with main hand (see main n.3), de de prep., and gloire glory n.
 Now chiefly hist.

  Originally: a charm made from or consisting of the root of a mandrake (see the etymology) (now rare). Later: a charm or talisman made from the dried and pickled hand of an executed criminal, used esp. (with a specially prepared candle placed within it) to render the occupants of a house motionless during a burglary.

Various stories and legends exist concerning the preparation and use of the Hand of Glory. A detailed description followed by many later texts is given by Francis Grose inProvinc. Gloss. (1787) 73-5. See also Scott Antiquary (1816) II. ii. 46-7.
[1687  tr. P. Jurieu Accomplishm. Script. Prophecies xix. 191 He assists at the right hand of God, because that is the hand of glory, and glory is for him.]
1707  tr. P. Le Lorrain de Vallemont Curiosities in Husbandry & Gardening 284 Mountebanks..make of it [sc. mandrake] what we call a Hand of Glory..They..make believe, that by using some little Ceremonies, the Silver they lay near it, will increase to double the Sum every Morning.
1787  F. Grose Provinc. Gloss. Superstitions 74 The use of the Hand of Glory was to stupify those to whom it was presented, and to render them motionless.
1816  Scott Antiquary II. ii. 46 De hand of glory..which de monksh used to conceal their treasures when they were triven from their cloisters.
1858  J. Timbs Pop. Errors(new ed.) 140 The Hand of Glory..was supposed to be a sure protection to robbers when committing their crimes.
1900  F. T. Elworthy Horns of Honour iii. 181 There are many stories told..in which it appeared that nothing but milk could extinguish the flame of the ‘hand of glory’.
1917 Bull. John Rylands Libr. Jan. 372 We have the belief that the ‘hand-of-glory’ can be dug up under a gibbet, both in England and France.
1979  B. Walker Body Magic 101 The ‘hand of glory’, the pickled hand of an executed criminal the fingers of which were used as candles, was believed to confer invisibility.
2002  N. Drury Dict. Esoteric 132/2 The Hand of Glory was supposed to have the magical power to freeze people in their footsteps.

Scottish words for snow

shelling (a fall of snow on the back of a sheep)
flother (a flake of snow)
windcrust (a crust formed on the surface of soft snow by the wind)
hap (a heavy fall of snow)
besnow (to cover or whiten with snow)
reek (a pile of snow)
penitent (a spike or pinnacle of compact snow that has been sculpted by the elements)
whited (covered with snow)
blind-drift (a drift of heavy snow)
mafting (drifting snow)
balter (snow adhering to horses’ hooves)
blunk (to snow lightly)
snittering (the fall of snow)
plodgy (of deep snow that’s not yet trodden down)
oversnow (whiten over with snow)
hogamadog (a huge ball of snow made by boys rolling a snowball over soft snow)