Vernacular.It was Thoreau who wanted to pull words up with dirt still clinging to the roots. He needed to watch Latin, Sanskrit, and Greek bleed to Saxon, then English, green as elm leaves or bright as privet. He kept a steady thirst for sap and the crisp snap of a tuber tuber, enlarged tip of a rhizome (underground stem) that stores food. Although much modified in structure, the tuber contains all the usual stem parts—bark, wood, pith, nodes, and internodes. , savoring equally carrot, sumac, and rhubarb or dew sparkling on chitin. He told Emerson, who was astonished a·ston·ish tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise. at his arrowpoint collection, "I just reach down, and there they are, so many syllables in the path." He saw each flint as a berry and touched it to his tongue to know something of flight and the nicked fingers that shaped it. "Language," he would ponder, "is the way my tongue makes sense of shadows, the breath and osculum osculum /os·cu·lum/ (os´ku-lum) pl. os´cula [L.] a small aperture or minute opening. os·cu·lum n. pl. os·cu·la A pore or minute opening. it lives in, the way flora orchestrate water and obdurate soil." He moved through fields and woodlands tasting radiant moss, tickseed tickseed, name sometimes used for the bur marigold, coreopsis, tick trefoil or beggarweed, and other bur-producing weeds. and meadow rue, promising nothing odd, crackpot or disfangled could ever be mere debris if you reach down and lift it, if you speak its savory name precisely in the oracular o·rac·u·lar adj. 1. Of, relating to, or being an oracle. 2. Resembling or characteristic of an oracle: a. Solemnly prophetic. b. Enigmatic; obscure. household of the unfurling world. |
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