“I
am in blood
Stepp’d
in so far that, should I wade no more,
Returning
were as tedious as go o’er:
Strange
things I have in head, that will to hand;
Which
must be acted ere they may be scann’d.”
History
is nothing if not bloody. Ours is a bloody-minded species. The OED’s second citation, by another Scot,
Thomas Carlyle, appeared in 1832: “England has escaped the blood-bath of a
French Revolution.” The dictionary gives four subsequent citations dated
between 1919 and 2005. All are drawn from the popular press. It’s a tabloid
word, vulgarly sensational, likelier to be used by a journalist than a
legitimate historian. In a Simpson’s
episode, Homer buys a revolver from the Bloodbath & Beyond Gun
Shop. But the word’s referent is a daily occurrence somewhere, hardly a moral anomaly.
Consider the OED’s first definition: “A
battle or fight at which much blood is spilt; a wholesale slaughter, a massacre.”
In brief, the twentieth century.
Each
morning the OED emails its “Word of
the Day” feature to subscribers. On Tuesday, the choice was “bloodbath,” and some readers objected. They found the choice “insensitive,” “in poor taste” and “tasteless
and gross,” among other expressions of ersatz sensitivity. The dictionary issued an apology and removed “bloodbath” as a “Word
of the Day.” The editors explained that their daily words are chosen by committee months
in advance and posted automatically. Nonetheless, they added:
“The
timing of today's word is a coincidence of the worst kind, and we apologize for
any distress or upset caused by what might appear to be a highly insensitive
choice.”
For
the next “Word of the Day” I nominate “craven,” defined by the OED as “That owns himself beaten or
afraid of his opponent; cowardly, weak-hearted, abjectly pusillanimous.” Hamlet
uses it:
“Now,
whether it be
Bestial
oblivion, or some craven scruple
Of
thinking too precisely on th' event,--
A
thought which, quarter'd, hath but one part wisdom
And
ever three parts coward.”
3 comments:
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world`s more full of weeping
Than you can understand.
-- William Butler Yeats, The Stolen Child, 1889
'Blood' occurs 19 times in Titus Andronicus and 23 times in Macbeth.
Accuracy matters.
ROSS: Your castle is surprised; your wife and babes
Savagely slaughter'd: to relate the manner,
Were, on the quarry of these murder'd deer,
To add the death of you.
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