Some people collect stamps, first editions or grievances. I collect words, phrases and sentences, and have since I was a kid. While in high school I read that Hart Crane, a fellow Ohioan, kept lists of words that attracted him as a magpie is attracted to shiny things. Some words, absent meaning, mesmerized him by their sound: words as music. He resolved to find a home for them in future poems – and did, sometimes to the detriment of the poems. I remember findrinny, a word he eventually rejected, though Yeats and Joyce had used it. A fine word if pinned in a specimen case, but not for use in more prosaic settings, especially if you are not Irish.
Virtually every time I
read a book, especially one from the pre-Hemingway era, I find at least one or
two words new to me, or familiar words used in a novel sense, or words so
striking in sound or sense that they ought to be preserved. So I write them
down. Some are recycled into whatever I happen to be writing. English is so
rich in vocabulary, to the point of glorious redundancy, that a writer would be
ungrateful not to mine it. In her foreword to A Marianne Moore Reader
(1961), Moore writes:
“Verse: ‘Why the many
quotation marks?’ I am asked. Pardon my saying more than once, When a thing has
been said so well that it could not be said better, why paraphrase it? Hence my
writing is, if not a cabinet of fossils, a kind of collection of flies in
amber.”
Some readers will decide
Moore’s collecting instinct – and mine – is yet another form of showing off: “Look
what I’ve read and you haven’t!” Rather, it’s proper etiquette and sometimes even
a humble, generous gesture: “Look what I’ve read! Isn’t it wonderful? So
wonderful, I wanted to share it with you.”
1 comment:
"Virtually every time I read a book, ... I find at least one or two words new to me, or familiar words used in a novel sense, ... So I write them down."
Today, I saved three such:
"feminine gestures and COQUETRIES to be used in ENMESHING some merchant or manufacturer" .. "she COQUETTED with an aesthetic dentist"
From Dahlberg's "Bottom Dogs, ...". (Which I thank you for leading me to read.)
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