Thursday, October 06, 2005
Poetry Thursday
Myrtle
by John Ashberry
How funny your name would be
if you could follow it back to where
the first person thought of saying it,
naming himself that, or maybe
some other persons thought of it
and named that person. It would
be like following a river to its source,
which would be impossible. Rivers have no source.
They just automatically appear at a place
where they get wider, and soon a real
river comes along, with fish and debris,
regal as you please, and someone
has already given it a name: St. Benno
(saints are popular for this purpose) or, or
some other name, the name of his
long-lost girlfriend, who comes
at long last to impersonate that river,
on a stage, her voice clanking
like its bed, her clothing of sand
and pasted paper, a piece of real technology,
while all along she is thinking, I can
do what I want to do. But I want to stay here.
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1 comment:
I really, really like that.
I think of this business of names a lot when we're driving around in an unfamiliar neighborhood. Or when we were house-hunting. Oh, look! We could live on Druid Lane or some such thing. Or Fluffy Bunny Meadowes.
As it is, I live on Quail Run Lane. How many quail have I seen in my seven-plus months of residence? I'll let you guess.
But it's still such a neat, romantic notion to name places. Much better than Road No. 453, or something like that.
I love how some old houses in England (any in America? I guess) have names. I have a British friend whose parents live in a house with a name. Their entire little town is surrounded by an old stone fence. But now I'm really rambling. Sorry about that.
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