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Authors: Phil Cousineau

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AFTER TALE
There is a coda at the end of George Plimpton’s wonderful posthumous collection of essays,
The Man in the Flying Lawn Chair
, titled “Wish List,” in which he lists the many things he would like to do before he dies. In that spirit of wishful thinking I offer here a final section of words, some untranslatable but indispensable, that I wish could be revived, used, and enjoyed for their sheer delight.
Charles Mackay titled his 19th-century dictionary
Lost Beauties
, to describe unfortunately abandoned, deleted, or misplaced words or derivations. Edifying examples abound, such as
emersal
, what a light wood does when released as it bops to the water’s surface, perhaps inspired by
emerge
. Also
hurkle
, to shrug shoulders.
Acnestis
refers to the part of an animal’s back that it just… can’t…reach to scratch. Brewer defines
merry-thoughts
as “the
furcula
or wishing-bone in the breast of a fowl; sometimes pulled asunder by two persons, the one holding the larger portion being supposed to have his wish.” Fellow words include
merry-go-sorry,
a story that conveys joy and sorrow, happiness and sadness, at same time: good news and bad news. If Mackay can immortalize a raft full of “lost beauties,” I can rescue a handful of “lost love-lies,” such as
skyme
, a glimmer of light, and
spoffle
, to look busy while trifling over little matters. Stevenson’s Scottish dictionary lists the wonderful mouthful
clishmaclaver
, idle talk, gossip—a word Scotland’s Radio Three describes as having built into it “a feeling of tongues wagging endlessly.” The OED provides us with the pugnacious
bully-scribbler,
a nasty writer. And one of the most charming derivations of all is Diane Ackerman’s discovery of the Aramaic origins of the word
poet
, which denotes, says she, the sound of water rushing over pebbles.
The Scottish
tartle
means “to hesitate in recognizing someone or something.” Far more fun—and forgivable—to say than that we’ve gone “brain-dead” when we meet somebody and can’t conjure up their name. An eye-popping illustration of this comes from the old Scottish term
groping
, which, according to Cox, 1828, was “a mode of catching trout by tickling them with the hands under rocks or banks.” Stevenson calls this Highlands and Borderlands practice
guddling
, “to catch fish with hands by feeling way into places in a stream where they may lurk. The ability to guddle trout is an admired skill.” Stevenson reports that in 1987 one Glasgow hospital averaged 21 soccer and rugby players “
hirpling
through the doors every week.” I can personally attest to the still widespread Scottish use of the hilarious-sounding
hirple
, to walk with a limp, to hobble. When I was hospitalized for pneumonia in northern Scotland in the summer of 2007, I overheard one nurse joking to another,
“Did ye see the Yank
hirpling
in here this afternoon?”
And finally, a last word to consider reviving: the Greek
aposiopesis
, which means “becoming silent.” Remember the old radio comedy
Fibber McGee and Molly
? Each show ended with Fibber saying , “I’ll just look here in the hall closet, and—” followed by crashing sounds and then pure, golden, cleansing silence.
BOOK: Wordcatcher
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