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Chapter 22 - Parable

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 February 2024

Joshua Davies
Affiliation:
King's College London
Caroline Bergvall
Affiliation:
Queen Mary University of London
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Summary

For Caroline Bergvall

trees, pillars in nature’s temple, speaking vague, perplexing words, “shimmers of verbal nuance” often nonsense in this language, obfuscation confuses paroles easily becomes palabras confusas not to be taken for confused or subdued words the adjective describes the words’ effect on their recipient, not their own state—the syntax of placement is keydo they utter “darkling whispers”is theirs “a soft language, half strange, half understood”

their messages ramifying

AVISO: LA PALABRA PALABRA NO ESTÁ EN EL DICCIONARIO

(Diccionario histórico de la lengua española)

palabra, metathesis of the Latin parabola, from the Greek parabolē, a comparison, a juxtaposition: para- “alongside” and bolē

“a throwing, casting, beam, ray”

parable, doublet of parole

comparison becomes narration in vulgar Latin and parabola becomes palabra, the word for word

Math.: A parabola is a curve where any point is equidistant from a fixed point (the focus) and a fixed straight line (the directrix)

an instructive allegory: if an utterance is a curve, any and all of its points are at an equal but growing distance from its focus

a line of verse is not to be taken for a directrix

confused, doublet of confound

confusioun, c. 1300 “overthrow, ruin” from Old French “disorder, confusion, shame” (11c.)

confound, c. 1300, “to condemn, curse,” also “to destroy utterly”; from Anglo-French confoundre, Old French confondre (12c.)

“crush, ruin, disgrace”

all from the Latin confundere: com “together” and fundere “to pour”

“to confuse, jumble together, bring into disorder” especially of the mind or

senses, “disconcert, perplex”

SIN ORDEN NI CONCIERTO

Old English word “speech, talk, utterance, sentence, statement, news, report, word,”

from Proto-Indo-European were- “speak,

say.”

A girl stands alone on the road. Her thoughts are in a language other than this one. She takes in a playground abutting a gully outside a housing complex at the southern edge of the city. An empty swing set on a concrete platform. Stray dogs on the other side of the wire fence. The wind rustles the foliage of surrounding trees. They start speaking to her for the first time, yet she can’t put what they say into any of the words she knows. She contemplates the dance that initiates the drift of spores allowing the trees to go on multiplying.

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Caroline Bergvall's Medievalist Poetics
Migratory Texts and Transhistorical Methods
, pp. 187 - 188
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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