Welcome to Poetry Friday! This week, we are fortunate to have the kind and charming Patricia Franz as our host. Patricia offers us a peek at her wish list for Santa this year.  Please enjoy visiting all of the Poetry Friday poets at Patricia's blog Reverie.

Recently, I found a massive Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary of The English Language, Unabridged (© 1975) at a book swap. 

I picked it up, thinking that I might use its large pages for wrapping paper or art projects, but as I started paging through, I realized that I mightn’t have the heart to shred it.  This five-inch-thick behemoth boasts finger notches, speckled page edges, and most importantly that musty old-book smell. 

Do you love the smell of books?  The first thing I do when browsing in a bookstore is take a deep inhale.  Apparently, my dog enjoys “book smell” too because she keeps walking by and sniffing this dictionary.  She also sneaks a quick lick if she thinks I'm not looking.  I digress.

Among other contents, this relic includes:

  • The Indo-European Family Tree of Languages
  • An Outline of the History of the English Language
  • Sub-dictionaries of: Biography, Geography, Noted Names in Fiction, Mythology, and Legend, Foreign Words and Phrases, and Scripture Proper Names
  • Common Abbreviations
  • Practical Business Mathematics
  • Forms of Address
  • Tables of Weights and Measures
  • Special Signs and Symbols (Did you know there are symbols for Mercury, Venus, Mars?)
  • Presidents of the USA  (With a 1975 copyright, how did they know Jimmy Carter would be president in 1977?)
  • Vice Presidents and Cabinet Officers
  • The Declaration of Independence
  • The Constitution of the United States
  • A Brief History of Canada  (Why only and specifically Canada, I wonder?)
  • Charter of the United Nations
  • Air Distances between Cities
  • Geographical Features of the World
  • Commercial and Financial Terms

Phew!  No wonder it is so thick. 

Also, it contains words.  Lots of words. 

There are some fun and old-timey words.

Of course, I had to try to mash these (almost) randomly-chosen words into a quick poem:

The Injured Gribble

Whilst perched upon my buckboard bench,
absorbed within a dream,
I came upon an injured gribble,
poppling in a stream*.

He’d clung among his gribble peers –
a glomerous, wet hunk.
Quickly, I discerped the fellow
from that gunky chunk.

I wrapped him scarfwise in my kerchief,
trying not to wrick,
and if you know your gribbles well,
you'll know that was a trick!

Thenadays, we all believed
that gribbles made good pets.
Nowadays, I have to say,
I’m having some regrets.

*Let's assume it was at least a brackish stream, as gribbles live in salt water.  
As for the gribble, he's actually kind of cute. 

Gribble, © Britannica

Well, the poem leaves something to be desired (it borders on the nonsense poem that I wrote several weeks ago), but it was a fun exercise!

Now, what to do with this brick of a dictionary...

29 comments

  • Tracey--I love this poem about the gribble!!!!! How cool! I often hunt down old books inside of Little Free Libraries. They make great pages for blackout poetry. But wow! I can see why you don't want to scar this lovely tome. :) 
    • Ooo!  I like the idea of a blackout poem.  I haven't tried one, but I have some other old books that I got at the same time that I have had no qualms about ripping up, so maybe there is something in there!
  • So delightful, I love your poem and its moving rhythm, also makes me smile! I like Marcie's suggestion and along the same lines (no pun intended) you could turn some of the pages into Zentangle poems… Have fun, and thanks for sharing many of  its parts too!
    • Michelle!  That is so cool!  I had never heard of a Zentangle poem, but I like the concept.  Another thing that I must try out very soon.
  • I just love the words, the sounds of them, like Gribble,  you discovered that I've never heard. I love Jabberwocky and your poem felt similar. It seems if you want to find words that sound weird and made up, that an old dictionary is the place to find them. Then-a-days surprised me and I could imagine someone at some past time using it to talk about a past time. Sounds like this dictionary is a keeper. 
  • What a wonderful find! I loved your rhyming gribble poem, so clever and fun. I have a 2 volume dictionary that I can't bring myself to tear up either. I call it "the big whopping dictionary." And the smell is old and divine! 

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