Showing posts with label witch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label witch. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Eidolon - Boo! – Wordplay Wednesday™ 10/30/2019


Is it Good? Is it Bad? I’m so scared 

We tend to ignore, refuse to believe, or fear, that which we cannot touch or see. Is it good or bad? It all depends …

EIDOLON (ī doʹlɘn) n. – 1) an image without real existence, phantom, apparition; *2) an ideal person or thing (adj. –  eidolic). [WW #240;*Americanism]

Phantom of the OperaPatrick Swayze in Ghost … the Bell Witch … all could arguably be seen (or not) as an eidolon, in its original definition. I’m not quite sure how to take the second description, however. The two aren’t just unrelated, they’re polar opposites!  
Of course, Webster might argue there is no such thing as an “ideal person”—à la apparition—in which case, I would have to agree. Although, “idol” once tentatively served in the eidolon capacity; the dictionary now relegates that definition to obsolete/archaic, keeping idol as an image of a god or other worshipped object of reverence.

For our purpose and weekly fun—after all, it’s Halloween!—we’ll focus on (or try to) that which is not there. The problem comes in when our eyes perceive an eidolon, but our minds are confused by its ethereal existence. Is it or isn’t it real?

From seances to exorcisms, haunted houses to a watery oasis in the desert … how can we trust what we hear
or see? It could be a broad daylight welcome vision, or a famously inky night, wispy clouds floating across a blood-red full moon. Turning to surreptitiously peek over your shoulder, the hackles rise on the back of your neck. You shiver uncontrollably, feeling an ice-cold chill blow across your cheek. What—who—is that shadowy figure gliding behind? You try to run, but your feet don’t get the message. Spinning around again to confront your fear, the eidolon faded into the night.

On Halloween eidolons are often unfriendly, but they can be sociable, insistent and irritating … and some even have a sense of humor. Think Sam Wheat (Patrick Swayze) in GhostOda Mae Brown (Whoopi Goldberg) to Molly (Demi Moore) about Sam, “I don't know you. I don't know Sam but let me tell you what he did to me. He kept me up all night singing ‘I'm Henry the Eighth I Am.’”

Word Challenge: EIDOLON. Will you face your fears this Halloween and slip eidolon into your week of spooky, unearthly writings, with trepidation or a humorous twist?

Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t fattening! Expanding your mind is a no-cost, simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments below.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

Wicked Witch of the West       

[LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series about pioneering R&R Radio DJs. True behind-the-mic tales make GREAT Holiday Gifts available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon … The Psychedelic Seventies!]

Note: Dictionary definitions are quoted from Webster’s New World College Dictionary.
Endnote: FYI – All links in the PFP site are personally visited, verified, and vetted. Most are linked to commonly accessed sites of reputable note. However, as with everything cyber-security, use at your own discretion.

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz  

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Grimalkin – Wordplay Wednesday™ 11/07/18


One Last Word Before the Parties Begin … 

Are you shaking off the somber pall of Halloween and heading full-bore into pumpkin season parties with an attitude of gratitude? Well we have a word for you this week that cleans up the final dark vestiges of October 2018’s last days …

GRIMALKIN (gri malʹkin) n. – 1) a cat, esp. an old female cat; 2) a malicious old woman. [WW #189] 

I suppose we could say “witch” or her “familiar” but what’s the fun in that? Insert grimalkin into your vocabulary for an interesting twist to your furtive fiction.

“She felt the eyes of the grimalkin stalking her as she walked hurriedly out of the shadows, into the arc of the streetlight.”

Word Challenge: GRIMALKIN. Choose your words carefully to represent without malice, as you fit grimalkin into your week of creative writings.

Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t fattening! Expanding your mind is a no-cost, simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments below.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

                       
  
LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series. They make GREAT Holiday Gifts available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon, … The Psychedelic Seventies!

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Wordplay Wednesday™ November 2, 2016 – Verism



Beautiful! Warts and All 

Ah, I found the perfect word for you this week, to follow the amusement and mystery of Halloween. Being the Scorpio I am, I identify most with the Halloween witch. Her familiar/muse is the sinuous black cat, and her striking, discreet beauty mark is a small, comely wart that lies aside her nose.

Beautiful, or hag? You decide …

VERISM  (virʹiz’ɘm) n. – realism or naturalism in the arts. [WW #84]

First found in Roman art during the latter part of the Roman Republic, verism goes beyond beautiful to form a more expressive realism in art; one might say, as “beauty in the eye of the beholder.”

There is no denying the considerable artistic talents of the Romans—and their realism period of verism waxed and waned over the centuries. By the late 1800s, it began to infiltrate Italy’s operatic productions that created a genre with such masters as Pietro Mascagni and Giacomo Puccini (Madame Butterfly).

I often go to Wiki for further explanation of a word or phrase; not as the definitive expert, but as an enhancement to my definitions. This time, the Wiki editor(s) made a notable observation: Verism, often described as "warts and all", shows the imperfections of the subject, such as warts, wrinkles and furrows. It should be absolutely noted that the term veristic in no way implies that these portraits are more "real". Rather, they too can be highly exaggerated or idealised, but within a different visual idiom, one which favours wrinkles, furrows, signs of age as indicators of gravity and authority.

So—applied to the 2016 presidential election, the “art of politics” today is a particular form of verism at its best … um, or worst.

Word Challenge: VERISM. More broadly applied—when our friends and family have warts, and we love them anyway. Can you fit verism into your week of beautiful writings?


               
        

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