Posted on 09/05/2002 11:59:15 PM PDT by MadIvan
President Bush wears many hats besides his Texan stetson. His fans think of George Dubya as a good old boy who waves the lasso for Middle America. Neutrals see him as the most popular President in history, who has carried most of the United States and the sane world with him in his stand against mad Islamist murderers. Enemies consider him a Millionocchio twitching on the strings of oil tycoons and fundamentalist Christian bigots. Most of them see him as a man whose words get scrambled between head and voice into the wit and wisdom of Bushisms. Intellectual snobs sneer that he would have difficulty in talking and riding a bicycle (or in his case a cow pony) simultaneously. Nobody has yet described the President as a poet.
But he emerged as one at his meeting in Washington on Wednesday. He is going to tell the UN General Assembly that President Saddam Hussein is stiffing the world. And he says: For long years he has sidestepped, crawfished, wheedled out of any agreement he made not to develop weapons of mass destruction.
Neither to stiff nor to crawfish is a familiar metaphor in Britain. Both are vivid, as any boy who has fished for crawfish (or crayfish) in the chalk streams of England knows. The little critturs are brilliant at backing out of the kettle-on-a-string baited with rotting meat saved from school lunch. To stiff has several meanings in British English, either murderous or sexual. Georges application of it, meaning to cheat, will exercise the translators at the General Assembly. It should produce some hilarious malapropisms, with delegates shaking their écouteurs in disbelief.
Pedants will sneer at Georges neologisms. They always have. Other times of unprecedentedly rapid lexical innovation provoked outrage from the Mr Grumpies. They called them inkhorn terms. If the word had existed, they would have called them cowboy English. Dryden complained about those who corrupt our English Idiom by mixing it with too much French. Defoe called the inundation of slang a Frenzy of the Tongue, a Vomit of the Brain. By far the greatest sinner against the purity of English in their time was Shakespeare. Many of that great neologists creations have stuck: accommodation, assassination, barefaced, countless ... Others have fallen off the language tree: abruption, cadent, vastidity...
OK, say the pedants or, in their case, with the greatest respect. It is one thing to accept neologisms from poets and other creative writers. Cest leur métier. But do we have to take vulgar new words from politicians? Especially from those whose command of English is as Brahma-bullish as Bushs? Of course we must and do. Politicians and others in the public domain are prolific creators of new words and phrases. The Prime Minister has taught us the Third Way. Margaret Thatcher (through the impish medium of Julian Critchley) has given us to handbag as a verb. Chris Patten, a politician with a creative gift for language, popularised porkies and also the double whammy. The Chingford Skinhead will be recorded for having instructed us to get on our bikes. Politicians too neologise. Cest leur métier, aussi.
Neologisms come in many categories. Some are loanwords from other languages: glasnost, nouvelle cuisine. Some are compounded: couch potato. Others extend grammatical function: to handbag, to quest. Others shift a meaning: to spin, to necklace (to put a tyre soaked in petrol around somebodys neck, and set it alight), and, in Georges neologism, to stiff.
But the most poetic neologisms introduce a new metaphor: Altarwise by owl-light in the half-way house: Dylan Thomas. And, of course, Georges to crawfish.
And a neologism is seldom credited to its coiner. Language bubbles up all the time, wherever men talk to each other. It is only when their bright new coinage is picked up by some media magpie of language, or some celebrity whose words are shouted around the world, that it comes to public attention.
So let it be with the President. To stiff (to cheat, or refuse to pay or tip) has been floating around in the US since 1950. The Washington Post, 1982 declared: Instead of stiffing his servers, McCarthy should be stiffing their employers. To crawfish, meaning to withdraw unreservedly from an untenable position, has been swimming backwards in US bayous for even longer. The Congressional Globe, 1848 observed that: No sooner did they see the old British Lion rising up than they crawfished back to the 49th parallel.
The President may not know it, or show it. But he is a linguistic archaeologist as well as a poet. His vivid metaphors are just the kind of colloquialisms that we Limeys expect to hear around the Texan barbecue or bar of our imaginations. They are lovely.
I've been to Louisville too - I was slightly confused by that as well. But I guess you lot get confused when we say "Worcester" or "Gloucester".
Regards, Ivan
You're welcome. It has been rare to see the President's eloquence praised, but at last, things seem to be turning.
One hopes.
Regards, Ivan
You Brits are surprising me more and more everyday ..
I'm glad he's a southern .. Can you just imagine if grew up in South Philly
Yooooooooooooooo Tony
Hopefully that sentiment will be shared by Saddam shortly, in a more shocked and horrified sense, however. ;)
Regards, Ivan
For those of you in Rio Linda, Burlington and Boston it means "To Crayfish"
Ya'll come see us now ya heah!
I'll leave that task in far more experienced hands. ;)
Regards, Ivan
I'll give him a break on the proper Texas Hang .. hey maybe Bush will teach him a few more words this weekend .. LOL
One presumes that he has spent sufficient time in Texas to gain it.
Regards, Ivan
I don't know. I wasn't there. And by the grace of God, I never will be. ;)
Regards, Ivan
With beignets at the Cafe du Monde, yes.
Didn't get a waitress saying "swaaaytie" though, and that sort of diminished the experience. ;)
Regards, Ivan
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