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- From: sstover@sumax.seattleu.edu ( Wilde Dame)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.poems
- Subject: Re: sonata... / Marek "love as a drug", "sex as need", Re: Need - A Poem
- Date: 21 Dec 1992 08:24:12 -0800
- Organization: Seattle University
- Lines: 25
- Message-ID: <1h4r3cINNtav@sumax.seattleu.edu>
- References: <BzJtvp.8wz@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu> <1992Dec20.164757.18166@news.cs.indiana.edu> <1h4c12INN4rm@leela.CS.ORST.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sumax.seattleu.edu
-
- With all this talk of fucking going on, I thought I would relate a bit of
- trivia regarding the word fuck to you all. It was indeed at one time an
- acceptable (commonplace and therefore base, but acceptable) Anglo-Saxon
- term for sexual intercourse--during the early medieval times, in fact.
- While perusing one of those enormous multi-volume dictionaries during a
- summer session at Scripps College a few years ago, my friend Julian and I
- discovered the word "wanderfuck" (ca. 13th century). A wanderfuck, the
- dictionary told us, was a hunter of kestrels (a European falcon which is
- known for hovering in the air against the wind). It also told us that, in
- the time of wanderfucks, kestrels were commonly known as "windfuckers."
- This led us to look up "fuck" (something we all must do at one or another
- point in our lives, I suppose :) ) and discover that its unacceptability
- was largely the result of mid- and late-Medieval attitudes in England
- toward sex becoming less and less tolerant. Sex was dirty, so the word
- for it became dirty too. It is for this reason that you will find the
- middle english equivalents for "cunt" in Chaucer but only vague allusions
- to the French term for "cunt" in Shakespeare.
-
- Mere trivia. Designed to keep you thinking on topic. :)
-
- Merry Christmas.
- --
- Sheryl Stover % If you ask me what I have come to do in the world,
- & Hemingway & Clio % I who am an artist, I will reply: "I am here to
- sstover@seattleu.edu % live aloud." -Emile Zola
-