Party going to seed
WICKED WORD
By V.S. Jayaschandran
Rousseau did not read any erotic book until he was 30. "These are books to be read with one hand," he wrote in Confessions. Yashwant Sinha's Confessions of a Swadeshi Reformer offered no such one-liners. But he attempted one when he quit as BJP vice-president on June 12. "I am getting a sinking feeling that once again there is a conspiracy of silence," he said in the resignation letter.
'Conspiracy of silence' is vintage Victorian. It entered the English language in 1865. John Stuart Mill introduced it in his book on Auguste Comte, the French philosopher. 'Sinking feeling', though as old, is more colourful. It first appeared in ads for an energy drink called Bovril. One ad showed a boy sitting astride a huge bottle of Bovril bobbing in the sea and saying, "Bovril prevents that sinking feeling." Flaccid old men drank more Bovril than boys willingly did.
Jaswant Singh says the BJP is a "party of yesterday". Its leaders are looking sad and droopy after losing the elections. A swig of Bovril can help them perk up. It is a beef extract, but the cow lovers should look at the brighter side: beef is slang for sex. The name Bovril is a mix of bovine and Vril. Vril comes from The Coming Race, a novel by Edward Bulwer Lytton, who is better known for The Last Days of Pompeii. It is an all-conquering magic fluid. Lytton coined the word from Old French viril, meaning virile.
Vir in Latin means man. The Sanskrit vira has the same root. The Old English word for man was 'wer', which has survived in werewolf. The Sanskrit veerya, meaning semen, is related to virile. Semen has a close kinship with seminary. Don't think that sex-starved Christian priests flooded the place with some sticky fluid. Semen means seed, and seminary was a plot-a nursery-where people planted seed. It later became a school for training priests. But the next time you attend a seminar, wipe the seat before you sit.
The BJP president issued a gag order after Sinha sent his letter. Bulwer Lytton's son, the viceroy Lord Lytton, imposed the Vernacular Press Act in 1878 to tame the Indian press. To escape the Act, the Amrita Bazar Patrika of Calcutta became an entirely English paper overnight. It was bilingual until then. Many Indian papers proudly call themselves vernacular. The word vernacular means 'home-born slave'. The press, of course, tells truth.
Men in Kenya are on a month-long sex boycott to protest against fanatic feminism. Their women staged a week-long sex boycott last month, demanding an end to violent political clashes. The prime minister's wife joined the strike. In the ancient Greek comedy Lysistrata, by Aristophanes, women go on a sex strike to force their men to stop a long war between Athens and Sparta. The leader of the strike tells her friends: "If we sit indoors dressed in our transparent silks, with our pubis nicely plucked, their tools will become so hard that they won't be able to deny us anything." The strategy is to tease, torture and tame.
Aristophanes savaged Socrates in the play The Clouds. He opposed the philosopher's liberal views on youth and women. Sharad Yadav of the Janata Dal says he likes Socrates and is ready to take poison if Parliament passes the women's reservation bill. In The Assembly of Women, another play by Aristophanes, women disguised as men take over the legislature and pass feminist laws.
One law grants the ugliest women the right to drag any man to bed. Praxagora, the feminist leader in the play, tells her friends: "It would be a fine thing if one of us, in the midst of discussion, rushed on to the Speaker's platform and, flinging her cloak aside, showed her hairy privates." Were he in ancient Greece, Yadav would have recorded if she wore lipstick and where.
wickedword09@gmail.com
(The Week)
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Labels: English usage
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