Fun Times with English Literature
So, a paid ad showed up on my dash (as they sometimes do) declaring, ‘Ya Bish!’ And ya know, bro, I don’t even know you, so no, I do not bish. But, it made me think of something else.
Percy Bysshe Shelley’s middle name is pronounced ‘Bish’. God bless the English (and their really silly names). It’s a simple name that just means bush.
Look at that quote, if that isn’t Elven, I dunno what is.
Anyway, if you have nerdy, well-read friends, and if you’re checking out this blog, you probably do, call them a Bysshe in a text or send them out a ‘ya Bysshe’ when you know they get you. And indeed, they might.
Quick Tolkien tie-in (straws, I’m grasping them!) like, Percy Bysshe Shelley’s literary essay “A Defence of Poetry” and Tolkien’s oft-discussed but criticized essay “On Fairy-Stories” are both analytical works on the uses of the literary imagination.
CliffsNotes: They’re both defenders of imaginative writing.
So, go them!
A paragraph I especially like from Tolkien’s essay “On Fairy-Stories”, ya Bysshe.