“Mweh,”
she says in her blog, “I felt so bad.” And again: “Blegh ... the wind has
dropped ...”
She
should take care. By the time she gets to New Zealand, the Kiwis won’t be able
to understand her, thanks to the mwehs and bleghs and whatever else she might
be cooking up linguistically.
* * *
WE
LIVE in rude times. Perhaps Congress sets the example for the ill-natured
discourse that pervades our country today. There is a lack of good old
fashioned courtesy, and a whole host of demands for individual rights that are
not in the interest of the community as a whole. Too much liberty is being
taken in the name of free speech to indulge in foul language, spoken and
written — harsh language that is intended to shock, if not hurt.
Women
are as guilty as men in this respect. Recent blogs by women sailors in Seattle
are rife with four-letter words. Unnecessary four-letter words. They add
nothing but foul language to the narrative, except perhaps an indication of the
writer’s nature.
I
understand that modern American women find themselves in direct competition
with men in many ways. They certainly seem to sense a need to match men in
profanity. But not all men use f-words in their regular speech, and even fewer
use them in their written language. The presence of a four-letter word does not
of itself add artistic merit to written language. It adds only shock, and then
only to start with. Swearing is a poor and lazy substitute for lively,
descriptive writing, which demands those other nasty four-letter words, hard work.
I,
for one, could use a little gentleness, a little modesty, a little reserve, in
the blogs I read. I don’t care to know that the lady sailor was upset because
the f-ing anchor got f-ing stuck in the f-ing mud. I don’t care to know that
the lady blogger moving aboard her new boat found a nice place to stow her
thongs. Where she keeps her intimate underwear is not my business. Or anybody
else’s.
Today’s
Thought
Politeness
is the flower of humanity. He who is not polite enough is not human enough.— Joubert, Pensées
Tailpiece
“Waiter,
there’s a fly in my soup.”(10)“You must be from animal welfare, sir — I’ll fetch him a spoon at once.”
(Drop by every Monday, Wednesday, Friday for a new Mainly
about Boats column.)