Wednesday, 19 January 2022

Words for Wednesday 19/1/2022




This meme was started by Delores a long time ago.  Computer issues led her to bow out for a while.  The meme was too much fun to let go, and now Words for Wednesday is provided by a number of people and has become a movable feast. 

Essentially the aim is to encourage us to write.  Each week we are given a choice of prompts: which can be words, phrases, music or an image.   What we do with those prompts is up to us:  a short story, prose, a song, a poem, or treating them with ignore...  We can use some or all of the prompts, and mixing and matching is encouraged.

Some of us put our creation in comments on the post, and others post on their own blog.  I would really like it if as many people as possible joined into this fun meme, which includes cheering on the other participants.  If you are posting on your own blog - let me know so that I, and other participants, can come along and applaud.

The prompts will be here this month and are provided by Hilary Melton-Butcher. 

This week's prompts are:

  1. Brick
  2. Folly
  3. Carapace
  4. Hessian
  5. Snowdrop
  6. Grizzly

 

And/or

 

  1. Illustrator
  2. Violet
  3. Ailment
  4. Twigs
  5. Eureka
  6. Dinkum

 

Have fun.


152 comments:

  1. Jenny wondered just why it had taken her so long to have this fair dinkum eureka moment. She was an illustrator, not a philosopher. Old and grizzly was not the time to suddenly realise what life was about. Better late than never she supposed. She knew that ‘I want it NAOW’ is a phrase that should only be uttered by a cat.
    Sadly this particular folly has infected the world. Instant gratification is the rule and the ailment is pandemic. People whose lifestyles would better suit hessian demand silk. Shelter, such a basic need, had to be brick mausoleums. Bodies and faces had to be trim, taut and terrific. And forever young.
    She rejected it all. She was not a rat and not in a race. Simple suited her best. A morning in the garden, admiring the first violets and snowdrops, listening to twigs crunch under foot and the birds overhead was more than enough for her. Her carapace of harmless old woman served her well, and insulated her from so much that she found offensive and unnecessary…

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You certainly used the prompts with finesse.
      Julia

      Delete
    2. "Her carapace of harmless old woman served her well, and insulated her from so much that she found offensive and unnecessary…"

      This is a BATTLE CRY!

      :)

      Delete
    3. I absolutely LOVE that final line! *stands and applauds*

      Delete
    4. Sandi: I hope that Jenny (and the world) win that battle.

      Delete
    5. I am also not a rat in a race and while I do love the feel of silk, I know I am much more comfortable in more simple things that don't require the care needed for silk.

      Delete
    6. So much is offensive and unnecessary, and i hope more than just Jenny realize it soon.

      Delete
    7. Hi EC - I love your take ... quite delightful and clever - tying it in to your garden. Brilliant - so good ... email on its way - cheers Hilary

      Delete
    8. FINE! We need more people to realize this. So well written.

      Delete
    9. I love that last paragraph...A morning in the garden, admiring the first violets, etc. Wondrous.

      Delete
    10. This was really great, but that last sentence said it all. It was the icing on the cake!

      Delete
  2. Oh what a brilliant take on the words EC. Profound.

    XO
    WWW

    ReplyDelete
  3. Here is mine, used all the words.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    For the entire winter Jean sat at her desk, and studied the book on gardening, her sketchpad on one side, the seed catalogue on the other. And oh yes, the gardening supplies website on her laptop in front of her at all times.

    A folly, her husband Henry called it. It was like an ailment, he pronounced. A grizzly old pronouncer was Henry. But he had the pocket to support her endeavours. And he did indulge her fads and caprices.

    She’d surround the garden in black brick, she thought, and she’d start the growing season with snowdrops. And oh yes, hessian for those low lying shrubs for next winter. And Eureka! maybe she could become an illustrator with all these sketches she was making.

    An ornamental carapace should be surrounded by violets, she mused. And that dutch elm tree with the black ailment should be, very sadly, cut down to twigs for the fireplace. What a load of work lay ahead.

    Fair dinkum! She said out loud, shutting the catalogue and book, let me sign up right now for an illustrator course!
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    XO
    WWW

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wisewebwoman: I love this and find myself hoping that Jean can indulge both of her passions. Ailments be damned, both sound good to me.

      Delete
    2. She's a lucky woman to have the Mr.'s support for her fads and caprices. I hope she gets her wish.
      A good use of the prompts.

      Delete
    3. It's certainly no disadvantage to have a Henry with the very pocket.

      Delete
    4. This is great! I once spent a lot of time with catalogues and sketches of how my garden might be.

      Delete
    5. It's nice to dream on paper and then work to make the dream come true.

      Delete
    6. Hi WiseWebWoman - really fun to read ... if only I could draw ... you set the scene perfectly and fortunate her to have Henry around. Cheers Hilary

      Delete
    7. THis was a fun use of the words! I liked it.

      Delete
    8. That Jean is my kind of woman! Well done!

      Delete
    9. Nicely done. Now I'm ready to find a gardening catalogue and start dreaming of spring.

      Delete
  4. I was walking down a path in a forest and a Grizzly spotted me. I ran and hid behind a tree. The grizzly sniffed and came down charging the path. He did not spot me but I looked beyond the tree and he was sniffing and charged me biting me in the arse. I got away by climbing a tree but he waited patiently. He finally left. I was so lucky.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That bite sounds painful although it didn't seem to hinder your climb. Where are the rest or the other prompt words? It could make your story even more scary or funny.
      Julia

      Delete
    2. suzanne dorries: Welcome and thank you for joining us. I would hate to be bitten in the arse by a grizzly - and wonder how she sat down - for the foreseeable future.

      Delete
    3. Oh your poor bm. I hope it healed OK. Difficult place to show off with though :)

      XO
      WWW

      Delete
    4. I worried for a minute the grizzly might climb up after her.

      Delete
    5. Best strategy with a brown/grizzly bear is to lie down and play dead. It will probably sniff and decide you aren't worth worrying about, and move on.

      Hope that bite heals soon!

      Delete
    6. Hi Suzanne - so glad you could join us ... Grizzly bears - you were lucky to get away so lightly with just a nip on the rear-end. Thank you - Hilary

      Delete
    7. I don't want anything biting my hindquarters, especially not a grizzly!

      Delete
  5. I hit a brick wall when I looked up the word hessian. Which definition to use? Then in a moment of folly, I decided to go the botanical way. I can visualize a carapace ornament in my snowdrop garden though it might look grizzly to turtle lovers.
    Julia

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Julia: Love it. And can definitely see a place for a carapace ornament in my own garden.

      Delete
    2. Quite a challenge for Mike. ;-)

      Delete
    3. A carapace ornament surrounded by flowers sounds just right.

      Delete
    4. Hi Julia - this was delightful ... and I could certainly visualise your result ... the snowdrops are coming out now - love them! Cheers Hilary

      Delete
    5. Lovely, especially sneaking hessian in!

      Delete
    6. Snowdrops and carapaces in a Hessian garden is pure folly according to the grizzly brick layer.

      Sorry I could not let this callenge lie.
      I like your take!

      Delete
  6. I forgot to mention, I'm short f spar time to use the other prompts just now.
    Julia

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Julia: Thank you for making the time to join us, I am grateful that you ate into your time allotment to do so.

      Delete
  7. He was the world's greatest illustrator. A true dinkum. His signature, a magenta violet encircled with neon twigs. Every marketing department that hired him yelled, "Eureka," when they saw his finished product and the money that came rolling in. Until the day, the powers that be, decided he had become too popular, too flamboyant, too lacking in respect for those that made his position possible. A word whispered in the right or possibly the wrong ear and Jumbi, the greatest illustrator, of all time, disappeared never to be seen again. Word was put around that he'd died of a little known ailment. But those that were closest to him knew better. Conformity was now the new buzz word, creativity and free-thinking a thing of the past as the death knell tolled on self-expression.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sandra Cox: Perhaps because I believe it is happening already on some levels I find your contribution incredibly sad. Well written but so very sad and frightening.

      Delete
    2. Very contemporary. A fine piece of writing.

      Delete
    3. Well done Sandra and quite sad and very true in today's world.

      XO
      WWW

      Delete
    4. The death of creativity and free thinking is a crying shame.

      Delete
    5. It has happened before in the world, and there's usually a revolution, and the whole cycle starts again.

      Delete
    6. Hi Sandra - sadly too true, too often I suspect ... crushed to the ground, and all connections switched off - not good at all. Thanks - excellent take - Hilary

      Delete
    7. Nicely done, Sandra. Too bad it may be truer than fiction.

      Delete
    8. Oh yes Sandra Cox lovely take on all the words and I feel as though you’ve spun a mysterious turn of events and perhaps more of this illustrator in our next series of words!

      Delete
    9. Fiction is more true than reality sometimes. I'm afraid this is one suhc. Sad, but well turned!

      Delete
  8. Jessica was many things to many people, but you could never accuse her of being a shrinking VIOLET. As an ILLUSTRATOR she had carved out a decent career and made a fair DINKUM living doing what she loved best, and at which she demonstrated a good degree of proficiency. It was her portrayal of a GRIZZLY bear that had landed on the cover of “Adventure” magazine, with its attendant pecuniary rewards, but her personal favourite was a watercolour of a SNOWDROP. As a child, she already showed great talent, but her father told her it was FOLLY to contemplate a career as an artist. She smiled sweetly, and ignored the advice. “Better shove your head under your CARAPACE you old turtle” she thought, with no disrespect to turtles. He would never acknowledge that her snowdrop was magnificent. Now, late in life, when the TWIGS and BRICKS of outrageous fortune bothered her not at all, but beset by physical AILMENTS, she decided to pack her HESSIAN bag and go off to paint another Snowdrop. Her brother had been urging her to share the cost of erecting a tombstone for their parents, with Jessica creating an image to be engraved on it. EUREKA! A snowdrop would be just the thing!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. David M. Gascoigne: Brilliant. Revenge is a dish best served cold - and what could be colder than a grave(stone).

      Delete
    2. Oh that was brilliant David. Oddly enough, my father quenched my artistic dreams so I am glad she rose above and sweet, sweet revenge.

      XO
      WWW

      Delete
    3. David M. Gascoigne, Brilliant indeed. A great use of the prompts.
      Julia

      Delete
    4. Hi David - that was great to read ... just perfect ... but I suspect she'd have to leave some mystery clues for future generations to find out why the snowdrop was there. Thanks - great take - cheers Hilary

      Delete
    5. Absolutely brilliant, David. I like the idea of a snowdrop (that I have never seen) being carved on a tombstone.

      Delete
    6. Well written and a happy ending - for her at least.

      Delete
  9. I'm ashamed ... I'm behind the times - it looks like you've come up with some amazing tales - I will be back tomorrow ... cheers Hilary

    PS challenging words I selected ... ?!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VERY challenging! I thought last week's were challenging until I saw this week's selection.

      Delete
    2. Hilary Melton-Butcher: Yes they are challenging, which is not a bad thing. Looking forward to seeing you tomorrow.

      Delete
    3. Here's to let you fish another compliment. ;-)

      Delete
    4. Nope Sean ... but I suspect I'd not be believed - !!

      Cheers Hilary

      Delete
  10. Trying to corral my tired brain into submission, i'll be back.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Dipping a hobnob in my tea I thought loudly: "Rather ageing with a few little ailings than being thick as a brick." Tetrapilotomos, as almost always busy with proofreading his 1669 pages short opus magnum "Pre-Assyrian Philately in a Nutshell", looked up, fixed me and murmured: "You would very probably not notice the latter. ... The hottonia palustris on your grizzly Hessian bag looks pretty dinkum, by the way."
    "Hottonia what?"
    "Water violet. Not bad for an underpayed illustrator."
    "Now I twig. I thought it was a snowdrop."
    "You're a brick, Sean!"
    Not sure, whether he meant it. Archaic collocations are his folly.
    *
    A few days later.
    To spare myself the accusation of either misogyny or misandry let's leave it at that in one of the world's finest art galleries I saw two persons stop in front of a famous painting when the young person enthusiastically cried out: "Eureka! Is that a Carapace?" – "Almost, darling, a Caravaggio", I heard the approximately 35 years older person say, and hand in hand on they went. Amor vincit omnium.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sean Jeating: I am smiling - which is often what happens when I read your take on the prompts.

      Delete
    2. Sean Jeating, First I smiled but when I got to the last paragraph, I had to laugh out loud.
      Well done.
      Julia

      Delete
    3. Tetrapilotomos! I love it. what a great name :)
      1669 pages is a SHORT opus?
      Great story :) I have a delighted grin across my face.

      Delete
    4. Bravo you had my attention from the start and your lovely genius use of words like this here

      Water violet. Not bad for an underpayed illustrator."
      "Now I twig. I thought it was a snowdrop."
      "You're a brick, Sean!"
      Now I twig I love it!

      Delete
    5. Hi Sean - having managed to get across to your blog - I see I have a lot to learn ... while this was fascinating ... thanks for the future introduction to much from the wordsmith, Sean, ... cheers Hilary

      Delete
    6. Well done Sean. I love your play on carapace and the indulgence of the very much older man. And who knew about the violet nomenclature? :D

      XO
      WWW

      Delete
    7. Thank you. This was fun. I think I Just have to share your savant and his magnum opus with my SO.

      Delete
    8. Ladies, thank you. Glad I could conjure a smile on your lips, in Julia's case even laughter.
      @ WWW: It could also have been a filthy rich lady indulgently correcting her muscular playmate, who admittedly was standing far behind as the good Lord distributed grey cells.

      Delete
  12. A few words that don't get heard much these days. I'll work on it tomorrow and see what pops up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. River: I look forward to seeing where the prompts take you - and us.

      Delete
  13. It was folly to attack the Hessian as he hid behind his brick like grizzly carapace in the snowdrops.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. By Jove, Mike! You made it, you made it.

      Delete
    2. Mike: Captain Succinct rides triumphant again.

      Delete
    3. Hi Mike - yes you've definitely succeeded here ... amazing how such excellent tales appear from the prompts. Thank you - cheers Hilary

      Delete
  14. Mike, I can visualize the whole scene. I'm not sure I would entrust your help in my garden, lol... 😂
    Julia

    ReplyDelete
  15. I'm having fun in my head right now.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Bravo, well done grand use of all the words, so many visions and your last paragraph tied it all up with a perfect bow! I put my words with a few photos as well this week again. Our brief day of spring livened my mood. https://twincitiesblather.blogspot.com/2022/01/snow-fairies-for-words-on-wednesday.html

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 21 Wits: I am heading over now to see what you made of the prompts - and expect to be delighted.

      Delete
    2. Thank you so much I hope you enjoy!

      Delete
  17. Here's my first lot:

    The brick came out of the blue, lobbed perhaps from the folly … why? To distract me? I was past that ...my mind was on collecting snowdrops … let's carry on – oh look what I've found a beautiful tortoiseshell box … the carapace will make a delightful vase for my little white beauties.

    I hope they will bring some pleasure to old grizzly-face – did he chuck that brick, hoping I wouldn't find the shell … so many secrets were held in the woodland glade."

    Cheers Hilary

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh bother ... I meant to unwrap the hessian bag ... to do something!!

      Ah well ... failed at my own first set! Happy Days ...

      Delete
    2. Hilary Melton-Butcher: Not a fail at all. I can see it, and would love to know more about both characters...

      Delete
    3. How many times did you proof read it? 2? 4? 10? It doesn't make a difference does it? Your mind keeps reading what you think you wrote, not what you actually did write.

      Delete
    4. Mike: That is sadly, painfully true in my case. I am a woeful self editor.

      Delete
    5. No fail. I especially loved lobbed from the folly.

      Delete
    6. A rousing success if you ask me. After all, the words are to get us thinking, we don't have to use all of them.

      Delete
    7. Thanks Mike - I did use a hessian bag - then changed the 'tale' around ... so it sifted its way through its own self - if you can understand that!! Cheers to you all - thank you ... Hilary

      Delete
    8. Your hope should come true, Hilary.
      At least, I can assure you that this year's first snowdrops will conjure a smile on this old grizzly-face.

      Delete
    9. Oh wonderful and delightful tale and perhaps more will come from the woodland glade! I’m intrigued.

      Delete
  18. Here's my 2nd set ...

    "The illustrator was using a violet crayon … I wonder whether her ailment was better or worse today – at least it wasn't a purple one.

    She'd brought her Dinkum doll with her … and had set 'Dolly' Dinkum on a bed of twigs to rest while she sketched in the dry river bed.

    Eureka, she cried out loud – no-one would hear she was out in the bush – 'Dolly' might come to life, but she doubted it – she was just so pleased she felt better, and her illustration was completed … she called it 'Violet Calm' … then she gathered her things, picked up Dolly, to return home in a happier state of mind."

    Cheers again - Hilary

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hilary Melton Butcher: Another charming take - and I am so glad that the illustrator feels better (and happier).

      Delete
    2. I love your take on both chapters of your story.

      A job completed always make us feel better. She finished her sketch and you finished your sweet story.

      Julia

      Delete
    3. Being able to go out and enjoy time with dolly and art would be quite cheering.

      Delete
    4. I am happy for the protagonist.
      But what do you have against purple, Hilary? ;-)

      Delete
    5. This is a happy story - and Dinkum dolls really exist! Thank you.

      Delete
  19. Well done Hilary on both of the stories, I love your use of the violet crayon. And the dinkum doll. And secrets in the woodland!

    XO
    WWW

    ReplyDelete
  20. Dinkum? You are truly evil.
    I will leave it alone, come back with something later.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Susan Kane: It isn't nice to call Hilary evil. And of course you don't have to use any of the words...

      Delete
    2. Hi Susan - Fun evil - I hope ... a challenge is a challenge isn't it?! You've mastered those words well in the answer you crafted up ... cheers Hilary

      PS thanks for standing up for me EC!!!

      Delete
    3. Sue, Hilary, though I probably shouldn't interfere: I think you got Susan's "evil" the wrong way round. It was certainly meant with a twinkling of her eye.

      This from someone whose poor soul almost on a daily basis severely suffers from being told 'you are very, very evil, Sean!'

      Delete
  21. Después de un tiempo de descanso, solamente me limito a esas buenas historias, que ha contado los participantes.

    Quiero de nuevo saludar a todos los blogs amigos y eso me lleva algún tiempo.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VENTANA DE FOTO: Thank you - and welcome back to the blogosphere.

      Delete
  22. Such a wonderful creative mind! Thank you for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My Tata's Cottage: This meme is a heap of fun isn't it? Perhaps you will join us some week.

      Delete
  23. Great challenge, but I shall return. There's a couple of words that have left me scratching my head ( I know what they mean but using them in the right context? That's another matter).

    Greetings from London.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A Cuban in London: Hilary stretched quite a few minds this week didn't she? I do hope that you can come back after so thought.

      Delete
    2. It'll be interesting to see what you come up with ACIL - you're a wordsmith ... a Cuban one granted ... but that scratch will go away! Cheers Hilary

      Delete
  24. Today I wrote a very short take on the Words for Wednesday. Thank you for the words to Hilary Melton-Butcher and thanks to you, EC for hosting this. I'll be back to read the stories tomorrow.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Charlotte (MotherOwl): I will be over to read your take as soon as I have responded to comments. I am looking forward to it. Big time.

      Delete
  25. Sometimes in life people meet by chance and sometimes for a reason. I like to think of my meeting with John Chapman was a little of both. I was having an overnight at an inn and was sitting in the tavern when a grizzly looking fellow wandered in looking for some lodging. He was a wiry gent, yet looked as solid as a brick. His neat beard framed his face and seemed at odd with his weatherworn look. Even though sun beaten he showed no sign of ailment. If not for a couple of peculiarities, I would have said he looked like any other man who had been on a journey. His violet eyes peeked out beneath the large pot he wore on his head like a turtles carapace, and he had a hessian bag filled with twigs and seed across his body.
    Naturally, I had to offer him a spot at my table to share a beverage and conversation.
    According to him most people thought his mission was a folly, and as he explained I was tempted to agree with the masses. As far as he was concerned he was strictly on a business endeavor with potentially large profits.
    He was traveling, often walking, from Pennsylvania into Ohio planting unsettled land to take advantage of the Northwest Ordinance which would allow squatters rights to anyone who planted 50 apple or pear tree. His business plan was to hire someone to look after the future orchards, then sell the land to west bound settlers, trees and all, for a large profit. With the hard cider apple trees, the new owners would be able to make their own cider to use and to sell, so it would be a win/win proposition.
    We talked into the night then it was time to retire. I woke to begin my day in time to bid him a good journey. We shook hands, he stooped to pick an early winter snowdrop to put in his jacket lapel, then he wandered off. It was the last time I saw him.
    Later that evening the illustrator in me took over and I found myself sketching him again and again. And my eureka moment came with fair dinkum* when I decided to dub the man in the drawing "Johnny Appleseed"

    * (from Anne) I have never seen this word before and after looking it up this usage is a total crapshoot.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Excellent! John Chapman/Johnny Appleseed was indeed a most interesting and rather odd person.

      Delete
    2. Anne in the kitchen: How fascinating. I had never heard his endeavours explained in business terms before. Dinkum is not even used very often in its originating country any more - except by some politicians. And as soon as I hear them say 'Fair Dinkum, I am on the level' I started chanting 'liar, liar pants on fire'.

      Delete
    3. Hi Anne - a wonderful tale - but 'fair dinkum' used there is fine ... it's not used often, but is still in use. Cheers Hilary

      Delete
    4. Thanks for a fine tale widening my horizon, Anne.

      Delete
    5. Anne, I love your story. I'll be thinking of your story the next time I bite in a apple.
      Julia

      Delete
    6. This made me think of Radagast the Brown and then Johhny Appleseed. It seems I was not off the mark. Dinkum was new to me as well, and I felt as akward as ... using it ;) Your story is lovely!

      Delete
  26. Let's see what happens:

    Diana stood on the CARAPACE, waiting.
    Sir Daniel had ridden leagues on his war horse, HESSIAN. After weeks of travel and battle, Sir Daniel was as GRIZZLY as the old men riding with him. The journey was the FOLLY of King Edward, at the suggestion of his mistress Lizzie. “Oh, Eddie! We could meet out here when the sun sets!” She had run to the BRICK wall, retrieving the key.
    Edward’s brain was as empty as dust under his bed. Plucking a SNOWDROP at his feet, Sir Daniel, waited, arrow at the ready. Lizzie was the first to drop, and Edward screamed in his unique squeak, dropping dead upon Lizzie, cold and silent.
    “HESSIAN let’s get out of here”, Sir Daniel swung up on the saddle. “Got places to go, people to see or kill.”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Susan Kane: I do hope that Sir Daniel sees more people than he kills - or that his potential victims see him coming and run.

      Delete
    2. Hi Susan - a fun tale of medieval life taken with a pinch of salt ... cheers Hilary

      Delete
    3. I didn't see that coming. Well done;)

      Delete
    4. Correction: NOT Diana on the carapace, DANIEL was on the carapace. He might have tossed her over.

      Delete
    5. Hehe knights and ladies in distress taken to a new level.

      Delete
  27. Fun words to weave a tale around. I enjoyed yours very much, and also those of your other commenters. My head's not working for putting any of my own together right now, but I am enjoying these very much.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. DeniseinVA: Thank you. Some of the words/phrases in my piece came from a post of yours. I hope your head picks up - and thank you for cheering us on.

      Delete
  28. I miss the season of spring with Violets and Tulips here!

    ReplyDelete
  29. The first thing that popped into my head was I should have been collecting bricks instead of snow drops to throw at that the grizzly. But, what folly it would be, the bricks wouldn't protect me either. Then my brain stopped, lol. Hope you're staying warm and out of harms way with this latest weather so many are dealing with.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sandy: No bricks wouldn't protect you from the grizzly. A brick wall to hide behind might. We are warm (too warm by my standards) here. I hope you are safe.

      Delete