Thursday, July 04, 2013

word of the day: aspic

The word of the day is aspic:








aspic, n.1 
Etymology:  < French aspic asp, < Provençal aspic , unexplained derivative of Latin aspid-em , nominative aspis : see asp n.2 
1.a. By-form of asp n.2, used chiefly in poetry. 
b. attrib. 
c. fig. 
2. transf. ‘A piece of ordnance which carries a 12 pound shot. The piece itself weighs 4250 pounds.’ C. James Mil. Dict. 1816. (Perh. only French.) (OED)

aspic, n.2
Etymology:  < French aspic (in huile d' aspic vulgar form of huile de spic) for spic, < Italian spigo the Great Lavender, originally Spikenard, = Old French espic < Latin spīcus (in medieval Latin) Spikenard, doublet of spīca spike.
The Great Lavender or Spike ( Lavandula Spica), a plant from which a volatile aromatic oil is obtained. (OED)

Etymology:  < French aspic. Littré suggests its derivation < aspic asp, because it is ‘froid comme un aspic,’ a proverbial phrase in French. 
A savoury meat jelly, composed of and containing meat, fish, game, hard-boiled eggs, etc. Also attrib. in aspic-jelly. (OED)


"His painting 'A Visit from the Old Mistress' (1876) reports on the state of the nation a decade after 'Prisoners'.  A lone figure of authority, in this case a stony white dowager, faces three antagonists: variously unwelcoming black women, in head scarves, one of whom holds a child.  The interloper evidently must bargain for services that used to be her perquisite.  She may get them, but with no conceivable abatement of the festering memories and the interminable consequences of slavery.  The painting's shadowed tones and ruddy hues suspend the scene in an aspic of anguish."

 - Peter Schjeldahl, "The seething hell: portraying the Civil War", 3 June 2013 The New Yorker


I have no idea what that means.  Is it literally the color of an aspic (meat jelly)?

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