written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Saturday 27 May 2023

Bark(e)

Let us compare etymologies. Barke (Middle English) meaning boat, comes from Middle French barque out of the Latin barica, itself derived from Ancient Greek βάρις (báris), and before that possibly the Coptic ⲃⲁⲁⲣⲉ (baare) and ultimately Egyptian bꜣjr - what a long, strange linguistic sailing trip. 

Egyptian wooden boat (approx. 2,000 BC - a reconstruction)
However, boats existed way before the Egyptians sailed the Nile from 3,000 BC onwards, and certainly before there was written language to name them. Fragments of earlier boats have been found from Scandinavia through the Mediterranean and Middle-East to Indo-China, dating back 8,000 or 9,000 years. Of course the problem is that the earliest boats were made of wood and prone to decay over millennia. But the tools that were used to make them were more durable and the discovery of such tools (in dusty Crete for example) suggests that boats may have been around as long ago as 100,000 years.

What tempted me to put this particular interpretation on the theme was the obvious similarity between that alternative word for a boat and the one describing the outer surface of a tree. I wondered if there was any real connection between the two, given that the earliest crude boats were made from hollowed-out tree-trunks, and then slightly more sophisticated branch frames covered in bark.

Chinese hollowed-out log boat (approx 8,000 BC - actual remains)
Bark is the outer covering of a tree's trunk (can also apply to vines and some shrubs), those layers that lie outside the vascular cambium (or main growth tissue in the plant's stem). Some tree barks yield spices and flavourings, some are a source of medicines (including poisons and hallucinogens), and bark has been/is used in the manufacture of clothing and ropes - as well as boats.

Then what about the origins of that word? Disappointment, it seems. Bark stems from the Old English barc and/or Old Norse bǫrkr and both in all likelihood are derived from the proto-Indo-European word for birch: bʰerHǵós.  In conclusion therefore, it appears I was barking up the wrong tree in divining etymologies and hoping to arrive at a common root. At least it's been instructive (I hope you'll agree). 

I'll dust myself down and move on, but before I do, here's the latest from the imaginarium. It's hardly out of the top drawer and is not necessarily the finished article, for it may merit improvement with a bit more fettling and whittling, but for now...

In The Beginning Was The Log
Who first saw a tree-trunk 
floating 
and thought boat? 
Maybe a log bridge 
tumbling 
into its stream one day
cut off passage 
to parochial shores?
In that momentous fall
the future changed 
commencing  
a liberating voyage
into further and beyond 
through millennia of 
sailing.
Odysseys down salty routes
acquiring oars, sprouting sails, 
incorporating smokestacks, 
evolving turbines,
rising 
audacious from the waves
on quivering wings
embarking
for the nearest moon
then a navigable seaway 
of planets and stars before
bobbing
off into the ineffable.








Thanks for reading, S ;-)

12 comments:

Harry Lennon said...

It was a reasonable shout, but language is a funny thing. I liked the idea of your poem. 👍

Ben Templeton said...

Good inquisitive blogging Steve. I enjoyed your porm.

Jen McDonagh said...

I love "bobbing off into the ineffable" :)

Saskia Parker said...

Yes it could have happened like that. 🤎

Tim Collins said...

I was interested in the suggestion that humans could have used boats as long ago as 100,000 BC. That seemed extraordinary. I did some online research that suggests modern man (homo sapiens) SAILED to the island of Java approximately 40,000 years ago and interbred with homo erectus who had been living there since before sea levels rose and isolated them. Your blog has been a real trigger (and not foe the first time). Well done with the poem.

Cynthia said...

Liked your poem particularly from Odysseys
onwards where it “took off”.They keep finding new evidence of earliest human habitation so I can
go with the boat theory.Interesting.

Ross Madden said...

Enjoyed this as ever Steve, the early boat research, the imaginative poetic voyage.👏

Deke Hughes said...

Good one. I enjoyed your poem very much.

Jeremy Jones said...

Most interesting. Nearly everything is older and happened earlier than we used to think. 100,000 years ago would not surprise me. It's just that the rate of technological progress was a lot slower then than now. I enjoyed your clever poem, and that title. Was it deliberate or serendipity? I suppose you know that in the original Greek in which it was written, John's gospel read: ἐν ἀρχῇ ἦν ὁ λόγος, which translates customarily as "In the beginning was the word", though λόγος' (= logos) could also mean concept, idea, plan or possibility.

Hannah Wrigley said...

Wouldn't it have been neat if there had been a common root, as you put it. Still, I loved the voyage and the splendid poem.

Tamsin Permaul said...

Clever poem.

Sahra Carezel said...

Very good Steve and a lovely poem.