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Aug 11, 2020
This week’s themeCharacters related to slavery who have become words in the English language This week’s words Jim Crow Simon Legree Uncle Tom topsy Aunt Tom
Gordon, an enslaved man, who received these scars as a result of beating by his enslavers.
Apr 2, 1863, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He later served in the Union Army.
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargSimon Legree
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A harsh taskmaster.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Simon Legree, a brutal slaveholder in the novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin
by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896). Simon Legree has Uncle Tom, an
enslaved man, whipped to death for refusing to divulge the whereabouts of
two enslaved women who had escaped to freedom. Earliest documented use: 1857.
USAGE:
“The Simon Legree of the plot was Brahms, who routinely dumped on any
young composer rash enough to seek his imprimatur.” Don O’Connor; Bruckner & Rott: Quartets; American Record Guide (Washington, DC); Jul/Aug 2012. See more usage examples of Simon Legree in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The hands that help are better far / Than lips that pray. / Love is the
ever gleaming star / That leads the way, / That shines, not on vague worlds
of bliss, / But on a paradise in this. -Robert Green Ingersoll, lawyer and
orator (11 Aug 1833-1899)
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