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Flourish: A Spencerian Definition

June 22, 2019

Bryana Joy



 

Flourish: A Spencerian Definition

1.

It was for a Daboll’s Arithmetick that he walked so they say
twenty miles barefoot in the backwoods of Ohio, drowsing
in a leaky trailside barn, dining on one sparse raw turnip.
But what we remember are his letters, each line a flock of birds.

2.

a noun: a luxuriant growth, showiness
in the doing of something

a verb: to be in a vigorous state, to
embellish with fanciful curves

3.

people also ask:
         Why is Cursive not taught anymore?
         Why does cursive exist?

4.

When I awoke on the morning
after our wedding,
I donned a ridiculous hat.
At the port I peered out from under
a newfound ostentation
and six inches of white weave brim. 
It’s alright, I said to the
good-looking stranger
who wondered aloud about the
weight of the bags.

My husband will be here soon.
He can’t have missed the strut

in my step, the way my chin
perked like a watered hydrangea.

5.

Of course for a time Spencer abhorred himself.
Letters from him came seldom. Alone in his room,
he roved over red rejections with foggy eyes.
I have failed the Lord God he naturally thought
and drained still another bottle because at that point
                                                       why not?

6.

I think all elevators shafts should be window,
like the ones running through the bellies of
cruise ships. I want to always remember the
small boys dancing behind the glass,
obstreperous as orangutans in their high trees.
Each hand was a whirl of paper windmill
waving at the decks as they passed.
Each move an exhibition, a way of saying

7.

watch me, watch me!

8.

In Ashtabula County
some of the trees
remember him.

None of a widow’s ten
children can afford
paper, a slate or a pen.

But what is in us
must come out.
If you look closely

at each spot of smooth trunk

you might find a snatch
of his flight plans.

9.

an adjective: foolish
        and happy and found

 

Author’s Historical Note: Platt Rogers Spencer (1800-1864) is known today as the originator of the Spencerian script, one of the most prominent historical forms of cursive penmanship. Spencer was intrigued by beautiful handwriting from childhood, and reportedly practiced on leaves, bark, snow, and ice because his family was too poor to afford proper writing materials for him. As a young man, Spencer planned to attend college and study for the ministry. However, his prospects were sabotaged by his increasing dependence on alcohol. He began working as a teacher instead and soon married another teacher. With the help of his wife and a period of rural seclusion, Spencer eventually succeeded in conquering his alcoholism and became a prominent academic and advocate for temperance and abolition. Traditional calligraphers still study and use the Spencerian script and it is featured in the logos for Coca-Cola and the Ford Motor Company.



The featured image shared here is with permission by Aaron Burden on Unsplash. 

We are grateful for Aaron’s beautiful work and his generosity!



 

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  1. Jordan Durbin says:

    This is fantastic! whimsical and light and deep and sweet!

  2. Mary Miller says:

    Absolutely delightful!

  3. I loved your winsome treatment of this historical reflection. This year I adopted the practice of writing out in cursive the brief portion of Scripture most significant from each morning’s reading. A few applicable adjectives for the experience so far? —Steadying, calming, focussing;
    Your piece,Refreshing.
    Thank you,
    Denise

  4. ‘ what we remember are his letters, each line a flock of birds.’

    beautiful

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