----------------------------------------------------------- Writing, tfurrows (circumlunar.space), 5/16/2018 ----------------------------------------------------------- RPoD wrote about the rain in southern Wyoming[1]. I've only been to Wyoming once, last summer when we drove through on a road trip. We stayed the night in Rock Springs. RPoD didn't write about any technical or scientific aspect of the rain. Instead, he wrote about the color and the smell, the texture and the feeling of rain. He wrote about the experience of the rain, the shared experience with nature and other forms of life, the contrast and the awareness. No one wants to read about the plain facts, especially when the subject is someting as common as rain. RPoD added a small bit of beauty to the world when he wrote about the rain, because he wrote something personal. But you came here, perhaps, to read about Clinkscales, so I'll move on. Down the road from this vacation rental in Columbia, MO there is a grocery store. It's called "Gerbes," but it's really part of the Kroger conglomerate; a once-local store now assimilated into a monolith that doesn't care if you're from down the street or another continent. They have good prices. Gerbes, when you're approaching it from the east on Broadway, is on the right-hand side just after a road named "Clinkscales." Before you hit Clinkscales, you pass roads with names like "Westwood" and "Maplewood" and "Greenwood" and "Glenwood." There are some woods there, which were apparently quite inspiring when they were naming the roads. For those coming in on Broadway from the east, a name like Clinkscales is quite distinct. It's not woodlandesque in the slightest. Since I'm a very inefficient shopper, I've been to the store more than a few times while I've been in town, and so I have seen the name over and over again. Every time I see it, I try to imagine where it the world the name came from. Of course, I could probably search out the origin of the name on the internet, but I have no intention of doing that. It's much more amusing to imagine where it might have come from. The most mundane possibility that I've come up with is that the street used to be the location of some kind of market or exchange, where they weighed things officially. Perhaps the cattle were driven to that location, or the crops were transported there to be loaded on a train and shipped west. In that possible reality, it might have been that goods and wares were clumsily placed on large scales, rickety and unstable from countless abuses and endless wear. The clink and clank of that daily work may have been heard for some considerable distance, inspiring the name Clinkscales. Perchance instead that the name Clinkscales came from a more distant past. There was a dragon-like creature that roamed the American midwest as late, perhaps, as the 17th century. The natives of Illinois called it Piasa. It was a terrible man-eating bird, covered in scales. Native Americans painted a likeness of it on a bluff, about 130 miles east of Columbia, MO. To demonstrate their terrible hatred of this monster, the natives would shoot both bullet and arrow at it whenever they passed the mural. It's entirely possible that a dragon or bird of that size and type, with a voracious appetite and ever-increasing numbers of human enemies, might travel over a hundred miles through the air to hunt and to escape being hunted. If its scales were as tough as dragon lore in the old world suggests, arrows or even bullets deflecting off them might make a clinking sound. On the ancient field where Gerbes now sits, there may have been an epic battle between the encroaching humans and the last of the Piasa, where arrow and lead ball finally penetrated the clinking scales. That might be a little far-fetched. Instead, the name may have come from a gentle, musical history of the area. The road is just off Broadway, and so perhaps it was named for the ragtime music of Edythe Baker. Edythe was trained in a convent in Kansas City MO, where she learned the piano. As a little girl, Edythe may have spent her free time tapping on the pipes in her dormitory, arranging the crude clinking notes into scales. Her overseers might have considered her talents and placed her in front of a piano to set her on a more correct course of pious and angelic piano music, only to have her clink out scales and tunes that would be recorded onto piano rolls and played in seedy flaper establishments the world over. I've rambled long enough that the kids are back home and demanding lunch. My point in all this was only to note that while the plain truth might be quite boring, the things we can imagine- even if inspired by a single street name- can be quite enjoyable indeed. And writing is one way to share that experience with others. [1] gopher://gopher.leveck.us:70/1/phlog/20180510.post