Benny Bunter
Well-known member
No doubt there's the obvious son/sun homonym to explore too.
The sun goes up and down, for example
The sun goes up and down, for example
The name damson comes from Middle English damascene, damesene, damasin, damsin,[6] and ultimately from the Latin (prunum) damascenum, "plum of Damascus".[7] One commonly stated theory is that damsons were first cultivated in antiquity in the area around the ancient city of Damascus, capital of modern-day Syria, and were introduced into England by the Romansthats in syria btw
I'm sure it does but I don't know what yet. I'm off to bed soon but I'll try and spend some time with it over the weekend. I really, really like this book.does it have anything to do with damsons? any connection?
Here's how it has to do with the fruit itself. (Words from poem in bold)does it have anything to do with damsons? any connection?
The sun also risesNo doubt there's the obvious son/sun homonym to explore too.
The sun goes up and down, for example
I've been passively following this thread not sure whether you guys were creatively hallucinating but the connections here with prunes/pruning, plums, orchards is very compellingThe name damson comes from Middle English damascene, damesene, damasin, damsin,[6] and ultimately from the Latin (prunum) damascenum, "plum of Damascus".[7] One commonly stated theory is that damsons were first cultivated in antiquity in the area around the ancient city of Damascus, capital of modern-day Syria, and were introduced into England by the Romans