At the beginning of any school
year, many students dread the prospect of navigating any English course as a
long and winding road taken through Dante’s inferno. Back in the day, when
composing course descriptions, I added special touches to make this yawning
prospect a little more tolerable. I created unique titles, such as “Great
Expectations: English 12AP” or “A Room of English 12AP.” (Sadly, some of the
more clever titles went into the recycling bin long ago.) For all my course
descriptions, I concluded with a bit of Shakespearean encouragement: “Our
doubts are traitors,/ And make us lose the good we oft might win/ By fearing to
attempt.” I followed with, “Do not fear to attempt!”
This quote comes from Measure for Measure. Isabella, the
female protagonist, has joined a very strict order of nuns, the sisterhood of
St. Clare. She is put in the very awkward position of having to plead for her
brother, who has been jailed for having impregnated his fiancée and faces the
death penalty. The messenger her brother sends beseeches Isabella using those
words, begging her to shake off her nunly reservations and come to her
brother’s aid, to attempt to win some good for her brother, his fiancée, and
their unborn child, among others.
Recently, I had cause to think
about attempting things and how humans often are fearful of trying new things
for a number of reasons. The American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (AHDEL) defines “attempt” as “to
try to perform, make or achieve,” coming from the Latin attemptare, which basically means “to test.” We might be afraid to attempt--or
test our ability to do--something different, like ride a carousel, for fear of
looking silly—or fear of falling off. We might be afraid to take the road less
traveled because it’s not in our comfort zone—or fear of getting hopelessly
lost! (Sometimes, even the GPS fails.) We might be afraid to attempt or pursue
a new interest, such as learning to play the ukulele, because musical talent is
alien to us—or fear that the neighbors might call the police because of the racket.
Then, I thought of the idea of
temptation. “Tempt,” the root of “temptation,” means “to try to get (someone)
to do wrong, especially by promise of reward,” according to the AHDEL, coming from the Latin tempere. The AHDEL defines temptation as “the act of tempting or the condition
of being tempted.” While I thought a connection might exist between attempting
a task and the temptation to perform a task, none exists. Both words originate
in Latin but come from different words. So, I decided to combine the two words
into something positive: attemptation. My definition of “attemptation” is “the
urge to try new and different things, in a positive way.” So the next time you
feel compelled to ride that carousel, take the road less traveled, or learn to
play the ukulele, yield to the attemptation!
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