âAs usual Iâve got no very watertight reasonsâbut I imagine you have hit on part of the reason when you say the âdaily bread of our northern muse.â I love âbrightsâ as a verb. It seems to have more power then âbrightensâ and I expect you are guessing aright when you suggest it may be that Iâve used it to strengthen the figurative meaning, if by figurative we mean the archetypal meaning or something like that. Of course as with so many of my âtricksâ it may be that I imagine it sounds more positive because it is slightly unusualâone has to beware of that snag, and I try to keep aware of it, when I choose a less usual or innovative form. But I do tend to like (for some reason unknown to me) the chance of emphasizing the meaning & feeling of a word by using, e.g., the adverbial form of that word in a verbal sense. (* Also I like substantives that are also used verbally, as âshe souths.â) Pârâhaps itâs partly, in the case of âbrights,â a colloquial thing as well, as I have heard an older generation (I canât remember whether in London or in the country) say such things as âLook! it brights up the whole place.â I think there is a natural tendency in traditional English unschooled usage to do that sort of thing. But I donât know for certain.â
âDavid Jones on his use of language in The Anathemata (from a 1953 letter to Desmond Chute, published in Inner Necessities: The Letters of David Jones to Desmond Chute)

















