In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markiewicz
Should the conflagration climb,
Run till all the sages know.
We the great gazebo built,
They convicted us of guilt;
Bid me strike a match and blow.
William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)
Eva Gore-Booth was a lyricist, writer, involved in politics and gorgeous. Yeats compared her to a
gazelle in this poem. It was she and her sister
Constance Markiewicz who were the focus of William Yeats' familiar poem
In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markiewicz. Eva, or Selena as she was occasionally called, wrote verse of a formless and spiritual variety, most of which has not survived its times. In addition to being immortalized by her homelands greatest poet, Gore-Booth enjoyed another great achievement. In a Manchester parliamentary by-election she once routed a young Liberal Party candidate named
Winston Churchill.
Pronounced g&-'zE-(")bO , these buildings are typically used as a summerhouse, gazebos are any free-standing, roofed structure that is open on all sides. Traditionally they are placed in the corner of a garden and used as a gazing room.
The earliest recording of the word gazebo dates back to 1752, allegedly a tongue in cheek creation of gaze and –bo. Perhaps a pseudo-Latin coinage from gaze, the open freestanding roofed structure from which one surveys the landscape, has two plurals: gazebos and gazeboes. Take Our Word For It explains the possible origins of the first time the word was used in print and how it may have come into the English language from the Orient:
The earliest use of the word comes from 1752, and that quotation suggests that the word might be of some Far Eastern origin: The Elevation of a Chinese Tower or Gazebo (from New Designs for Chinese Temples, by William and John Halfpenny). Some have suggested that it was coined in English as a play on gaze, imitating Latin future verb forms (like videbo "I shall see"), but the OED does not seem to favor that explanation. Robert Hendrickson, in his Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins, mentions a possible derivation from German Gasse-bau "bow window", but he cites no support for that.
William Halfpenny, by the way, also known as Michael Hoare (no one knows which was his real name), was an 18th century English architectural designer. John was purportedly his son. New Designs for Chinese Temples is an important work because, among other reasons, it describes the Chinese influence in England that is normally attributed to Chippendale and Chambers, whose books were published some time after the Halfpennys'. New Designs for Chinese Temples notes that the Chinese influence had already reached England and was enjoying some popularity. Despite all of this, however, the Halfpennys designs are not considered important; some were pretty but all apparently lacked originality.
Still others expand on the idea that it may be the corruption of an oriental word derived from the model of past
belvedere s where
bello verde means "handsome sight." But most likely a corruption of some oriental word attesting to features of the architectural structures and other associated vocabulary for instance
kiosk and
pergola, all of which are found frequently in the framework of European
Orientalism. Another possible etymology for gazebo could possibly come from Hispano-Arabic as a viewing platform for watching candidates called
mirador. The first written account of this term dates back to another poet from medieval
Cordoban by the name of
Ibn Guzman. The British occupation of
Tangiers during the eighteenth century may have supplied a way for the introduction of this
lexical isolate. Even though the structural design of the octagonal garden pavilion now called a gazebo probably had multiple paths to Britain.
For certain no one knows its origins but lastly one etymologist suggests that the Latin roots may possibly be the product of a gag among academia as a comical reference to the word ‘gaze’, emulating the Latin future tense, “just as the basin used in the Catholic mass is a lavabo, meaning ‘I shall wash.’”
Sources:
Gazebo:
http://www.bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=gazebo&x=0&y=0
Eastern Prospects: Kiosks, Belvederes, Gazebos http://www.kluweronline.com/article.asp?PIPS=5111407&PDF=1
May 22, 1870 was the birthday of Eva Gore-Booth:
www.geocities.com/athens/delphi/7086/000522f.htm
Online Etymology Dictionary:
www.etymonline.com/g1etym.htm
Take Our Word For It:
www.takeourword.com/TOW178/page2.html
www.m-w.com/:
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/netdict?gazebo