Re: Thinking to find a lark's nest
- From: "John Dean" <john-dean@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2008 19:22:33 -0000
Marius Hancu wrote:
On Jan 23, 12:29 pm, the Omrud <usenet.om...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
[Ernest tells his parents he lost his watch, which really had been
given by him to a former female servant of the family, Ellen, now
pregnant.]
Of course, Ernest was made to look for his lost property, and a
reward was offered for it, but it seemed he had wandered a good
deal off the path, thinking to find a lark's nest, more than once,
and looking for a watch and purse on Battersby piewipes was very
like looking for a needle in a bundle of hay: besides it might have
been found and taken by some tramp, or by a magpie of which there
were many in the neighbourhood, so that after a week or ten days
the search was discontinued, and the unpleasant fact had to be
faced that Ernest must have another watch, another knife, and a
small sum of pocket money.
The Way of All Flesh, by Samuel Butler, p. 237
--------
Yes, it's an idiom: "thinking to X" means "thinking that he will X",
i.e. believing or intending that he will X. So the character has
gone off the path to look for a lark's nest.
I don't see the implication in the context.
They were looking for an watch which had been presumably lost or
stolen, but had in effect been given by the owner (Ernest) to a girl,
a fact which Ernest hid from his father and others.
Thus the search for it in the woods didn't really have a point,
couldn't lead to anything positive.
Could it be that the searchers thought that a bird found the watch and
took it to its nest?
Or could it be that "finding a lark's nest" means an impossible task?
Ernest has given away his watch but tells his parents he has lost it -
dropped it on his way home. They insist he looks for it along the path he
followed home. He claims he wandered off the path from time to time looking
for larks' nests (larks nest on the ground). It's suggested that the watch
may have been picked up by a tramp or a magpie (who are notably attracted to
shiny objects - hence the phrase 'thieving magpie'). Neither, obviously,
could have happened since the watch is on its way to a friendly pawn shop by
now, but Ernest plays the game to deceive his parents and escape the
consequences of his action.
--
John Dean
Oxford
.
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