Gresham's Law Poem by Aniruddha Pathak

Gresham's Law



‘Odious' offends, but not the nose,
‘Odorous' fragrant once was like rose.
But as bad drives out good
It wore a smelly shroud.
For, man's whim li'le logic ever knows.

A poet may have licence his own,
But people a mandate have unknown.
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Odious comes from Latin odiosus, meaning hateful, repugnant, offensive and the like. But it has nothing to do with smell and is not offensive to nose.
Odorous comes from Latin odorus meaning fragrant. At first, it meant only good smell. But the bad-scented meaning eventually drove out the good (Gresham's law) .

Here is a limerick ending with a couplet.
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Ways of words |13.07.2020|
Topic: good, bad, poet, humour

Friday, July 31, 2020
Topic(s) of this poem: good,humour,poet
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Aniruddha Pathak

Aniruddha Pathak

Godhra - Gujarat
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