·
Donald Trump terminated all trade negotiations with Canada
“based on their egregious behaviour.”
·
Pakistan has an egregious record of assassinations
among its leaders.
·
Benjamin Netanyahu’s egregious disregard for civilian
suffering has drawn widespread international condemnation.
Now, look at the following sentences.
·
Archias is an egregious and most excellent man.
[Cicero’s speech in 62 BCE]
·
“An egregious captain and most valiant soldier.”
[Roger Ascham in 1545]
Up to about 16th century,
the word egregious had a positive meaning: excellent or outstanding. Cicero
was defending Greek poet Aulus Licinius Archias’s request for Roman
citizenship. Archias had left his country out of disgust for the corruption of
its Seleucid rulers.
Ascham was speaking about the qualities of valiant
soldiers when he used the adjective ‘egregious’ to mean ‘outstanding’.
In short, ‘egregious’ had a very positive meaning back
in those days.
When the word reached Shakespeare, it began to evolve drastically. In Othello,
Iago calls Roderigo “an egregious liar, a most pernicious slave.” The
Bard gave a sarcastic colour to the word here. In Twelfth Night, Malvolio is
called “an egregious ass.”
One more century later, the Shakespearean irony and
sarcasm left the word and it became absolutely negative in meaning. In 1651, Thomas Hobbes wrote in
Leviathan about the “egregious folly and madness” of the English Civil War of
the 1640s which made the philosopher flee his country and take shelter in
France. Hobbes was disgusted particularly by the religious fanaticism of his
compatriots. Four centuries later, we can speak about the egregious folly
and madness of quite a lot of people all over the world! We haven’t grown
up much, right?
I was reading the latest issue of The
Week this morning when the word egregious triggered all these thoughts in
my mind. The article was: The Sham Trial of Sheikh Hasina. The writer speaks about
the “egregious errors” in the UN Human Rights Report against Sheikh
Hasina and the kangaroo courts in Bangladesh which can make any egregious
allegation against a leader and kill her. Some people have a peculiar knack for
such deeds: eliminate inconvenient political figures. Since that’s nothing new
in certain countries like Bangladesh, I stopped reading the article and started
contemplating the word egregious: how words evolve and meanings
transmute radically.
The adjective egregious was an honour once, and
now it is an insult!
Shakespeare’s sarcasm and irony played not an
insignificant role in the evolution of the meaning of egregious.
Repeated irony can reshape truth. Repeated sarcasm can reshape history. As
Prime Minister Modi said once, “Injustice done to those who made history by
those who twisted history in the name of writing it is being corrected by ‘New
India’.” Try and figure out how many ironies lie in that statement.
You may be more amused by another statement of the PM.
“Those who cannot create history sometimes want to paint history in their own
colours because they do not have the capacity to create history.” Ironies and
sarcasm can be egregious too.
The ancient, original meaning of egregious
meant outstanding. Standing out from the group. Not good really. When
you rise above the flock, you become an outsider. You may even have to flee your
country like Hobbes and Archias.
What if your country puts you behind bars for
“standing out”? In 2023, India reported 5,272 “offences against the State.” In
the previous year, that figure was 6,062. Anyone who “stands out” can be
egregiously sent to jail under laws like UAPA and NSA. As Shashi Tharoor would
say, the quest for conformity can translate into inconceivable injustice and
unchecked power rises to tyranny sooner rather than later, posing an egregious
affront to constitutional norms.
The story of ‘egregious’
teaches us that excellence and error can share the same stage.
[The illustration-image is generated by Gemini AI.]

Not only Excellence and Error/ Folly but terror, tyranny and untruth also could be strange bedfellows with egregiousness.
ReplyDeleteFolly - better in the context. Rather than error, as I put it. It's all there in the same bed in unholy liaisos.
DeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteExcellent "anvaya", Tom-bhai! One could argue that the word itself still contains its essential meaning of 'outrageous/outstanding', however we now only seek to apply it to the negative traits, being less inclined to speak of meritorious deeds as worthy of such exaggeration. Such is the turn of the human mind. YAM xx
I found it rather fascinating to think on how being above the herd was considered superiority back then and wickedness now.
DeleteIt's interesting how words evolve over time. I did not know egregious was used in a positive light before. Fascinating.
ReplyDeleteBoth gregarious and egregious share the same root which means flock or herd. That's how egregious made me do a bit of research.
Delete