EAST DON RUIN
As the Taylor Creek
splits from the Don in Seton Park, so the Don splits from itself into
its East and West branches. By the time each branch reaches Sheppard
Avenue they are separated by a distance of some 6 kilometers. Yet, by
the time each arrives at Finch Avenue they can be said to have
travelled kindred territory, with the East branch heading through the
vast East Don Parkland and the West branch heading through the
similarly extensive West Don Parkland. That these two swathes of
land, in a city brimming with unique and specific place names, should
share such correspondingly nondescript monikers is somewhat notable
in and of itself. That they should both contain ruins of the same
strange and inexplicable variety that we've been examining thus far
is certainly a noteworthy phenomena.
The East Don ruin occurs
at the southern end of its respective Parkland, near Sheppard and
Leslie Street, were a massive concrete structure juts out from a bend
in the river, right into the middle of the stream. Stretching
approximately 15 meters from the west bank, the ruin falls short of
the east bank by roughly another 5 meters. A similar gap exists at
the west end, as well, although the structure remains moored to land
by means of a framework and sub-aquatic floor. What remains above
water resembles something like a long brace, or capital "I",
with two concave angular brackets at either end connected by a
steeply pitched wall in between.
Should the structure have
forded the river completely, a mill dam would be the most likely purpose
one might assume for this ruin (and, indeed, it still may be,
allowing for a change in the river's course or shape since its
construction). Otherwise, one is limited only by
the imagination as to its original use. Clues in the immediate
toponymy are expectedly scant in this rather anonymous corner of the
city. Just to the north of the ruins, however, we find Villaways Park
and the odd nomenclature of its associated housing complex. While the
curious sounding "Villaway" aspect turns out to be a
typical street-naming convention of North York townhouse projects
(one need only refer to the nearby Willoway, Briarway, Vineway,
Shepway, and Creekway communities for further evidence of this), it
is the specific "Villaways" of this complex — Adra, Ocra,
Tomar, and Grado — which draw one's attention...though, perhaps,
only to muddy the waters even further.
Three of the four
Villaways would seem to share Iberian associations with Grado and
Adra being Spainish municipalities, and Tomar being a city in central
Portugal. Adra and Tomar, however, also exhibit Indian connotations
with the former being an historic railway town in West Bengal and the
latter being the name of a medieval dynastic clan known in the region
of Delhi. Grado, meanwhile, shares a vague geographic connection with
Ocra by way of the former being a small Italian fishing village
situated some 50 kilometers across the Gulf of Trieste from the
latter, a Slovenian plateau famously designated by Strabo as the
eastern-most peak of the Alps.
Given such divergent
linguistic sources, any further analysis of these name's etymologies
would, at this point, seem rather futile. Nevertheless, it so happens
that Spanish and Portuguese, Hindi and Bengali, Italian and Greek and
Slovene (and English) all share common descent from the Indo-European
family of languages and its reconstructed Proto-Indo-European roots,
thus allowing for some continued hypothesizing at a more primordial,
if yet more uncertain level.
Starting with "Adra,"
we note that the first syllable *ad- is a prevalent PIE
root suggesting "nearness" or "adjacency."
The second syllable presents us with more varied options including:
*dhragh-, *dhreg-, or *tragh- meaning "to
pull" something (from which we arrive at such current words as
"drag," "draw," and "traction");
*dhreu- meaning "to fall" (whence "drip,"
"drop," "droop," etc.); and *dhreugh- or
*drem- with the first meaning "deception," the
second meaning "sleep," and with both potentially relating
to "dreams." Another possibility is that the name "Adra,"
as a whole, is a slight mutation of the root *ater- meaning
"fire."
"Grado" would
seem a straightforward development of the root *ghredh- meaning
"to walk," "step," or otherwise "progress"
(hence such progeny as "grade," "gradient,"
"degree," etc.). Another suspect, however,
could be the proto-Germanic *grat- or *krat- meaning
"to grate" or "grind" something — or, perhaps,
it is even a construct of *krau- ("to hide," whence
"crypt," "cryptic," and all such things) and *do-
("to give," whence "donate") suggesting a "hidden
gift" of some sort.
"Ocra's"
primary syllabic root *ok- or *okw- relates to "sight"
or "vision" (from which we get "occular," and
eventually "eye"). Combined with the aforementioned *krau-
we then seem to get something "hidden from sight." However,
close analogues for the second syllable also include *krei-
meaning "to sift" (and hence "discriminate,"
"discern," etc.), and *kreuh- meaning "raw"
or "bloody" (hence "crude" or "cruel").
Lastly, "Tomar"
would seem to find its initial syllable in *to- or *tu-
the generic demonstrative pronoun from which comes "this,"
"that," "those," "the," and many
related others. The second syllable points to numerous candidates,
the most lexically relevant of which include: *mari- meaning
"young woman," "virgin," or "bride"
(whence "to marry"); *marko- meaning "horse"
(whence "mare"); *mer-1 relating to "dim"
or "flickering light" (whence "murky," "morning,"
etc.); *mer-2 or *mers- relating to "trouble,"
"injury," or "harm" (whence "mar" and
"nightmare," perhaps eventually to the point of death, as
in "mortal," "morbid," etc.); *mer-3
meaning "to tie" or "bind" (whence "moor");
*merg- referring to a boundary or borderland "marker";
and *mori- a body of water (whence "marine"). That
said, serious consideration must also be given to *teu(h)-
with respect to the origin of "Tomar" en masse; a
root meaning "swollen" or "to swell," whence the
Latin tumere and the Greek tymbos from which we get
such words as "tumulus," "tumour," and "tomb."
At this juncture, we may
appear somewhat overwhelmed by vague possibilities; further from any
insight into these names than before we started pulling them apart.
Yet such abundance might, in itself, make the case for intentional
ambiguity — for a vagueness with the power to express multiple
meanings simultaneously. Having this, now, to meditate on, we observe
that the Villaways park and housing complex also sits across the East
Don River from a certain Clarinda Park, the next nearest toponym of
any apparent significance. The ONC has "Clarinda" as
a literary elaboration of Clara, from the same derivation as our
familiar St. Clair, and first encountered in Edmund Spenser's The
Faerie Queene, an unfinished work of much byzantine polysemy
itself; "cloudily enwrapped in allegorical devises"
and "dark conceit" to use Spenser's own words.
Little else would seem to
stand out with respect to place names on any current map of the area.
Indeed, one would need to consult a map of the 19th century to learn
that these ruins sit directly between two bygone settlements of
potentially pertinent toponymy known as Clarksville and Flynntown. In
"Clark," of course, we have an English occupational name
derived from a "clerk" or "cleric," which,
according to the ONC, can be traced further back through
French, Latin, and Greek to a derivative of kleros (recalling
Clair and that previous Ionian oracle), meaning "inheritance,
legacy, with reference to the priestly tribe of Levites."
"Flynn," meanwhile, comes down to us from the Gaelic floinn
or flann meaning "reddish" or "ruddy" and,
again, we seem to have religious connotations mixed with that
ever-recurrent pigment of Crothers Woods. If we now consider The
Faerie Queene's unifying protagonist, Arthur (marked out
earlier as a candidate "red king") or, indeed, the
Redcrosse Knight — Spenser's literary embodiment of Holiness itself
— we can only muse at all the ostensible implications. We might
also consider that the East Don Parkland and ruins can be most
immediately accessed from the west via Blue Ridge Park, while the
West Don Parkland and ruins connect to the congruently placed Blue
Forest Drive, out in the vicinity of Finch & Bathurst. Now,
together with our Red King and Yellow Creek, we would seem to have
each of the primary colours covered.