Wordsmith.org: the magic of words


A.Word.A.Day

About | Media | Search | Contact  


Home

Today's Word

Subscribe

Archives



Jul 3, 2026
This week’s theme
Eponyms

This week’s words
Carrollian
hiren
Crichtonism
Mona Lisa
Comstock Lode

comstock_lode
Mining on the Comstock, 1876
Art: T.L. Dawes

Wordsmith Games
🧩Jigsaw Riddle
Studying the Stars
🌍Langitude
Trace vaudeville home
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

Comstock Lode

PRONUNCIATION:
(KUHM/KOM-stahk LOHD)

MEANING:
noun: A rich supply or source, especially one that seems inexhaustible.

ETYMOLOGY:
After Henry T.P. Comstock (c. 1820-1870), a prospector whose name is attached to the rich silver-and-gold deposit discovered in 1859 near what is now Virginia City, Nevada. Earliest documented use: 1866.

NOTES:
The California Gold Rush began in 1848-49; about a decade later, Nevada had its own silver rush. In 1859, prospectors uncovered a rich silver-and-gold deposit near what became Virginia City. It drew a rush of prospectors, led to large-scale mining, and helped Nevada become known as the Silver State.

Henry Comstock was not the heroic discoverer the name might imply. He was one of the early claim holders around the site, and the lode wound up with his name. A reminder that history, like mining, sometimes rewards whoever is standing nearest the shiny thing.

The phrase Comstock Lode is sometimes shortened to the Comstock. Not to be confused with comstockery, from Anthony Comstock, a different Comstock with a different lode of censoriousness.

See also Golconda.

USAGE:
“There was only light, and light is intangible. You cannot slice off an inch of the spectrum and put it in your pocket. The people who had come to exploit this Comstock Lode of the miraculous, found themselves painfully frustrated.”
Aldous Huxley; Adonis and the Alphabet and Other Essays; Chatto & Windus; 1956.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
There are two ways to slide easily through life: to believe everything or to doubt everything; both ways save us from thinking. -Alfred Korzybski, engineer, mathematician, and philosopher (3 Jul 1879-1950)

We need your help

Help us continue to spread the magic of words to readers everywhere

Donate

Subscriber Services
Awards | Stats | Links | Privacy Policy
Contribute | Advertise

© 1994-2026 Wordsmith