T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
731.1 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Fri Oct 27 1989 18:37 | 3 |
| I thought it was "glitters".
Dan
|
731.2 | | PHAROS::WILSON | I'm the XTC. | Fri Oct 27 1989 18:49 | 5 |
| RE: .1
I've heard people use both "glistens" and "glitters."
I'll check the Gray poem (if I can find it!).
|
731.3 | "Winning isn't everything" . . . | SHARE::SATOW | | Fri Oct 27 1989 19:03 | 13 |
| . . . "It is the only thing"
- Vince Lombardi
or slight variations thereof. Problem was, he never said it. The closest he
came (paraphrased) was "Winning isn't everything. Trying to win is."
The Churchill ". . . blood, sweat, and tears" which was actuall "blood, toil,
tears, and sweat" is in another note.
Clay
|
731.4 | | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Fri Oct 27 1989 19:16 | 2 |
| Also in another recent note, I believe, is "[The love of] money is the root
of all evil".
|
731.5 | two more | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Fri Oct 27 1989 20:49 | 12 |
|
Hamlet's "Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him well." is a misquote of
Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio; a man of infinite
jest, of most excellent fancy.
The time-worn "Business before pleasure" is a misquote of Thackeray's
Business first; pleasure afterwards.
Bernie
|
731.6 | Movie quote | CNTROL::HENRIKSON | Be excellent to each other | Fri Oct 27 1989 22:23 | 6 |
|
In the movie Casablanca, Bogey never actually says "Play it again, Sam." I
think there is a line something like "You played it for her, now play it for
me."
Pete
|
731.7 | Who's this Grey guy? | BERAQ::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Sun Oct 29 1989 22:19 | 14 |
| G'day
In the 'Merchant of Venice' by that well known English lad from the
Elizabethan era, or thereyabouts, one William Shakespeare, Portia's
suitors must choose from a one of three caskets lead, silver and Gold.
The hero of the plot, one Antonio, the merchant of Venice, chooses
lead. Portia comments that 'all that GLISTERS is not gold'. This was an
indication that she was rapt in the choice and reckoned he done good by
choosing the lead one!
leastways that how I recall it.
Derek
|
731.8 | Based on the second line, not original with the Bard | SSGBPM::KENAH | Break the pattern, break the chain | Mon Oct 30 1989 17:08 | 18 |
| Very good, Derek --
The exact context: It isn't Portia that speaks the words;
they are part of a verse found inside the gold casket. They
are actually read by the Prince of Morocco, and go like this:
All that glisters is not gold;
Often you have heard that told.
Many a man his life hath sold
But my outside to behold.
Gilded tombs do worms infold.
Hath you been as wise as bold.
Young in limbs, in judgment old,
Your answer had not been inscrolled
Fare you well, your suit is cold.
Merchant Of Venice; II,vii; 64-73
|
731.9 | Casting correction... | NYEM1::SCHEIBEL | Temporary Insanity | Mon Oct 30 1989 20:27 | 4 |
| RE: 731.7
Antonio is the Merchant - his young friend who wins Portia is Bassanio.
|
731.10 | how far that candle throws its gleam, like a good deed in anaughty world | BERAQ::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Tue Oct 31 1989 07:44 | 13 |
|
G'day
Re .8 - Thanks! Memory fades after 26 years out of high school....:-(
yacc = yet another casting correction..
Bassanio wins Nerissa, Portia's maid, n'est-ce pas?
And Shylock's daughter runs off with???
derek
|
731.11 | Can't tell without a program... | PCOJCT::SCHEIBEL | Temporary Insanity | Tue Oct 31 1989 15:17 | 10 |
| Sorry, but no.
Bassanio wins Portia. His serving man (whose name escapes me) wins
Nerissa, who is Portia's serving woman. Lorenzo runs away with
Shylock's daughter, Jessica. Antonio, poor lad, wins no one, but
does get to keep his pound of flesh firmly attached to his body.
DeBanne (who once played Portia, and does remember with whom she ended
up in the final clinch)
|
731.12 | The price of Glister is $357 per ounce | BERAQ::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Tue Oct 31 1989 23:04 | 18 |
| Ahhh G'day,
_NOW_ I know why I failed Eng. Lit. first time thru!...;-)
I remember seeing M o V at 'The Old Vic' in London as a schoolkid. When
Portia and Nerissa appeared in, what appeared to be, low cut gowns, all
that could be heard through the auditorium was the sound of sixpenny
pieces being pushed into the slots so that the opera glasses could be
brought into play!
My favourite character was Lancelot Gobbo. (or is he in Macbeth?)
derek
|
731.13 | Or how far DOES your candle gleam? | PCOJCT::SCHEIBEL | Temporary Insanity | Wed Nov 01 1989 18:25 | 7 |
| Lancelot Gobbo is M o V. Forgot to look up the name of Bassanio's
sidekick, though. To be continued...
Are you downunder, or is g'day general pleasantry?
DeBanne
|
731.14 | I felt sorry for Shylock - needed a good lawyer! | BERAQ::WHORLOW | It's darkest just before it goes totally black | Wed Nov 01 1989 21:44 | 14 |
| G'day,
Yup, I'm Darnunderr - A Pom in self imposed exile... ;-)
been on my head for 11 years now and am even considering having
'the Op' ie becoming neutralised (naturalised)!
...and my candle gleam _is_ like a good deed in a naughty world!
(or so I would like to think)
derek
|
731.15 | The Final Vows | SSGBPM::KENAH | Break the pattern, break the chain | Thu Nov 02 1989 00:15 | 4 |
| Gratiano is Bassanio's manservant -- he woos and wins Nerissa,
Portia's lady-in-waiting.
andrew
|
731.16 | Which TV Network? | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | | Thu Nov 02 1989 18:39 | 1 |
| Uhhh-h-h- Is this on ABC or CBS?
|
731.17 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Nov 02 1989 21:17 | 1 |
| Most likely PBS, after 10pm.
|
731.18 | But is it happily ever after...? | PCOJCT::SCHEIBEL | Temporary Insanity | Fri Nov 03 1989 17:25 | 14 |
| All right, then! Before this totally degenerates into a rathole...
Who ends up with ...
Portia - Bassanio
Nerissa - Gratiano
Jessica - Lorenzo
Antonio - His pound of flesh (still attached)
Shylock - Christianity
The End!
DeBanne
|
731.19 | | SEEK::HUGHES | Fenestration+Frustration=DECwindows! | Mon Nov 06 1989 23:14 | 10 |
| .17> Most likely PBS, after 10pm.
^^^^^^^^^^
... or as people used to say in the UK, after the Council Houses have gone
to bed.
Meaning the inhabitants of Public Housing. (Don't blame me for casting
aspersions, I merely report the usage .)
Jim
|
731.20 | Elementary, my dear Watson? | SHARE::SATOW | | Wed Dec 06 1989 19:10 | 10 |
| Another note is devoted to puns on
Elementary, my dear Watson.
I don't want to rathole that note, so I'll enter my question here. Isn't this
a misquote? I know Basil Rathbone said it many times, but can anybody quote a
passage from a Conan Doyle short story or novel in which Holmes says,
"Elementary, my dear Watson"?
Clay
|
731.21 | | THEWAV::MIKKELSON | Elvis spotted in Malta! | Wed Dec 06 1989 21:06 | 5 |
|
That is correct. The canon contains no such quote.
- David
|
731.22 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Nothing up my sleeve... | Tue Dec 12 1989 19:04 | 6 |
|
And, if you'd known that bit of trivia, you could have been in the
running for one week's use of the Car Talk t-shirt! (It was the
answer to the Car Talk Puzzler two weeks ago.)
-Perry
|
731.23 | Give them an inch... | REVEAL::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Thu Dec 21 1989 20:11 | 6 |
| Most would finish this with "... and they'll take a mile."
I believe the correct quote is "... and they'll take an ell." but I don't know
where the quote comes from.
Wook
|
731.24 | You mean I've had it wrong for all these years?! | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | | Fri Dec 22 1989 00:16 | 6 |
| I would agree with the first version but what the ell...
What is an "ell" anyway?!
>I believe the correct quote is "... and they'll take an ell." but I don't know
>where the quote comes from.
|
731.25 | | PROXY::CANTOR | Go ahead; quote my say. | Fri Dec 22 1989 05:52 | 3 |
| An ell is like a cubit, but it's not the same size.
Dave C.
|
731.26 | Oh, an ell | WELMTS::HILL | Technology is my Vorpal sword | Fri Dec 22 1989 09:45 | 3 |
| An ell is a measure of cloth, it's about 45 inches.
Nick
|
731.27 | So why did I ask? | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | | Fri Dec 22 1989 22:09 | 6 |
| And an ell is a wing of a building that sticks out at right
angles. (Or it wouldn't be an ell would it?)
What was the question? 8^)
Mike
|
731.28 | enchanting movie, btw | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Sat Dec 23 1989 03:34 | 7 |
| And there's the quote from "Sebastian", the conductor crab in the new
Disney Movie "The Little Mermaid"....
"teenagers....give 'em an inch and they swim all over you"
-Jody
|
731.29 | More goodies... MisPrintNuncios? | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Nutcracker Protocol Honeymoon Suite | Sat Jan 05 1991 04:17 | 69 |
| I dunno exactly what'd be the right string for these but what the
hey... Courtesy of my daughter the ORACLE.
I certainly won't be surprised to see some of these pop up as some of
your Personal Names... Or in mine... :-)
> > These are from the New Yorker magazine competition where they asked
> > competitors to change ONE letter in a familiar non-English phrase
> > and redefine it.
>
> > HARLEZ-VOUS FRAN�AIS? - Can you drive a French motorcycle?
>
> > EX POST FUCTO - Lost in the mail
>
> > IDIOS AMIGOS - We're wild and crazy guys!
>
> > VENI, VIPI, VICI - I came; I'm a very important person; I conquered
>
> > J'Y SUIS, J'Y PESTES - I can stay for the weekend
>
> > COGITO EGGO SUM - I think; therefore, I am a waffle
>
> > RIGOR MORRIS - The cat is dead
>
> > RESPONDEZ S'IL VOUS PLAID - Honk if you're Scots
>
> > QUE SERA SERF - Life is feudal
>
> > LE ROI EST MORT. JIVE LE ROI - The King is dead. No kidding.
>
> > POSH MORTEM - Death styles of the rich and famous
>
> > PRO BOZO PUBLICO - Support your local clown
>
> > MONAGE A TROIS - I am three years old
>
> > PARDONNEZ-MOT - That wasn't funny. Sorry.
>
> > FELIX NAVIDAD - Our cat has a boat
>
> > HASTE CUISINE - Fast French food
>
> > VENI, VIDI, VICE - I came, I saw, I partied.
>
> > QUIP PRO QUO - A fast retort
>
> > ALOHA OY - Love; greetings; farewell; from SOCH a pain, you should
> never know!
> > MAZEL TON - Lots of luck
>
> > PORTE-KOCHERE - Sacramental wine
>
> > APRES MOE LE DELUGE - Larry and Curly get wet
>
> > ICH LIEBE RICH - I'm really crazy about having dough
>
> > FUI GENERIS - What's mine is mine
>
> > VISA LA FRANCE - Don't leave chateau without it
>
> > �A VA SANS DIRT - And that's not gossip
>
> > MERCI RIEN - Thanks for nothin'.
>
> > AMICUS PURIAE - Platonic friend
>
> > L'ETAT, C'EST MOO - I'm bossy around here
>
> > L'ETAT, C'EST MOE - All the world's a stooge
|
731.30 | Some MisPrintNuncios on my own nickel, this time... | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Nutcracker Protocol Honeymoon Suite | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:29 | 18 |
| Gee, commuting was fun this morning... And how would I have survived
if I hadn't had one of those notepads that attaches near the steering
wheel?
PLUS �A CHANGE, PLUS C'EST LE M�ME CHORE -- I hate housework
QU'ILS MANGENT DU B�TEAU -- Assuming they're termites, that is...
O TEMPURA, O MORES -- Can't get anything but Thai food around here
anymore...
... and with but a slight extension of the rules... :-)
APR�S MOI, LE PELAGE -- I'll check how warm the water is, first!
L'�CLAT, C'EST MOI -- Dictator *Hell,* call me THOR!!! *^@BOOM!!@#!!!
O� SONT LES VI�RGES D'ANTAN? -- O Tempora, O Mores!
|
731.31 | Mais Oui, I *know* TEMPURA is Japanese...:-) | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Nutcracker Protocol Honeymoon Suite | Wed Jan 09 1991 02:36 | 22 |
| Several folks, including cherished and respected members of mine own
fambly :-(!) whom I would preSUME would know that I know, have pointed
out that they presume moi has referred in error to Tempura as a Thai
cuisine. "Yakitori"! on them, sez I.
But of *course* Tempura is Japanese. I've known that since I sipped my
first Miso. My lament (_vide_ original sense of "O TEMPORA, O MORES")
was that all the good local Japanese restaurants around my neighborhood
seem to be being replaced by Thai restaurants, which are, it would
seem, more "in" these days. I love Thai food, to be sure, but
sometimes there's nothing I like more than a good Shrimp TEMPURA, tyvm.
Pardon the excessive use of telegraphy. Shoulda provided more context.
And btw folks, I'm having second thoughts about P�LAGE meaning
something having to do with swimming. I'm beginning to think that if
it *is* a French word at all, it's more likely to have something to do
with FISHing... Any nonpseudoFrancophones care to set (what little
remains of :-) my mind at ease?
TEMPUS FUKIT -- Forget it, I don't care *what* time it is, let's DO it!
|
731.32 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jan 09 1991 09:24 | 7 |
| My dictionary gives "pelage" (without the accent) as the
fur/wool/coat of an animal, and "p�lagien" (with the accent) as an
adjective for deep sea (animal/plant).
You might describe a whale as p�lagien, though it has no very
noticeable pelage. Otters (at least in this part of the world) have a
pelage, but are not p�lagien.
|
731.33 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Wed Jan 09 1991 09:42 | 6 |
| Re .31, .32: Correct definition, Dave. 'Pelage' is related to 'poil'
(hair) and means the whole set of hair (usually on a mammal).
'P�lagien' is related to the ancient Greek word 'pelasgos' which means
the sea (and the 'Pelasgoi', or 'Pelastoi' were the pre-Greek
inhabitants of Greece).
Denis (native born francophone).
|
731.34 | Thanks, Denis & ::MONAHAN... | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Nutcracker Protocol Honeymoon Suite | Wed Jan 09 1991 13:37 | 25 |
| Well, maybe not full marks, but I think that some of the meaning
clusters somewhere in the oceanic realm...
First, while fastening on pelage yesterday morning, I guess I was
groping towards the French word for beach and grabbed it. Then last
evening I began to remember the French guidebook phrase "O� est la
plage?" and then worried that I'd misconstructed pelage from that. I
think I must have been confused by a vague recollection from something
like our National Geographic magazine to deep-ocean-dwelling "pelagic"
fishes or birds or something.
Interestingly enough, I find in my Random House American College
Dictionary that definition 1 of "pelagian" is "Of or pertaining to the
seas or oceans" and also mentions in 2 "Living at or near the surface
of the ocean, far from land, as in certain animals or plants."
So, despite my initial confusion, I guess I haven't been sunk *too*
deeply in the Sargasso Sea by the Albatross of error...
Let me propose, revisionistically:
APR�S MOI LE PELAGE -- No, let *me* catch the first fish!!
Dan KALIKOW (I think that Continental CAPITALIZATION is so
UTILITARIAN!:-)
|
731.35 | Then the semi-Pelagians | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jan 09 1991 19:38 | 5 |
| Alternatively (and obscurely):
APR�S MOI LE PELAGE - The line for heretics forms here.
Ann B.
|
731.36 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Thu Jan 10 1991 09:27 | 4 |
| Re .35: Sorry not to have mentionned that acception of the term, but I
thought Pelasgianism had been dead and forgotten for about 14 or 15
centuries now... I try to be more exhaustive next time.
Denis.
|
731.37 | that's GREAT! | TLE::RANDALL | Where's the snow? | Thu Jan 10 1991 17:40 | 6 |
| Re: .35
You just caused my two neighbors on the other sides of my cubes
to look up to see what I was laughing so hysterically at . . .
--bonnie
|
731.38 | Hic Hoc - this wine | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jan 11 1991 19:16 | 3 |
| IN HOC SIGNO VINTES - Fine wines sold whereever you see this symbol.
Ann B.
|
731.39 | | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Fri Jan 11 1991 20:08 | 13 |
| l'eclair, c'est moi == you are what you eat...
vax populi == VAX of the people
toot LeMond == honk your bike horn at Greg LeMond
Dominus vobiscuit == God gives you a biscuit
eat two Brute == dig in!
bon motormouth == the exact word said too quickly
und so waiter == waiters, etc
|
731.40 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Noli me vocare, ego te vocabo | Fri Jan 11 1991 21:36 | 6 |
|
au reservoir == see you at the lake
hasta lumbago == see you at the chiropractor's
|
731.41 | maybe it's the joke that needs hospitalized | TLE::RANDALL | Now *there's* the snow! | Mon Jan 14 1991 21:55 | 3 |
| Sick transit Gloria -- get her to the hospital fast.
--bonnie
|
731.42 | | SSGBPM::KENAH | The heart of the matter... | Tue Jan 15 1991 15:43 | 3 |
| Hic Transit Gloria -- Careful, she's driving drunk again!
andrew
|
731.43 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Tue Jan 15 1991 16:57 | 2 |
| sic transit gloria thursdi - thus passes the glory of payday?
|
731.44 | ad nauseum | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Tue Jan 15 1991 21:04 | 3 |
| Sic gloria transit mundi - Gloria threw up on the bus Monday.
Bernie
|
731.45 | Hey, good idea... | DDIF::RUST | | Wed Jan 16 1991 02:18 | 10 |
|
CARPET DIEM - The day they promised to deliver the new rug.
ID NAUSEUM - Needs a psychiatrist. (Or has a really bad one!)
TABULA RASTA - Don' be erasin' ma tablet, mon.
MOTOR DOLOROSA - My car's engine on _really_, _really_ cold mornings.
-b
|
731.46 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Wed Jan 16 1991 04:32 | 1 |
| MISS QUOTATION - The newspaper columnist who brings us these.
|
731.47 | Cosy Fond Tooties | STAR::RDAVIS | Just like medicine | Wed Jan 16 1991 19:35 | 16 |
| IN HOCK SIGNO VINCES - Notification that Vince's is going out of
business
CUM GRONO SALIS - Assalted by puns
IN DINO VERITAS - "Bark once if Fred's home; bark twice if he's not"
CAF� AU LAITY - Without liqueur
LA DOOCE VITA - Biography of Mrs. Mussolini
And an old personal favorite:
J'AI DEUX AMOURS, MON PAY ET PARIS - I'd expatriate in an instant if I
could only find a job
|
731.48 | pooe | TLE::RANDALL | Now *there's* the snow! | Wed Jan 16 1991 20:44 | 1 |
| Dic transit Gloria -- They eloped.
|
731.49 | Not sure where the first of these goes; dual citizenship! :-) | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | LibR8 Q8 | Thu Jan 31 1991 01:13 | 7 |
| Polly-View Fran�ais -- and liked what she saw!
Sic Transit; Glorious Monday! -- The school bus broke down,
NO SCHOOL -- YAAY!!
The above two courtesy of my Sis's SO, who seems to have been bitten by
"the JOYOFLEX bug"...
|
731.50 | Greece meets West? | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Fri Feb 01 1991 22:57 | 3 |
| STABIT MATER Clytemnestra from Electra's point of view.
MERCHI BEAUCOUM Fried anchovies (If you speak Korean, that is.)
|
731.51 | off-by-one, not quite famous characters | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Partially sage, and rarely on time | Tue Jun 23 1992 14:22 | 19 |
| Newsgroups: rec.humor.funny
Date: Mon, 22 Jun 92 19:30:4 EDT
From: [email protected] (Joan Young)
Organization: Center for Environmental and Regulatory Information
Systems, Purdue University
Subject: MISSPELLED CHARACTERS
DESCRIPTION OF PERSONS WITH NAMES ALTERED BY ONE LETTER:
LITTLE BOA PEEP - shepherdess who absentmindedly ate her own
flock.
JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACHE - Wall Street baroquer.
MOOSES - Hebrew prophet who parted the Maine woods.
PERRY MASSON - television lawyer who will solve no case before
its time.
EVICTOR HUGO - French landlord and author, "Lease Miserables"
XEROXES - Persian photocopy king.
ERICH MARINA REMARQUE - author, "All Quiet On The Waterfront."
|
731.52 | Cliches we'd like to see | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Carp per diem | Wed Jun 24 1992 12:10 | 8 |
| "Flagging a dead horse" -- a futile attempt at hitchhiking
"There's no such thing as a free launch" -- Robert A. Heinsightlein's
famous argument against the space program
"90% of anything is hit" -- Surgeon's Law (specialist in traumatic
injuries)
|
731.53 | Another character (off by one) | HLFS00::STEENWINKEL | R80ST | Thu Jun 25 1992 06:59 | 1 |
| Ludwig van Beathoven - he's into symphonic rock music
|
731.54 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Carp per diem | Thu Jun 25 1992 09:08 | 2 |
| Ah, that reminds me of MC Sturgeon's Law, "90% of everything is rap."
|
731.55 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Thu Jun 25 1992 20:39 | 4 |
| On a bad day, you could say "0% of everything is crap" and be off by 1.
[In case there's any doubt, that 1 means 100%.]
|
731.56 | | GOOEY::RUST | | Mon Jul 13 1992 07:55 | 10 |
| Inspired by somebody's phonetic spelling of a foreign phrase:
ESPRIT DECOR - choosing the colors of one's aura,
or,
the satisfaction of knowing that all of one's fellow
Marines look stunning in their dress uniforms.
-b
|
731.57 | To keep from misquotation, I'm looking for a brainpick... | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | SERVE<a href="SURF_GLOBAL">LOCAL</a> | Wed Dec 21 1994 10:18 | 10 |
| Someone (Disraeli? Churchill? Einstein?) was once visiting the lab
where a new & apparently worthless but later-to-be-proven-absolutely-
seminal invention was being shown. When he asked the inventor "What
USE is it?" he was cleverly rebuffed by the retort "What use is a
baby?"
Or maybe it was the other way around.
Anecdote, please! And no Misquotations! Tnx, Dan
|
731.58 | It might be in _Ben_Franklin_Laughing_ | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Dec 27 1994 09:27 | 7 |
| The oldest version of that that I know:
After the Framers had finished hammering together the U.S. Constitution,
a non-participant asked what it was good for, and Benjamin Franklin
gave the socratic answer, "Of what use is a newborn baby?"
Ann B.
|
731.59 | A thousand thanks, Ann... :-) | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | SERVE<a href="SURF_GLOBAL">LOCAL</a> | Tue Dec 27 1994 10:59 | 1 |
|
|
731.60 | | JRDV04::DIAMOND | segmentation fault (california dumped) | Tue Dec 27 1994 17:16 | 9 |
| Re .58
Can you supply a citation? Considering that the Constitution was
designed as a solution to known severe problems with the Articles
of Confederation, it seems hard to believe that anyone would doubt
its purpose. Doubts about its legitimacy of course, and viability
maybe, but purpose? Really hard to believe.
-- Norman Diamond
|
731.61 | | ALLVAX::GELINEAU | fear, surprise, and an almost fanatical devotion | Sat Dec 31 1994 11:14 | 4 |
| norm, have you been talking to steve leech (of womannotes notoriety)
lately? :)
--angela
|
731.62 | | JRDV04::DIAMOND | segmentation fault (california dumped) | Wed Jan 04 1995 18:52 | 13 |
| >norm, have you been talking to steve leech
Never heard of him.
>(of womannotes notoriety)
Oh. Never heard of her.
Anyway, my request for a citation was sincere, because I really
find it hard to believe that the quoted question would have been
asked about that document. What is objectionable about my request?
-- Norman Diamond
|
731.63 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Jan 05 1995 10:06 | 9 |
| Norman,
I remember it as one of the documented quips from _Ben_Franklin_
_Laughing_, but I don't remember if it was about the Constitution,
the Articles of Confederation, the Declaration of Independance, or
the Table of Contents. And I haven't found the book yet. I'd like
to think it isn't in a box in storage.
Ann B.
|
731.64 | | ALLVAX::GELINEAU | fear, surprise, and an almost fanatical devotion | Fri Jan 06 1995 10:17 | 9 |
| Norman,
there is nothing objectionable about your request...
Mr. Leech is an ardent admirer/scholar of the constitution
as well, and your writing styles (not your noting styles)
seem very similar to me. I thought that you might
know him through notes.
--angela
|
731.65 | | FORTY2::KNOWLES | | Fri Jan 13 1995 06:08 | 9 |
| If it was Ben Franklin, Stevenson should have it - Book of Home
Quotations or Book of Home Quotations or something - better
(or at least bigger) than any other compendium of N. American
Quotations. Its main flaw (apart from various misquotations
and misreferences - one _horrific_ one whose details I forget)
was `Marry in haste, repeat at leisure' (not in the text, but in
an index entry).
b
|
731.66 | It may have been nice of you but it was bigamy. | RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Fri Jan 13 1995 10:31 | 1 |
| Are you sure it isn't `repent at leisure'?
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731.67 | Not an error at all. Details herein. | SMURF::BINDER | gustam vitare | Fri Jan 13 1995 12:42 | 13 |
| Re .65
> apart from various misquotations
> and misreferences - one _horrific_ one whose details I forget)
> was `Marry in haste, repeat at leisure'
Bob, that is NOT a misquotation or a misreference. It is a shortened
version of the following line from the fantasy novel _Jurgen_ by James
Branch Cabell:
I shall marry in haste, and repeat at leisure.
-dick
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731.68 | Interesting. | RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Sun Jan 15 1995 07:53 | 5 |
| It's Mike but thanks for the reference.
Fantasy? Hmmmm. 8^)
mikeP
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731.69 | I think so. :-) | SMURF::BINDER | gustam vitare | Sun Jan 15 1995 18:27 | 30 |
| Re .68
Er, umm, Mike, I was answering Bob Knowles' .65, not your .66.
Fantasy. Not like the modern soup-brained sword-and-sorcery New Age
fantasy - adult, intelligent stuff that is in my opinion far better.
Cabell was one of several 19th- and early 20th-century fantasy writers
that I like. I don't have all his novels, but some of them are:
Jurgen (1919)
The High Place (1923)
The Cream of the Jest (1917)
Domnei (1920)
Figures of Earth (1921)
Cabell is responsible for the following seriously profound witticism:
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible
worlds; and the pessimist fears that this is true."
Other good stuff that I have on my shelves includes:
The Boats of the Glen Carrig (1907), William Hope Hodgson
The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath (1939), H. P. Lovecraft
Silverlock (1949), John Myers Myers
The Wood Beyond the World (1894), William Morris
The Well of the Unicorn (1948), Fletcher Pratt
Take a shot - you might like it.
-dick
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731.70 | Jump in anywhere you like she said. | RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Mon Jan 16 1995 05:07 | 1 |
| So you were. Sorry for the distraction.
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731.71 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Jan 16 1995 08:54 | 19 |
| Norman,
I found it! It's anecdote 98. in _Ben_Franklin_Laughing_. However,
it doesn't refer to government at all! <blush> It is about the
early ballon flights. Here it is in translation from the
_Correspondance_Litt�raire_ of Baron Fr�d�rick-Melchior von Grimm,
for August 1783:
Many people who prided themselves upon remaining indifferent
[to the first ballon flights] in the midst of public enthusiasm
did not fail to repeat, "To what use do they expect to put
these experiments? What good is this discovery that they
make so much noise about?" The venerable Franklin replied
with his accustomed simplicity, "What good is a new-born baby?"
By coincidence, I also found _The_Most_Dangerous_Man_in_America_ (a
biography of Franklin) on the same day -- but in a different bookcase.
Ann B.
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731.72 | Woohhh! THANX Ann!! | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | UNISYS: ``Beware .GIFt horses!'' | Mon Jan 16 1995 11:18 | 9 |
| (-: ...happy sigh... of release of long-held tension :-) -- NOW I will
be able to use that thought with an authoritative author to cite, as
well... There's still far too much "that'll never amount to much!!"
around these halls. This now-solidly-credited quote will work wonders,
at least for those of calcified brain with whom I joust who are
American, British, and/or French...:-)
Tnx again!!
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731.73 | | FORTY2::KNOWLES | | Fri Feb 03 1995 06:19 | 9 |
| Dick -
I didn't know about Cabell, but either the Stevenson index entry gave a
pointer to the wrong source (Johnson) or it was a typo (as the source
given was indeed Johnson, whose word was `repent'). If the latter, one
could fantasize that Cabell spotted it too and turned it into a
wisecrack.
b
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731.74 | | SMURF::BINDER | gustam vitare | Fri Feb 03 1995 06:42 | 6 |
| re .73
When was Stevenson collected, Bob? That'd answer your suggestion that
Cabell saw it there. Jurgen was published in 1919.
-dick
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731.75 | Later than that, I think | FORTY2::KNOWLES | | Tue Feb 14 1995 04:46 | 7 |
| Not sure, Dick. It's a while since I was au fait with this stuff. My
recollection is that I only ever handled quite recent copies of
Stevenson ('60s/'70s), but I wouldn't have used a first edition
anyway. If it _was_ post-war (I'll check when I can get to a decent
library) Cabell must have been extraordinarily prescient (!)
b
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