Moral Maxim
Our enemies are nearer the truth in their opinion of us than we are ourselves.
… La Roche foucauld
To Ale with It
Who buys good land buys many stones,
Who buys good meat buys many bones,
Who buys good eggs buys many shells,
Who buys good ale buys nothing else.
Grammer Gurton’s Needle
A Rap for the Beagles
An estate was lately advertised for sale; after a description had been given of the beauty of the situation, the richness of the soil, and the mildness of the climate, this addendum was given to enhance the value of the property: N.B. –There is not a lawyer within 10 miles of the place.
The Long and the Short of It
Dick cannot blow his nose whene’er he pleases,
His nose so long is, and his arm so short;
Nor ever cries, “God bless me!” when he sneezes—
He cannot hear so distant a report.
A Howler
Cleopatra lived and loved on denial.
Literary Errors
Virgil has placed Aeneas in a harbor which did not exist at the time, “Portusque require Velinos” (Aeneid vi. 366). It was Curius Dentatus who cut a gorge through the rocks to let the waters of the Velinus into the Nar. Before this was done, the Velinus was merely a number of stagnant lakes, and the blunder is about the same as if a modern poet were to make Columbus pass through the Suez Canal.
What’s in a Name?
Bakirjian: Turkish in derivation, identified as an occupation, bakir is defined as copper, and a bakirji, a coppersmith.
Source: Armenian Weekly
Link: Uncle Garabed’s Notebook (March 19, 2016)