Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Little Hawk Date: 31 May 07 - 06:23 PM What must be done is to determine who Bill is. I'll give you a clue or two. He is not Bill Clinton, he is not Bill Shatner. He is, however, someone who has been seen in newspapers across the nation. He has achieved fame. Well, notoriety, at any rate. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Little Hawk Date: 01 Jun 07 - 04:44 PM Meanwhile, here's another one to drive you all nuts... "We Peeweegahs, with our arrows, stilled...." |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Alice Date: 01 Jun 07 - 11:06 PM We grow too soon old and......... |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Little Hawk Date: 01 Jun 07 - 11:11 PM ...too late smart." |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Alice Date: 01 Jun 07 - 11:14 PM very good |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Mickey191 Date: 02 Jun 07 - 12:32 AM May the roof of this house never fall in and ............. Puritanism: The haunting fear that ................ May you live as long as you want, and .............. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: mrdux Date: 02 Jun 07 - 12:50 AM "Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy." – H. L. Mencken It has also come up as "A Puritan is someone who is desperately afraid that, somewhere, someone might be having a good time." "May you live as long as you want and never want as long as you live." "May the roof of this house never fall in and may these friends beneath it never fall out." |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: mrdux Date: 02 Jun 07 - 12:59 AM "I will be exonerated of any ridiculousness. . ." "Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for. . ." "Beware of all enterprises that. . ." |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: kendall Date: 02 Jun 07 - 07:27 AM ..that require a new suit. Mark Twain??? |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Mickey191 Date: 02 Jun 07 - 09:54 AM Great job mrdux. My wall plaque: Puritanism: The haunting fear that somewhere someone is having a good time. H.L.M. May the roof of this house never fall in and those within never fall out. Six of one half dozen of the other! Now who said that? Gross Buckets is still hanging in the wind-as are a few others. Truth to tell, I'm so unhip--that when LH finally gives the answer--I won't know what he's talking about! |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: The Walrus Date: 02 Jun 07 - 10:18 AM No takers on "Gentlemen, we may not change history tomorrow, but..." ? Would it help if I point out that the 90th Anniversary appears on the 6th of this month? W |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: JennyO Date: 02 Jun 07 - 11:16 AM "Gentlemen, we may not change history tomorrow, but we shall certainly change the geography" Herbert Plumer, 6th June 1917 It is about the Battle of the Messines in the First World War. No, I didn't know this one till I looked it up, but it makes interesting reading, so I thought I would link to it here. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: An Buachaill Caol Dubh Date: 02 Jun 07 - 11:47 AM But one man ?saw the pilgrim soul in you, And loved the sorrows of your changing face; something like that: "Quand vous sera toute gris, Assis aupres de la feu, Devidant et filant... &c &c ... Ronsard me celebrait quand j'etais belle And Yeats did so for Maud Gonne, in translation. Mind you, he also described her as "drinking the ditch where they lie". For the Walrus, I wonder if it's anything to do with Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov? For everyone else: "Life scarce can cast a fragrance on the breeze, But ........ " |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Mickey191 Date: 02 Jun 07 - 12:55 PM An Buachaill Caol Dubh, Have you got another name--Like when your called for tea: "Henry, the tay is on." You are correct on Yeats beautiful love poem. Are you in Ireland? Just nosey! Mickey. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Mickey191 Date: 02 Jun 07 - 02:26 PM Hello Henry (TEE HEE) \ I wanted to see your french translated to English. The first site said they'd do it for $65.00. I demurred. Second site (Babel Fish) gave this: When you is very gray, Assis aupres of fire, Devidant and spinning... &c &c... Ronsard celebrait me when I etais beautiful When you i s very gray, Assis aupres of fire, Devi dant and spinning... & c &c... Ronsard celebrait me when I etais beautiful Kinda loses something in transit. That was a very bitchy thing Yeats said about the beautiful Maud Gonne. Not nice. Refresh my memory please-she had another famous lover-but can't recall at this moment. Do you know - was he her husband? |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Micca Date: 02 Jun 07 - 04:10 PM Mickey 191 here is the info you seek I think "Maude Gonne, one of the most colourful characters of Irish history, was in fact an English woman. She was born in Surrey in 1866, the daughter of an Army Colonel. Two years after her birth her father was posted to Ireland and after her mother's death in 1871 she spent her childhood between her father in Dublin and relatives in England, which she hated. After his death in 1886 her own illness took her to convalesce in France. She had a long affair with French nationalist Lucein Milleyoye, by whom she had two children. Through him she met the old Fenian John O'Leary and she joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood. It was under Maude's spell that Yeats became a member of the Nationalist Movement. ...... Maude married the Boer War veteran John McBride in February 1903. They separted in 1905 after a long wrangle over custody of their only child, Sean. John McBride was executed with the leaders of the 1916 Rising, in what was regarded as more of an act of revenge by the British for his Boer War exploits. His son Sean McBride, entered the Irish political scene of the 1930's, became an International lawyer, founded Amnesty International in 1961, and had the unique distinction of winning both the Nobel and Lenin Peace Prizes. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Mickey191 Date: 02 Jun 07 - 04:17 PM Thank you Micca, very interesting. Maude must have been quite a woman. Guess she had brains as well as beauty. Otherwise I don't think she would have attracted those types of men. Course I could be all wet too. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: mrdux Date: 02 Jun 07 - 05:37 PM Kendall -- very close. "Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes." – Henry David Thoreau, Walden (1854), I. Economy |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: The Walrus Date: 02 Jun 07 - 08:43 PM JennyO, "Daddy" Plumer it was - the night before they spang the mines and blew the top off Messines Ridge. W |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Trevor Thomas Date: 02 Jun 07 - 09:34 PM I thought that the 'Bill' in question might be Bill the Cat out of the Bloom County cartoons. I don't recognise tthe quotation, though. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Little Hawk Date: 02 Jun 07 - 10:02 PM Hurrah! You are correct, Trevor. Well done. I shall now reveal all. The quotation appeared in a Sunday strip. You may recall that Bill the Cat had, during his sordid career, formed a heavy metal rock group in which he was the lead singer and also played the tongue (his tongue, of course). The group was initially called "Deathtongue", with an umlaut over the "o" in "tongue". Opus the Penguin was also part of the group, as were a couple of other characters from the strip. One of their big hits was called "U Stink But I Love U" (with a heart symbol for the word "Love"...naturally...that was very much the style in music at the time). They later renamed themselves "Billy and the Boingers" and pursued fame, fortune, sex, drugs, the usual stuff... I think that sleazy lawyer Steve Dallas was involved too, but I can't recall in what capacity. At any rate, this Sunday strip was a parody of the Barry Manilow hit playing above Bill's and the band's gyrations...and I paraphrase it (cos I can't exactly recall all the lyrics)...it went kinda like this: Bill howls the songs that knot my underwear... Bill howls the songs that make me tear out my hair... Bill hows the songs that make the young girls cry... He howls the songs, Bill howls the songs... Bill is gross buckets...and he howls the SOOOONNNNNNGGGGGS! |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: GUEST,Songster Bob Date: 03 Jun 07 - 10:46 PM Second try at posting this. Now that we know the answer to the original, try this one: We have met the enemy and he .... Three well-known answers that I know of. Name them and their sources, please. Bob |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Little Hawk Date: 04 Jun 07 - 01:28 AM "We have met the enemy and they are ours; two ships, two brigs, one schooner and one sloop." - Oliver Hazard Perry, American commander, reporting on his naval victory over the British on Lake Erie in 1813. Very famous, but really quite a typical thing for a victorious commander to say in those days. Since naval victories were few and far between in those years for the rather small American fleet, this statement from Perry became very well remembered in the USA. "We have met the enemy and he is us." - A very wise comment from Pogo. Positively zenlike, in fact. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: mrdux Date: 04 Jun 07 - 01:35 AM Bob -- I only know one, with variant. The short form is: "We have met the enemy and he is us." It's attributed to Walt Kelly, and I think Pogo himself is to have said it, and that's the one that I've known for years. But I've never actually seen it written that way in any Pogo strip (I admit that my search has not been all that diligent). What I have found is this longer form, in context: "There is no need to sally forth, for it remains true that those things which make us human are, curiously enough, always close at hand. Resolve then, that on this very ground, with small flags waving and tinny blasts on tiny trumpets, we shall meet the enemy, and not only may he be ours, he may be us." "Forward!" – Walt Kelly, The Pogo Papers michael |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: mrdux Date: 04 Jun 07 - 01:57 AM "We have met the enemy and he has been smashed." (or is it "We have met the enemy and they have been smashed."?) -- Tom Paxton, "Talking Vietnam Pot Luck Blues" |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: guitar Date: 04 Jun 07 - 09:10 AM oh f.. what a load.. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Little Hawk Date: 04 Jun 07 - 12:31 PM Ha! That's easy. Oh, flip! What a load of horse puckey. |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: Songster Bob Date: 04 Jun 07 - 10:13 PM Correct answers to all three. I assume there may be others, since the original and the Pogo ones are so well-known. Bob |
Subject: RE: BS: Finish the quote... From: An Buachaill Caol Dubh Date: 05 Jun 07 - 02:46 PM Micca beat me to it on MG and MacBride (see "Easter 1916" for Yeats "writing it out in a line", tho' he calls Major McB "a drunken, vainglorious lout"). The French verse I tried to recall was, I'm pretty sure, garbled; now I'm thinking the first line should have been, "Quand vous sera bien vielle..." (since "toute gris" can mean, in addition to "all grey", "pretty much drunken" in colloquial French, or at least it could some years ago). I was trying to give the Ronsard poem of which "When you are old and grey..." is a rendition. On that note, then, can anyone complete: "I'm S**** of S*****, aged sixty-odd, I've lived....." and what's his relation to Jock ****** of Peterhead? Exits An Buachaill Caol Dubh (Robt G) |