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- From: dok@fwi.uva.nl (Sir Hans)
- Newsgroups: alt.quotations,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: alt.quotations FAQ
- Supersedes: <aqfaq_825645901@fwi.uva.nl>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 29 Mar 1996 03:05:03 +0100
- Organization: FWI, University of Amsterdam
- Lines: 1959
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 9 May 1996 02:05:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <aqfaq_828065100@fwi.uva.nl>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: gene.fwi.uva.nl
- Keywords: faq
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.quotations:30409 alt.answers:16685 news.answers:68062
-
- Archive-name: quotations/part1
- Version: 2.0.3
- Original-author: jgm@cs.brown.edu (Jonathan Monsarrat)
- Maintainers: dok@fwi.uva.nl (Sir Hans) and jrnewquist@ucdavis.edu (Jason
- Newquist)
- Last-change: 1995.02.22 by dok@fwi.uva.nl (Sir Hans)
- Changes-posted-to: alt.quotations,alt.answers,news.answers
-
-
- The alt.quotations FAQ
- -+-
- by Sir Hans and Jason Newquist
-
-
- I keep six honest serving-men
- (They taught me all I knew);
- Their names are What and Why and When
- And How and Where and Who.
- Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
- _Just So Stories_ (1902) ``The Elephant's Child''
-
-
- 0. Metastuff, credits and some other standard FAQfare
- 0.1 What's this?
- 0.2 Who are the creators of this FAQ?
- 0.3 Who's to thank for those additional bits and corrections?
- 0.4 Where can I get the latest version?
- 0.5 What will happen with the FAQ in the future?
-
- 1. Getting started
- 1.1 What is a quotation?
- 1.2 What is a great quotation?
- 1.3 What is not a quotation?
- 1.4 What are the standards for good quotation citation?
-
- 2. alt.quotations newsgroup
- 2.1 What is it?
- 2.2 What is netiquette?
- 2.3 What is appropriate to post to a.q?
- 2.4 How do I compose a good subject header for my post?
- 2.5 What is an ObQuote?
-
- 3. FTP sites
- 3.1 What are FTP sites?
- 3.2 Where are they, and what is on them?
- 3.3 How can I contribute to these sites?
- 3.4 What is the Bibliophiles project?
-
- 4. loQtus: the WWW Quotations Page at UC Davis
- 4.1 What is it?
- 4.2 What is the WWW (World Wide Web)?
- 4.3 How do I access loQtus?
- 4.4 What is available on loQtus?
- 4.5 How can I contribute to loQtus?
-
- 5. Textual resources
- 5.1 What are DoQs (Dictionaries of Quotations)?
- 5.2 What DoQs exist?
- 5.3 Are there other resources?
-
- 6. Programs [section under construction]
- 6.1 What programs are available for the Macintosh?
- 6.2 What programs are available for IBM-compatibles?
-
- 7. Frequently Asked Quotations
- 7.1 Who said ``...''?
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 0. Metastuff, credits and some other standard FAQfare
-
-
- ----0.1 What's this?
-
-
- Whence and what art thou, execrable shape?
- John Milton (1608-1674)
- _Paradise Lost_ (1667) bk. 2, l. 681
-
-
- The alt.quotations FAQ. It gives answers to frequently asked
- questions (that's what FAQ stands for), sums up some frequently asked
- (and posted) quotations, and is a small guide to quotations and related
- subjects in general--or at least it tries to be all this. If you are
- new to this group and want to post here, or merely wish to peruse it
- for any length of time, you should definitely read through this FAQ
- carefully. If you have a question about a quotation, look carefully
- through section 8 to see whether the answer may not be there.
-
-
- ----0.2 Who are the creators of this FAQ?
-
-
- Little Lamb who made thee?
- Dost thou know who made thee?
- William Blake (1757-1827)
- _Songs of innocence_ (1789) ``The Lamb''
-
-
- Sir Hans (dok@fwi.uva.nl) and Jason Newquist
- (jrnewquist@ucdavis.edu). Jason did the ``techie'' bits: sections 3,
- 4, and 5. Sir Hans admits to having written the rest, though all the
- good bits in section 8 have been written by intelligent, nice, and
- omniscient people, most of whom are mentioned in the next answer.
- Also, the old alt.quotation FAQ was a little bit more than just an
- inspiration for this one.
-
-
- ----0.3 Who's to thank for those additional bits and corrections?
-
-
- A joyful and pleasant thing it is to be thankful.
- Book of Common Prayer (1662)
- Psalm 147, v. 16
-
-
- In no particular order:
-
- Jonathan Monsarrat and Michael Moncur (creators of the original FAQ)
- Alfred M. Kriman
- Col. G. L. Sicherman
- William C. Waterhouse
- Dwayne Day
- Douglas Zongker
- Jeff Shepherd
- Lars Jorgen Aas
- Patrick Faricy
- Michael Binder
-
- If you think you should be mentioned, but aren't, tell us so.
-
-
- ----0.4 Where can I get the latest version?
-
-
- This strange disease of modern life,
- With its sick hurry.
- Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)
- ``The Scholar-Gipsy'' (1853) l. 201
-
-
- The FAQ will posted every month to alt.quotations, alt.answers
- and news.answers, and should appear on Jason Newquist's WWW
- Quotation Page loQtus
-
- (see section 5).
-
-
- ----0.5 What will happen with the FAQ in the future?
-
-
- I have been over into the future, and it works.
- Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936)
- in _Letters_ (1938) vol. 1, p. 463
-
- I hope to have info on a possible replacement for Jason's now
- defunct Quotations Listserver. Furthermore, some extra reviews will be
- added shortly.
-
- The FAQ is quite large; it will probably be split up, as some
- ``canonical'' lists of quotations by perennial favorites like Yogi
- Berra and Groucho Marx that are requested rather often and very rarely
- surprise, except perchance by gross inaccuracy or malevolent stupidity,
- will be added as well.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1. Getting started
-
-
- ----1.1 What is a quotation?
-
-
- Quotation, n. The act of repeating erroneously the
- words of another. The words erroneously repeated.
- Ambrose Bierce (1842-?1914)
- _The Devil's Dictionary_ (1911)
-
-
- According to Tony Augarde in his preface to _The Oxford Dictionary
- of Modern Quotations_ a quotation is ``a saying or piece of writing
- that strikes people as so true that they quote it (or allude to it) in
- speech or writing'', to which I would add ``or add it to their personal
- collection''--at least this is the case with many readers of
- alt.quotations. Quotations are either famous in their own right or
- utterances by (generally speaking) someone famous. Quotations can be
- maxims, aphorisms, striking fragments of poetry, humorous or impressive
- prose and remarks, coinages of new phrases or ideas, remarks at
- historical events, putdowns of others, famous last words or anything
- else which is worth repeating on its own, possibly with some comment on
- when, where, and on who.
-
-
- ----1.2 What is a great quotation?
-
-
- A good aphorism is too hard for the tooth of time, and
- is not worn away by all the centuries, although it serves
- as food for every epoch.
- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900)
- _Miscellaneous Maxims and Opinions_ (1879) no. 168
-
-
- A great quotation is one that makes you want to chime in with Oscar
- Wilde and say ``I wish I had said that.''[1] [SH]
-
- A great quotation is one that highlights a point about the human
- condition or of reality with style and in such a way as to present it
- in a new light. This tentative definition of mine obliterates any
- chance that two people will agree on what is a great quotation, but
- that's realistic. It's all up to you. If you can read a particular
- quotation over and over again, each time deriving pleasure and
- knowledge from the words--chances are, that's a great quotation. Great
- quotations should be shared. Post them, write them in .sigs, get them
- out there. It is my opinion that there are precious few great
- quotations and that they should be shared whenever possible. [JN]
-
-
- ----1.3 What is not a quotation?
-
-
- Fun is a good thing but only when it spoils nothing
- better.
- George Santayana (1863-1952)
- _The Sense of Beauty_ (1896) ``The Comic''
-
-
- Basically, anything not covered by 1.1, but specifically ``Laws''
- (as in variation on Murphy's Law, the Peter Principle[2]--those have
- attained ``quotation'' status, due to their well-knownness and the
- fact that they're attributable (and more or less original) are not
- appreciated, as are other humorous variations on real quotations.
- Jokes and fulldeckisms belong in rec.humor. Fragments from movies and
- television series are often not appropriate, only being able to be
- appreciated by fans of the series (but check out 2.3). Of course as
- always there are exceptions--_Casablanca_ has now a few firmly entombed
- entries in _Oxford_, for example, but this is--and should, in _my_
- arrogant opinion, remain--an exception.
-
-
- ----1.4 What are the standards for good quotation citation?
-
-
- I distrust all systematisers, and avoid them. The will
- to a system shows a lack of honesty.
- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900)
- _G\"otzen-D\"ammerung [The Twilight of the Idols]_ (1888)
- ``Maxims and Missiles'' no. 26
-
-
- A quotation really must have an author, unless it's a very well
- known ``anonymous'' statement, such as the one describing television
- programs as ``chewing gum for the eyes.''[3] If you know birth and
- death years of the author, give those as well, and if the author is
- only a person of minor fame, telling us who she or he is would be nice.
-
- There is always great interest in as complete sources, so if you
- know the book, play, or whatever else your quotations come from, give
- them as well.
-
- If you quote from the Koran or the Bible or another large,
- well-known ``anonymous'' work, you can give the title of the work as
- the ``author'', and give the book, chapter, verse, etc. in the
- reference line.
-
- We here at the Institute for Experimental Quotology have developed
- a special format to keep one's quotations in. The advantages are
- manifold and will become apparent upon inspection. Unfortunately
- there are also one or two minor disadvantages, such as the fact that
- you practically have to be either a rocket scientist or me to
- understand it. Anyhow, adherence to this standard _would_ be nice and
- appreciated. If you do have comments, ideas or whatever to improve it,
- or to radically reorganize it, do not hesitate to e-mail me (Sir Hans)
- at dok@fwi.uva.nl.
-
- The system:
-
- ``@A: '' author and birth/death information. Giving the last name of
- the author first will allow for easy sorting. When you are sure the
- quotation is exact, append an asterisk (``*'') to this line.
-
- ``@Q: '' the quotation come directly after this. If verse is quoted,
- indicate empty lines with a ``.''
-
- ``@T: '' if the original quotation is from a foreign language, and you
- happen to know the original as well, the original appears after
- ``@Q: '', and the translation in this field. If you don't know the
- original, put the translation in the ``@Q: '' field.
-
- ``@D: '' this is the field to give particulars with regard to the
- quotation that do not actually comment on the quotation itself,
- including date, and whether it is an ``attributed'' remark.
-
- ``@R: '' the reference for the quotation; i.e. not ``Letter to John
- Smith'' or ``Speech at the MIT'' (these should go into the ``@D:''
- field) but a work where the quotation can be found. Titles of works
- are given in Italic type (here represented by starting and ending with
- an underscore ``_''). Titles of pieces appearing as part of a
- published volume appear inside double inverted commas (``''). An
- ``in'' means that the line is quoted in that work. A default ``@R:''
- line looks like this:
-
- @R: _Name of Publication_ (date) ``name of piece'' place in publication
-
- Standard abbreviations used are:
-
- bk. book
- ch. chapter
- l. line
- n. note
- no. number
- p. page
- para. paragraph
- pt. part
- sc. scene
- sect. section
- st. stanza
- subsect. subsection
- v. verse
- vol. volume
-
- The book, part, chapter etc. numbers can always appear in arabic.
- What's the use of old-fashioned roman numerals?
-
- ``@%: '' possibly needed comment on the quotation, e.g. explaining what
- the quotation is about, or giving some useful info (``She died minutes
- later'').
-
- ``@K: '' keywords; you shouldn't place the complete set of nouns here,
- but something descriptive of the idea behind the quotation, or the
- subject. There are also extended keywords: a sort of higher level
- keyword to allow subjects to be grouped together, like literature or
- famous people. A possible keyword line would look like this:
-
- @K: literature:poetry; people:Milton, John
-
- The keyword line is often neglected by people who do not want to spend
- their days being bored to death.
-
- On indentation: for prose, start the first line on the same line as
- ``@Q:'' in the ninth column, and any subsequent lines in the fifth
- column. Left-align poetry, and start in the ninth column; an exception
- could be made in cases where the poem depends on its shape--though this
- would usually take us outside the quotation range and into the
- copyright-infringment range, size-wise speaking. If you have thought
- of a way to quote from Mary Ellen Solt's ``semiotic poems'' in ASCII, I
- don't want to hear from you. You're probably scary.
-
- Some examples:
-
- @A: Acheson, Dean (1893-1971) *
- @Q: Great Britain has lost an Empire and has not yet found a role.
- @D: [1962.12.05] Speech at the Military Academy, West Point
- @R: in _Vital Speeches_ 1 January 1963, p. 163
-
- Note the format on the ``@D: '' line: it allows for easy sorting on
- date. The asterisk behind the name indicates exactness.
-
- @A: Anne, Princess (1950-)
- @Q: It's a very boring time. I am not particularly maternal--it's
- an occupational hazard of being a wife.
- @D: [1981] TV interview
- @%: On pregnancy.
- @K: pregnancy
-
- Here the use of the ``@%: '' field becomes apparent. The keyword may
- seem redundant, but the as-yet-hypothetical archive will be the better
- for it, allowing easy retrieval of quotations on a subject. This
- quotation is from somewhere on the net, and I am therefore less than
- sure of the exactness, hence no asterisk.
-
- @A: Li Yeh (fl. 8th cent.) *
- @Q: It is good to get drunk once in a while.
- What else is there to do?
- @R: ``A Greeting to Lu Hung-Chien'' in Kenneth Rexroth and Ling Chung
- (ed. and tr.) _The Orchid Boat, Women Poets of China_ (1972)
-
- A rather different ``@R:'' line here. That's what you get when you
- quote from obscure people.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 2. alt.quotations newsgroup
-
-
- ----2.1 What is it?
-
-
- News is what a chap who doesn't care much about
- anything wants to read. And it's only news until he's read
- it. After that it's dead.
- Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)
- _Scoop_ (1938) bk. 1, ch. 5
-
-
- alt.quotations is a newsgroup for everything related to quotations;
- it is read, and contributed to by people from all over the world. If
- you have questions regarding the author of a quotation, or want to
- share your favorites, have a question about the meaning or background
- of a quotation, or simply want to read some quotations posted by
- various contributors, this is the place to be. You can also discuss
- software and books on quotations here, or anything else, as long as it
- somehow has to do with quotations.
-
-
- ----2.2 What is netiquette?
-
-
- Good manners are the settled medium of social, as
- specie is of commercial, life; returns are equally expected
- for both.
- Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)
- _Letters to his Son_ (1774) 25 December 1753
-
-
- If you are new to the net, it is recommended that you spend some
- time reading the documents from the group news.announce.newusers.
- These will explain everything you need to know. In short, netiquette
- is the usenet equivalent of good manners, and like in real life, people
- who do not conform to them are not likely to be appriciated much by the
- community. Remember that you are far more likely to receive an answer
- to a request if it is in written in proper English, well formatted and
- if you don't ask people to reply by e-mail (bear in mind that your
- fellow readers may well be interested in seeing the quotations as
- well).
-
-
- ----2.3 What is appropriate to post to a.q?
-
-
- The inappropriate cannot be beautiful.
- Frank Lloyd Wright (1869-1959)
- _The Future of Architecture_ (1953)
-
-
- Anything mentioned in 2.1. One-liners, ``laws'', funny limericks
- about people from Nantucket and so on belong in rec.humor (see also
- 1.3). If you have a request for quotes from a television series or
- movies, you are probably better off asking in groups on that subject.
- A good list of movie quotes, maintained by Lars Jorgen Aas can be found
- on the following two FTP sites:
- cathouse.org in pub/cathouse/movies/database
- ftp.funet.fi in pub/culture/tv+film/lists
-
- If you want to have the lyrics for a particular pop/rock/whatever-
- these-youngsters-listen-to-today-song, your best bet is to check out
- the following FTP site:
- ftp.uwp.edu in pub/music/lyrics
- There are quite a few different lyrics there. Alternatively, ask
- on alt.music.lyrics on one of the many other music groups--there's
- bound to be one on your favorite kind of music.
-
-
- ----2.4 How do I compose a good subject header for my post?
-
-
- Our inventions mirror our secret wishes.
- Lawrence Durrell (1912-1990)
- _Mountolive_ (1959) 7
-
-
- Stay to the point, indicate if you are requesting something, and if
- you follow-up to something, check whether the header is still relevant.
- If it isn't you should edit the header so that it has your subject, but
- keep the old one there in square brackets.
- Many people type the kind of post in caps, followed by a colon and then
- a brief explanation. For example:
-
- REQUEST: Shakespeare
- ANNOUNCE: quotations web page
- QUOTES: Tom Stoppard
-
- more colorfully...
-
- **IDENTIFY**: mystery quote on bananas
-
- You get the idea. Bad subjects include ``quotations'' or ``help'', as
- this doesn't tell the public much of anything. If you are specific,
- odds are you will garner more responses then just a general cry in the
- dark bleakness of cyberspace.
-
-
- ----2.5 What is an ObQuote?
-
-
- Noblesse oblige. [Nobility has its obligations.]
- Gaston Pierre Marc, Duc de L\'evis (1764-1830)
- _Maximes et Reflexions_ (1812 ed.)
- ``Morale: Maximes et Préceptes'' no. 73
-
-
- Whenever you feel the need to post to alt.quotations, and your
- posting does not already include a quote added by you in the course of
- posting or answering, it is considered good manners to supply a quote
- anyway--this is, after all, alt.quotations. This quote is known, and
- usually announced accordingly, as an ``obligatory quote''--an
- ObQuote for short. In alt.quotations, your wittiness is judged by the
- relevancy of your ObQuotes.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 3. FTP sites
-
-
- ----3.1 What are FTP sites?
-
-
- The night sky over the planet Krikkit is the least
- interesting sight in the entire Universe.
- Douglas Adams (1952-)
- _Life, the Universe, and Everything_ (1982)
-
-
- FTP is ``file transfer protocol''. It is a very commonly used way
- of moving information from one computer on the internet to another. An
- ``FTP site'' is a computer that accomodates file transfer protocol. In
- one way of thinking, there are two kinds of FTP sites. The less useful
- of the two requires that you have an account set up with the facility
- which manages the site. The more useful allows anyone to gain access
- to a region of the computer. These are referred to by the term
- ``anonymous FTP sites'' and, in internet parlance, things which a user
- can gain access to on these sites are said to be ``available via
- anonymous FTP''.
- How does one gain access? I could go into rigorous detail, but
- that will take too much space. I refer you to one of the several on-
- line guides to the internet which explain these matters in depth.
-
-
- ----3.2 Where are they?
-
-
- I can't say I've ever been lost, but I was bewildered
- once for three days.
- Daniel Boone (1734-1820)
- Attributed
-
-
- The largest place I know is at:
-
- wilma.cs.brown.edu
-
- If you want a wide array of stuff, that's the place. FTP over there,
- login as ``anonymous'' and include your e-mail address as your
- password. Go into the ``pub'' directory and thence to
- ``alt.quotations''. You will need to know how to decompress the files,
- so I heartily recommend taking the time to read the on-line info
- discussed in question 3.1. Another place is known warmly as the
- ``Yoyo''. The address is:
-
- yoyo.cc.monash.edu.au
-
- There you can find Tim MacKenzie's fortunes and other items. Go into
- pub/quotes once there. See also 2.3 for the location of the movie
- quotes list.
- We know of no other FTP sites.
-
-
- ----3.3 How can I contribute to these sites?
-
-
- It is more blessed to give than to receive.
- Bible
- ``Acts of the Apostles'' ch. 20, v. 35
-
-
- You need to contact the persons in charge of the sites. Normally,
- they readily accept items. Here are the e-mail addresses of the
- current persons in charge:
-
- FTP at Brown: Jonathan Monsarrat
- FTP at Yoyo: Tim MacKenzie tym@dibbler.cs.monash.edu.au
-
-
- ----3.4 What is the Bibliophiles project?
-
-
- He had been eight years upon a project for extracting
- sunbeams out of cucumbers, which were to be put in vials
- hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in raw
- inclement summers.
- Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)
- _Gulliver's Travels_ (1726) ``A Voyage to Laputa, etc.'' ch. 5
-
-
- It is a project based at Brown designed to get a large number of
- quotations in a uniform format so that programs can be written to take
- advantage of, manipulate, and add to them. There is a bit of a
- division over exactly what format is best, but the one in this FAQ will
- probably eclipse the current, more limited, one used at Brown. The
- idea is to gather a group of people together who will process
- quotations by hand, making them readable in the new format. This is a
- time-intensive project, to be sure, and requires lots of effort. You
- can help relieve the bibliophiles of this effort by posting quotations,
- when possible, in the suggested format given above. If you'd like to
- volunteer to be a bibliophile, contact Jason.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 4. loQtus: the WWW Quotations Page at UC Davis
-
-
- ----4.1 What is it?
-
-
- I wrote my name at the top of the page. I wrote down
- the number of the question ``1''. After much reflection I
- put a bracket round it thus ``(1)''. But thereafter I
- could not think of anything connected with it that was
- either relevant or true.
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
- _My Early Life_ (1930) ch. 2
-
-
- loQtus is the ``latticed on-line Quotations user service''. It is
- a hub for all things quotable on the World Wide Web. loQtus is located
- in the Center for Advanced Information Technology at the university of
- California, Davis. It is comprised of several web pages. Its' URL is:
-
- http://pubweb.ucdavis.edu/Documents/Quotations/homepage.html
-
-
- ----4.2 What is the WWW (World Wide Web)?
-
-
- Man did not weave the web of life;
- he is merely a strand in it.
- Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself.
- Seattle (c.1786-1866)
- [1854]
-
-
- Remember back in the FTP section when I referred you to some
- on-line or published paper documents which explain the internet? Well,
- get them back out. If you want a comprehensive explanation of the WWW,
- I suggest that you look there! If you don't know what it is, you
- should find out about it, because you can access everything that is
- available via FTP, gopher, telnet through the WWW--as well as special
- ``pages'' that are WWW-readable only. loQtus is accessible only
- through the WWW.
-
- Suffice it to say that the WWW is able to arrange text in different
- fonts and sizes, display graphics and animations, and play sounds
- (depending of course on your computer set-up).
-
-
- ----4.3 How do I access loQtus?
-
-
- Lasciate ogni speranza voi ch'entrate! [Abandon all
- hope, you who enter!]
- Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)
- _La Divina Commedia [The Divine Comedy]_ (1310-1321)
- ``Inferno'' canto 3, l. 1
-
-
- You need a machine that is directly on the internet, or a slip or
- TCP/IP connection with a machine that is directly on the internet.
- With such a set-up, you should be able to use the popular Mosaic ``web
- browsing'' software. You need Mosaic (or something similar like the
- fine Macintosh program MacWeb) to access the WWW on these machines.
- Winweb and Cello are two alternative programs for the PC. Both are
- much easier to set up than Mosaic.
- If you have an account on a Unix machine, you may be able to run a
- program called ``lynx'' which offers a text-only version of the WWW.
- For more information, see your local information technology people, or
- just try to type ``lynx'' at your unix prompt.
-
-
- ----4.4 What is available on loQtus?
-
-
- As I was walking among the fires of Hell, delighted
- with the enjoyments of Genius; which to Angels look like
- torment and insanity. I collected some of their Proverbs.
- William Blake (1757-1827)
- _The Marriage of Heaven and Hell_ (1790-1793)
-
-
- loQtus has a host of archives (almost 2 megabytes worth) of pure,
- undiluted quotations. These clearly make up the centerpiece of
- loQtus. loQtus also features a list of quotations resources on the
- internet, including links to all the sites mentioned in this document.
- loQtus is an archival site for ``back issues'' of popular daily and
- weekly quotations which appear on the Quotations Listserver and on
- alt.quotations. A more detailed list is in progress and will appear in
- the next version of this FAQ.
-
-
- ----4.5 How can I contribute to loQtus?
-
-
- It is rather to be chosen than great riches, unless I
- have omitted something from the quotation.
- Robert Benchley (1889-1945)
-
-
- ``We're just a phone call away.'' Well, an e-mail message. loQtus
- is maintained by Jason Newquist (jrnewquist@ucdavis.edu). e-mail me
- with any ideas that you have. If you collect quotations, please
- contact me! I am very interested in any sorts of collections that you
- might have (especially if sorted by author or subject, but anything
- helps!).
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 5. Textual resources
-
-
- ----5.1 What are DoQs (Dictionaries of Quotations)?
-
-
- It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books
- of quotations.
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
- _My Early Life_ (1930) ch. 9
-
-
- Dictionaries of quotations. There are several types: some are
- intended mainly to allow the user to find out the who, what, and where
- regarding well-known quotations (these are normally arranged by
- author), some are there to help the speaker or writer to find ``pithy
- sayings'' to support her or him (often subject-based), and others are
- meant more to be read through and enjoyed by the reader (you'll be
- lucky if you can detect any order at all). In practice these
- distinctions are not that sharp--even the major DoQs for referential
- use have their share of the more obscure and interesting, and some of
- the latter type are actually useful if you want to find a source for
- something. Some DoQs are subject-based as well, and whether you're
- interested in love, war, or music, you'll be able to find one about it.
- If you're seriously interested In quotations you will definitely want
- to have at least either _Bartlett's Familiar Quotations_ or _The Oxford
- Dictionary of Quotations_; see below for details.
-
-
- ----5.2 What DoQs exist?
-
-
- Il buono, il bruto, il cattivo. [The good, the bad,
- and the ugly.]
- Age Scarpelli,
- Luciano Vincenzoni (1926-),
- and Sergio Leone (1921-)
- Title of film (1966)
-
-
- This is a bibliography of the DoQs in our possession. Entries
- marked with [Michael] have been written by the former FAQ maintainer
- Michael Moncur, with some merely ornamental editing by me (Sir Hans).
- [SH] should be obvious. If you have a favorite DoQ, or any at all, and
- can add to this list, please send e-mail to dok@fwi.uva.nl (Sir Hans)
- or jrnewquist@ucdavis.edu (Jason Newquist). See below for more
- specific instructions.
-
- [JS] Jeff Shepherd (jeff@trg.saic.com)
- [MM] Michael Moncur (mgm@xmission.com)
- [PF] Patrick Faricy (patrick@usa.net)
- [RS] Roger Scowen (rss@ditc.npl.co.uk)
- [SH] Sir Hans
-
-
- 21st Century Dictionary of Quotations
- Published: 1993
- Publisher: Laurel Books
- Editor: ``The Princeton Language Institute''
- Scope: Subject-based quotations
- Number of quotations: 6000
- ISBN: 0-440-21447-5
- Well. If there's any DoQ which can lay a claim on being a worthy
- contender in the ``Big Two'' class, this is it. Not. This DoQ must
- surely rank as one of the most shockingly bad yet produced. For
- starters, there are no sources at all, misquotations abound, and once
- more it is demonstrated that ``experts comprising of linguists,
- lexicographers, writers, teachers, and businesspeople'' can have the
- utmost trouble discerning Samuel Butler and Samuel Butler or Thomas
- Fuller and Thomas Fuller, besides having looked a little too
- extensively in _The International Thesaurus of Quotations_. Also worth
- a mention is the debilitating ``unique conceptual index to facilitate
- access to related ideas.'' If this is truly the level of ``21st
- century reference'' I think I'll go and kill myself come December 31,
- Sigh. Not recommended. [SH]
-
-
- The 637 Best Things Anybody Ever Said
- Published: 1982
- Publisher: Fawcett Crest / Ballantine (Random House)
- Editor: Robert Byrne
- Scope: Chosen by author.
- Robert Byrne has compiled a volume of quotations which he finds to
- possess ``insight, surprise, wit, pith, or punch.'' No attempt is made
- to be comprehensive. The quotations are arranged in ``sequential''
- order, meaning that they vaguely relate to the ones around them. It
- does include an index by author and subject, though. This book, and
- its sequels, are my personal favorite collections. [MM]
-
-
- The Other 637 Best Things Anybody Ever Said
- Published: 1984
- Publisher: Ballantine (Random House)
- Editor: Robert Byrne
- Scope: Chosen by author
- Sequel to the above work. Same concept, new quotations. [MM]
-
-
- The Third-and Possibly the Best-637 Best Things Anybody Ever Said
- Published: 1986
- Publisher: Ballantine (Random House)
- Editor: Robert Byrne
- Scope: Chosen by author
- Yet another 637. [MM]
-
-
- The Fourth-and by far the Most Recent-637 Best Things Anybody Ever
- Said
- Published: 1990
- Publisher: Atheneum/Macmillan Publishing Company
- Editor: Robert Byrne
- Scope: Chosen by author
- The cover says that Robert Byrne ``Just can't seem to stop'', which
- seems true. It's been three years, though--Let's hope there's a fifth
- volume coming. All four of these are of equal value in my opinion.
- [MM]
-
-
- Bartlett's Familiar Quotations (16th edition)
- Published: 1992 (1st edition 1855)
- Publisher: Little, Brown
- Editor: Justin Kaplan
- Scope: All quotations, choice based on familiarity.
- Number of quotations: 20000
- ISBN: 0-316-08277-5
- This is the first of the ``Big Two''. It has a few thousand more
- quotations, and is more fun to leaf through than _Oxford_, probably
- because the authors are organized on year of birth, making the whole
- slightly more coherent and giving an interesting insight when comparing
- authors. The disadvantage of this approach is of course that it
- becomes slightly more difficult to locate a certain person (can you
- remember off-hand when Antigonus or Archibald MacLeish was born?)
- Unfortunately, often only translations are given from foreign
- quotations, and the references could have been more exact, just giving
- ``Last words'' is not very helpful. The index is very good, and about
- 600 pages (twice as large as the one in _Oxford_). Anyway, it's fun,
- looks gorgeous, has the most quotations of any DoQ I know of, and you
- can spend a lot of money on it (the last has not been universally
- recognized as an advantage). [SH]
-
-
- Bloomsbury Dictionary of Quotations (2nd edition)
- Published: 1991 (1st edition 1987)
- Publisher: Bloomsbury
- Editor: John Daintith et al.
- Scope: Quotations, based on interestingness
- Number of quotations: 10500
- ISBN: 0-7475-0997-2
- Well, well, well... Don't you all just love _The Little, Brown
- Book of Anecdotes_? So do the Bloomsbury people apparently, for quite
- a few of the quotations in this DoQ have been ripped from that work.
- Otherwise there are good descriptions of the quotees, okay indexes and
- some original quotes, though some are rather stupid, and seem to be
- included merely to have more and different authors than anybody else.
- [SH]
-
-
- The Columbia Dictionary of Quotations (1st edition)
- Published: 1993
- Publisher: Columbia University Press
- Editor: Robert Andrews
- Scope: Subject-based quotations
- Number of quotations: 18000
- ISBN: 0-231-07194-9
- Well. If there's any DoQ which can lay a claim on being a worthy
- contender in the ``Big Two'' class, this is it. This DoQ claims to
- have more than 11,000 quotations which ``have never before appeared in
- a general quotation book'', which makes this one less of use for those
- of us who wish to find the sources of particular quotations, but for
- others, especially freaks who already have all the other DoQs and want
- to see some new ones (go read a good book, dammit!), this makes it an
- interesting purchase--if they're absolutely loaded, coz it ain't cheap.
- [SH]
-
-
- Concise Dictionary of Quotations
- Published: 1992
- Publisher: Bloomsbury
- Editor: Anne Stibs and John Daintith
- Scope: Subject-base and author-based quotations
- Number of quotations: 6000
- ISBN: 0-7475-1330-9
- A nice diverse selection of quotations, with a bit more originality
- than ordinarily found in second rank works. Okay index, and good
- description of authors, but some quotations appear twice, both under
- the name of the author and under a subject... cheap, cheap, cheap (I
- don't know if they've been included in the total count twice, but am
- rather inclined to think so.) [SH]
-
-
- A Curmudgeon's Garden of Love
- Published: 1989
- Publisher: NAL Books
- Editor: Jon Winokur
- Scope: Cynical, mostly humorous, on love.
- Number of quotations: 500 (?--it's a _very rough estimate)
- Much like _The Portable Curmudgeon_, but a bit more specialized.
- No sources or anything, and some semi-humorous interviews and assorted
- pieces. People who like this sort of thing will find this the sort of
- thing they like.[4] Oh, it's rather expensive too (I picked it up for
- about $2, but the cover price is $16.95) [SH]
-
-
- A Dictionary of Contemporary Quotations
- Published: 1982
- Publisher: David & Charles
- Editor: Jonathon Green
- Scope: Post WW2, based on interestingness
- Number of quotations: 7000
- ISBN: 0-7153-8417-1
- As Mr Green tells us in ``A note on sources'', he didn't think it
- worth his while to spend too much time finding original citations, and
- in many occasions none is present at all. The quotes themselves are
- reasonably interesting, and there is much here you won't find somewhere
- else. The only index is one of names. Oddly, Mr Green decided it
- would be useful to place birth and death years of people in the index
- only, and to give their occupation or claim to fame with each quotation
- itself (incidentally, the giving of the latter is definitely a Good
- Thing). Another disadvantage is the fact that it looks horrendously
- ugly. Overal quality: not too high, but if you can pick it up cheap,
- you won't go too far wrong. [SH]
-
-
- The Dictionary of Humorous Quotations
- Published: 1949. Was still in print in 1989.
- Publisher: Doubleday (1949), Dorsett Press (1989)
- Editor: Evan Esar
- Scope: Humorous quotations, chosen by author.
- This is one of the many quotation dictionaries that are basically
- the collected ``favorite quotes'' of the author. It is arranged by
- author, and includes a subject index. [MM]
-
-
- A Dictionary of Musical Quotations
- Published: 1985
- Publisher: Routledge
- Editors: Ian Crofton and Donald Fraser
- Scope: Music
- Number of quotations: 3000
- ISBN: 0-415-03136-2
- If you like classical music and are interested in quotations, you
- will not go wrong too far with this one. Lovers of other styles of
- music are in for a disappointment--there are some entries on the
- Beatles and reggae and such like, but that's about it, while on the
- other hand some rather obscure classical composers do have their own
- entry. [SH]
-
-
- Good Advice by Safire and Safire
- Published: 1982
- Publisher: Times Books, division of Quadrangle/The New York Times
- Book Co. Inc.
- Editors: ?
- Scope: Quotations of ``good advice''
- Number of quotations: 2000
- ISBN: 0-8129-1013-3
- The Safire brothers have compiled a wonderful collection of quotes
- alphabetized according to topic. The quotes are culled from ancient
- and modern sources and provide diverse opinions on meaningful ways of
- living. Unfortunately, only the author is listed, not dates or further
- sources of the quotation. [PF]
-
-
- The International Thesaurus of Quotations (1st edition)
- Published: 1970
- Publisher: Harper & Row
- Editor: Rhoda Thomas Tripp
- Scope: Subject-based quotations
- Number of quotations: 16000
- ISBN: 0-06-091382-7
- If your aim is to find quotations on subjects, this it the one to
- get. Very good indexes for authors, quotes, and keywords, surprisingly
- good references for each quote (something one doesn't expect in a DoQ of
- this type), though again no originals of foreign quotations. Reasonably
- cheap and recommended. [NOTE: There is a second edition of this one,
- but I do not have it; from what I have seen it is a sound and solid
- sequel, with a more modern range of subjects.] [SH]
-
-
- Isaac Asimov's Book of Science and Nature Quotations
- Published: 1988
- Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
- Editor: Isaac Asimov and Jason A. Shulman
- Scope: Science and nature (are you surprised?)
- Number of quotations: 2000
- ISBN: 1-555-84111-2
- No sources, no proper index, some incredibly debilitating
- platitudes, many errors. I can't handle it. In short: No. [SH]
-
-
- Like a Fish Needs a Bicycle
- Published: 1992
- Publisher: Bloomsbury
- Editor: Anne Stibbs
- Scope: By and about women
- Number of quotations: 3000
- ISBN: 0-7475-1173-X
- Like the _Concise Dictionary of Quotations_ by Bloomsbury,
- quotations are organized by keywords and by author, the first all more
- or less directly related to women, and from people of both sexes, the
- second all from (and on those) women and on more diverse subjects. If
- you're interested in the subject (and who isn't?) this isn't too bad.
- [SH]
-
-
- The New International Dictionary of Quotations (1st edition)
- Published: 1986
- Publisher: Signet
- Editor: Hugh Rawson and Margaret Miner
- Scope: ``a bias . . . towards the tried and true''
- Number of quotations: 3700
- ISBN: 0-451-16673-6
- Subject based. Weakish sources. Weaker index. Some nice
- ``backtracking'' of a few quotations, though this has mainly been
- borrowed from other DoQs. Nothing special really.
- [NOTE: A second edition has recently come out, but I haven't as yet
- taken a good look at it.] [SH]
-
-
- The New Penguin Dictionary of Quotations
- Published: 1992 (original 1960)
- Publisher: Penguin
- Editors: J. M. Cohen and M. J. Cohen
- Scope: All, chosen on familiarity
- Number of quotations: 14000
- ISBN:0-670-82952-8
- A sort of would-be _Oxford_ this, but not quite as good. Almost
- all of the references lack a date, which is common among the lesser
- DoQs, but for something on this level of pretentiousness it is a weak
- point. The index is good enough. Unfortunately, ``to save space lines
- of verse are run on and the divisions between lines are indicated by
- oblique strokes.'' This looks ugly. Bit of a bland one, overall, but
- you should be able to find it quite a bit cheaper than others of this
- size. [SH]
-
-
- The New Quotable Woman
- Published: 1993 (a revised editon of _The Quotable Woman: From Eve to
- 1799_ and _The Quotable Woman 1800-1981_)
- Publisher: Penguin Group
- Editor: Elaine Partnow
- Scope: By women
- Number of quotations: 15000
- ISBN:0-452-01099-3
- Quotes are arranged by author, and authors by year of birth. Good
- sources, and the information on the authors is about as complete as
- you'd want it to be. The keyword index is weak, because small and
- somewhat confusing. There are several other indexes as well, including
- a very useful one telling us the authors' nationality and/or ethnicity
- (pretty cool to find two quotes by a ``!Kung tribeswoman''!)
- Some of the quotes are pretty boring, probably because the editor has
- tried to include as many people as possible--including those who don't
- really have to say something remarkable--like the above-mentioned !Kung
- tribeswoman. Still, there's plenty of good stuff as well, and the
- price is quite reasonable. It's better than _Like a Fish Needs a
- Bicicle_ as well.
-
-
- The New York Public Library Book of 20th-Century American Quotations
- Published: 1992 (First Printing: July, 1992)
- Publisher: The Stonesong Press, Inc. (Distributor: Warner Books)
- Editor: Stephen Donadio
- Scope: Quotations, American, Twentieth-Century
- Number of quotations: 8-10,000 (The cover flap says ``almost 10,000''
- while the introduction says ``more than 8,000'')
- ISBN: 0-446-51639-2
- This compilation is organized by forty major topics (from Age to
- Work) with half of those topics divided into subtopics. Within the
- (sub)topics the quotations are listed alphabetically by author's last
- name in chronological order. The attribution includes either a primary
- or secondary source. There is both an author and a subject index.
- The index lists the page the quote can be found on and whether it
- can be found in the left or right column. This is great if you are
- wandering through quotes, but somewhat tedious if you want to find the
- right quote immediately. Numbering each quote (as in _Bartlett's_)
- would have been better, but this is intended more as a browsing book
- than a reference book. There are entire documents/speeches quoted as
- well (such as consitutional amendments in the twentieth century, King's
- ``I Have a Dream'', Kennedy's inaugural address, and more).
- I like this book, though the title weighs as much as the book
- itself. It has a narrow scope which can be either a strength or a
- weakness. I enjoy the quotations being grouped by topic. [JS]
-
-
- The Oxford Dictionary of Modern Quotations
- Published: 1991
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Editor: Tony Augarde
- Scope: Quotations from people alive after 1900, chosen on basis of
- familiarity.
- Number of quotations: 5000
- ISBN: 0-19-283086-4
- The right stuff! Here at last we find proper references for
- everything--no annoying ``Letter to Mrs Wotsit'' as source, but also a
- work in which the quote is to be found. An excellent index, originals
- of non-English quotations but no Oscar Wilde (why did he have to go and
- die in 1900? Boo.) It is very much more a work of reference than one
- to read through though. [SH]
-
-
- The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations (4th edition)
- Published: 1992 (original 1941)
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Editor: Oxford University Press
- Scope: All quotations, chosen based on familiarity.
- Number of quotations: 17000
- This is the other of the ``Big Two'' quotation books. Any fan of
- quotations should have it available. Like all quotation books, it is
- by no means comprehensive, but it attempts to be, and is at least
- diverse. Not a book to be read cover to cover, but a good reference
- for looking up particular quotes. Quotes are arranged by author. Also
- includes a _large_ (approximately 300 pages) and comprehensive subject
- index. [But see _Bartlett's_ -SH] [MM, ed. by SH]
- Qua research this one is the best, as far as I know. There are
- very complete sources for everything, so that we are not just told that
- Ms X said something in a speech, but we also get to know where we can
- look it up for ourselves, should we be thus inclined. Something new in
- the 4th edition (and lacking in, e.g. _Bartlett's_) is a one-line
- description of almost all persons quoted. Get it or regret it. [SH]
-
-
- The Pan Dictionary of Famous Quotations (revised edition)
- (first published as _The Modern Dictionary of Quotations_ (1962))
- Published: 1989
- Publisher: Grange Books
- Editor: Robin Hyman
- Scope: All, chosen on familiarity
- Number of quotations: 6000
- ISBN: 1-85627-363-6
- First of all, ``technical'' details concerning this dictionary are
- a bit vague, and I have also seen the complete text of it under a
- different name (an NTC reference work or something like that) possibly
- the rights for this are very cheap, something which would not surprise
- me, given the lack of quality (amusingly, of the 4 quotes given on the
- backside of my edition, one is misquote, and another is attributed
- incorrectly. Also, there we are told that the _index_ contains over
- 25,000 entries. Who are they trying to fool?) It seems to be rather
- outdated as well, despite the claim that it's a ``revised edition''.
- If you want a nice DoQ, there are many better choices. If you don't,
- then why are you reading this? Go away. [SH]
-
- A comment:
-
- I think your judgement is rather harsh. It is not the best DoQ, but
- it is not the worst. Authors are given birth and death dates,
- translations often have the original (but no Russian for Tolstoy), the
- source is given for the quotations, and the aim of the index has been
- ``to refresh memories by providing finger-posts to half-remembered
- quotations.'' My copy has no quotes on the back, just some extracts
- from reviews, and the publisher's blurb for the book. Perhaps you have
- a reprint put out by a publisher seeking the maximum income for the
- least expenses. [Yes--SH] If so, ``revisions'' will be largely
- invisible [They're non-existent, really--SH] . . . I have a copy in my
- office, and it is good enough to answer many of the queries in
- alt.quotations. If you want just one DoQ, then no; but if you see a
- copy cheap, why not buy it as another DoQ? [If you like 'em, yes,
- otherwise it would be largely superfluous if you already had something
- decent--SH] [RS]
-
-
- The Portable Curmudgeon
- Published: 1987
- Publisher: NAL Penguin Inc. (US), New American Library of Canada
- Ltd (CA)
- Editor: Jon Winokur
- Scope: Cynical, mostly humorous.
- These are ``outrageously irreverent'' quotations from people the
- author considers Curmudgeons (Cynical, irascible, cantankerous). It is
- organized by subject, with additional sections devoted to
- frequently-contributing curmudgeons (W.C. Fields, Dorothy Parker, Fran
- Lebowitz, and Groucho Marx to name a few). No index. A book intended
- to be read cover-to-cover. [MM]
-
-
- Respectfully Quoted
- Published: 1993
- Publisher: Barnes & Nobles
- Editor: Suzy Platt
- Scope: Mainly political
- Number of quotations: 2100
- ISBN: 0-88029-768-9
- This DoQ contains quotes that have been inquired upon at one time
- or another by Members of Congress and their staff, and have been very
- solidly researched (mostly) by Congressional Research Service of the
- Library of Congress. For this reason, it claims to be more useful than
- other DoQs; in my opinion this is only the case if you're a Member of
- Congress yourself--many quotes are rather specific. It also contains
- somewhat longer pieces (it's the only DoQ with the complete
- ``Desiderata'' (see below) that I know of), and not infrequently even
- longer explanations of the history of certain quotations. If you're
- really, really serious about your quotations, you should have this
- one. [SH]
-
-
- This list is by no means comprehensive, but we'd like it to be. If
- you have any books of quotations (any subject or theme), please send me
- the following information so that it can be added to this list:
-
- * Full Title
- * Publication date (original printing and most recent, if possible)
- * Publisher (and distributor)
- * Editor(s) or Author(s)
- * Scope (theme: i.e. Humorous, Military, Feminist, etc.)
- * Number of quotations
- * Library of Congress and/or ISBN numbers if available
- * A brief review
-
- If you disagree with one of the reviews, or simply think you can do
- better, you may want to write a short piece yourself and mail it to me,
- and I will add it as well (after all, even _we_ are not entirely
- perfect.)
-
-
- ----5.3 Are there other resources?
-
-
- The resources of civilization against its enemies are
- not yet exhausted.
- William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898)
- Speech at Leeds, 7 October 1881
- in H. W. Lucy (ed.) _Speeches of . . . Gladstone_ (1885) p. 57
-
-
- Forbes Magazine: Every issue contains a great list of quotes organized
- according to a pertinent topic on the last page of the magazine under
- ``Thoughts on the Business of Life''.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 6. Programs [***SECTION UNDER CONSTRUCTION--SUGGESTIONS APPRECIATED***]
-
-
- ----6.1 What programs are available for the Macintosh?
-
-
- Maxims are the condensed good sense of nations.
- Sir James Mackintosh (1765-1832)
-
-
- ----6.2 What programs are available for IBM-compatibles?
-
-
- Software suppliers are trying to make their software
- packages more ``user-friendly''. . . . Their best approach,
- so far, has been to take all the old brochures, and stamp
- the words, ``user-friendly'' on the cover.
- Bill Gates (1955-)
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 7. Frequently Asked Quotations
-
-
- ----7.1 Who said ``...''?
-
-
- Misquotation is, in fact, the pride and privilege of
- the learned. A widely-read man never quotes accurately,
- for the rather obvious reason that he has read too widely.
- Hesketh Pearson (1887-1964)
- _Common Misquotations_ (1934) introduction
-
-
- Lord Acton (1834-1902)
- +--+ +---+ +---------+
-
-
- (John Emerich Edward Dahlberg, 1st Baron Acton)
-
- Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
- Letter to Bishop Mandell Creighton, 3 April 1887
- in Louise Creighton _Life and Letters of Mandell Creighton_ (1904)
- vol. 1, ch. 13
-
- Do note:--
-
- Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess
- it.
- William Pitt, Earl of Chatham (1708-1778)
- Speech
- _Hansard_ (House of Lords) 9 January 1770, col. 665
-
-
- W. H. Auden (1907-1973)
- ++ ++ +---+ +---------+
-
-
- Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
- Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
- Silence the pianos and with muffled drum
- Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.
- .
- Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead
- Scribbling on the sky the message He Is Dead.
- Put crepe bows round the white necks of public doves,
- Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.
- .
- He was my North, my South, my East and West.
- My working week and my Sunday rest,
- My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
- I thought that love would last forever; I was wrong.
- .
- The stars are not wanted now: put out every one;
- Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun;
- Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood;
- For nothing now can ever come to any good.
- _Twelve Songs_ (1936) no. 9
-
- This one's become very popular on alt.quotations recently,
- something we have to blame the movie _Four Weddings and a Funeral_ for,
- in which it is recited. The poem is called ``Funeral Blues'' in the
- movie.
-
-
- Gelett Burgess (1866-1951)
- +----+ +-----+ +---------+
-
-
- I never saw a Purple Cow,
- I never hope to see one;
- But I can tell you anyhow,
- I'd rather see than be one!
- _The Burgess Nonsense Book_ (1914) ``The Purple Cow''
-
- Ah, yes! I wrote the ``Purple Cow''--
- I'm sorry now I wrote it!
- But I can tell you anyhow,
- I'll kill you if you quote it!
- _The Burgess Nonsense Book_ (1914) ``Confessional''
-
-
- Edmund Burke (1729-1797)
- +----+ +---+ +---------+
-
-
- The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to
- do nothing.
-
- This has not been found in his works; there is no known source for this
- and it has been suggested (in _Bartlett's_) that ``it might be a
- twentieth-century paraphrase'' of
-
- When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall,
- one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.
- _Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents_ (1770)
-
- which sounds like a good guess to me.
-
-
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
- +-+ +-----+ +-------+ +---------+
-
-
- After a heated argument on some trivial matter Nancy [Astor] . . .
- shouted, ``If I were your wife I would put poison in your coffee!''
- Whereupon Winston with equal heat and sincerity answered, ``And if I
- were your husband I would drink it.''
- Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan _Glitter and Gold_ (1952) ch. 7
-
- Jeff Shepherd remarked that this reference was to be found in _The
- Oxford Dictionary of Modern Quotations_, and it was--under Nancy Astor!
- From another source I have heard that this conversation was supposed to
- have taken place at around 1912, at Blenheim Palace, so one would
- expect an earlier source if this really took place.
- The other, even more popular, bit of Churchill lore we've seen here
- quite a lot of times is the following exchange:
-
- [Braddock:] Mr Churchill, you are drunk.
- [Churchill:] And you madam, are ugly. But I shall be sober tomorrow.
- in W. Manchester _The Last Lion_
- To Elizabeth Margaret (``Bessie'') Braddock, MP, according to some.
-
- I'm not sure if Braddock is mentioned in the rendering of this anecdote
- in _The Last Lion_. Both of these stories are described as false by
- George Thayer in a review of a book about Churchill in _The Washington
- Post_ 27 April 1971, p. B6. Thayer spent a year as a research
- assistant to Randolph Churchill on the biography of Sir Winston
- Churchill.
-
-
- Arthur C. Clarke (1917-)
- +----+ ++ +----+ +-----+
-
-
- When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is
- possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something
- is impossible, he is very probably wrong.
- _Profiles of the Future_ (1962; rev. 1973)
- ``Hazards of Prophecy: The Failure of Imagination''
- Clarke's First Law
-
- On which he commented:
-
- Perhaps the adjective ``elderly'' requires definition. In physics,
- mathematics, and astronautics it means over thirty; in the other
- disciplines, senile decay is sometimes postponed to the forties. There
- are, of course, glorious exceptions; but as every researcher just out
- of college knows, scientists of over fifty are good for nothing but
- board meetings, and should at all costs be kept out of the laboratory!
- _Profiles of the Future_ (1962; rev. 1973)
- ``Hazards of Prophecy: The Failure of Imagination''
-
- But the only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to
- venture a little way past them into the impossible.
- _Profiles of the Future_ (1962; rev. 1973)
- ``Hazards of Prophecy: The Failure of Imagination''
- Clarke's Second Law
-
- Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
- _Profiles of the Future_ (1962; rev. 1973)
- ``Hazards of Prophecy: The Failure of Imagination''
- Clarke's Third Law
-
- The third one especially has been the unlucky victim of many ``funny''
- alterations. Which we've all seen before in alt.quotations many times.
-
- Clarke adds: As three laws were good enough for Newton, I have modestly
- decided to stop there.
-
- A post with the ``first law'' invariably gets followed up with one
- mentioning this:
-
- When, however, the lay public rallies round an idea that is
- denounced by distinguished but elderly scientists and supports that
- idea with great fervor and emotion--the distinguished but elderly
- scientists are then, after all, probably right.
- Isaac Asimov (1920-1992)
- _Fantasy & Science Fiction_ 1977 [magazine]
- In answer to Clarke's First Law
-
-
- John Donne (c.1571-1631)
- +--+ +---+ +-----------+
-
-
- No man is an Island, entire of it self; every man is a piece of the
- Continent, a part of the main; if a clod be washed away by the sea,
- Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a
- manor of thy friends or of thine own were; any man's death diminishes
- me, because I am involved in Mankind; And therefore never send to know
- for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
- _Devotions upon Emergent Occasions_ (1624) ``Meditation XVII''
-
-
- Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
- +---+ +---+ +-----+ +---------+
-
-
- A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by
- little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a
- great soul has simply nothing to do.
- _Essays: First Series_ (1841) ``Self-Reliance''
-
- _Immortality_. I notice that as soon as writers broach this
- question they begin to quote. I hate quotation. Tell me what you
- know.
- _Journals_ May 1849
-
- See also ``Success'', _post_.
-
-
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)
- +----+ +------+ +-+ +----+
-
-
- But when I said that nothing had been done I erred in one important
- matter. We had definitely committed ourselves and were halfway out of
- our ruts. We had put down our passage money--booked a sailing to
- Bombay. This may sound too simple, but is great in consequence. Until
- one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always
- ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation),
- there is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless
- ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits
- oneself, the providence moves too. A whole stream of events issues
- from the decision, raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen
- incidents, meetings and material assistance, which no man could have
- dreamt would have come his way. I have learned a deep respect for one
- of Goethe's couplets:
- Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it.
- Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
-
- This, starting with ``Until one is . . .'', and in a mutilated form, is
- often attributed to Goethe here on the net. Michael Binder (whose
- email address I've lost) has found the origin in William Murray _The
- Scottish Himalayan Expedition_ (1951).
-
- Then indecision brings its own delays,
- And days are lost lamenting o'er lost days.
- Are you in earnest? Seize this very minute;
- What you can do, or dream you can, begin it;
- Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
-
- These lines occur in the 1835 translation of _Faust_ pt. 1 (1808) by
- John Anster. They're spoken by the Manager in the ``Prelude at the
- Theatre'', and appear to be a somewhat free translation of the
- original.
-
-
- John Gillespie Magee, Jr. (1922-1941)
- +--+ +-------+ +----+ +-+ +---------+
-
-
- Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth,
- And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
- Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
- Of sun-split clouds,--and done a hundred things
- You have not dreamed of--Wheeled and soared and swung
- High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there
- I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
- My eager craft through footless halls of air...
- .
- Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue
- I've topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace
- Where never lark or even eagle flew--
- And, while with silent lifting mind I've trod
- The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
- Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.
- ``High Flight'' (1941)
-
-
- Ogden Nash (1902-1971)
- +---+ +--+ +---------+
-
-
- I think that I shall never see
- A billboard lovely as a tree.
- Indeed, unless the billboards fall,
- I'll never see a tree at all.
- Ogden Nash (1902-1971)
- _Happy Days_ (1933) ``Song of the Open Road''
-
- This poem, by the way, is based on the poem that starts with
-
-
- I think that I shall never see
- A poem lovely as a tree.
- Joyce Kilmer (1886-1918)
- _Trees and Other Poems_ (1814) ``Trees''
-
-
- Martin Niem\"oller (1892-1984)
- +----+ +---------+ +---------+
-
-
- When Hitler attacked the Jews I was not a Jew, therefore, I was not
- concerned. And when Hitler attacked the Catholics, I was not a
- Catholic, and therefore, I was not concerned. And when Hitler attacked
- the unions and the industrialists, I was not a member of the unions and
- I was not concerned. Then, Hitler attacked me and the Protestant
- church--and there was nobody left to be concerned.
- in _Congressional Record_ 14 October 1968, p. 31636
-
-
- William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
- +-----+ +---------+ +---------+
-
-
- The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose.
- An evil soul, producing holy witness,
- Is like a villain with a smiling cheek,
- A goodly apple rotten at the heart.
- O, what a goodly outside falsehood hath!
- _The Merchant of Venice_ (1596-1598) act 1, sc. 3, l. [99]
-
- Hath not a Jew eyes? hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions,
- senses, affections, passions? fed with the same food, hurt with the
- same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means,
- warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer, as a Christian is? If
- you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not laugh? if
- you poison us, do we not die? and if you wrong us, shall we not
- revenge? If we are like you in the rest, we will resemble you in that.
- _The Merchant of Venice_ (1596-1598) act 3, sc. 1, l. 63
-
-
- George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)
- +----+ +-----+ +--+ +---------+
-
-
- You see things; and you say ``Why?'' But I dream things that never
- were; and I say ``Why not?''
- _Back to Methuselah_ (1921) pt. 1, act 1
-
-
- Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)
- +---+ +----+ +-----+ +---------+
-
-
- I met a traveler from an antique land
- Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
- Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
- Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
- And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
- Tell that its sculptor well those passions read.
- Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
- The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed;
- And on the pedestal these words appear:
- ``My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
- Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!''
- Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
- Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
- The lone and level sands stretch far away.
- ``Ozymandias'' (1819)
-
-
- Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)
- +---+ +---+ +---------+
-
-
- On his ``last words'': The oft-quoted
-
- Ah, well, then, I suppose that I shall have to die beyond my means.
- in R.H. Sherard _Life of Oscar Wilde_ (1906) p. 421
- When a huge fee for an operation was mentioned
-
- as it appears in _TODoMQ_ is not regarded as very accurate by Wilde
- scholar Richard Ellman; his report in _Oscar Wilde_ (1988) runs thus:
-
- To Willie's widow, Lily, and her new husband, Teixeira de Mattos,
- Wilde said, ``I am dying beyond my means. I will never outlive the
- century. The English people would not stand for it. I am responsible
- for the failure of the Exhibition: the English went away when they saw
- me there so well-dressed and happy. The English know this too, and
- they will not stand me any more.'' . . . To Alice Rothenstein Oscar
- remarked, ``I can't even afford to die.''
-
- Ellman's sources are _St James's Gazette_ 6 My 1905; [Raymonds and]
- Rickets _Oscar Wilde: Recollections_ (1932) 59; A. [Douglas] _St
- James's Gazette_ 3 March 1905; Housman _Echo de Paris_ 32; M. Ross
- _Friend of Friends_
-
- All this took place around October 1900, at least a full month before
- Wilde's death. Another frequently (mis-)quoted line is
-
-
- My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or the
- other of us has to go.
- in Frank Harris _Oscar Wilde: His Life and Confessions_ (1930) p. 572
- To Claire de Pratz, 29 October 1900
-
- Which was in fact said a month before his death on 30 November 1900.
- So, no Famous Last Words for Oscar. In fact, about the last quotable
- thing that Wilde said (excepting the case that your idea of
- ``quotable'' includes stuff like ``Aaaaaaghaaaaaaaaaaaarhrghhgl''), is
- as far as I know
-
- ``You ought to be a doctor,'' he said to Turner, ``as you always
- want people to do what they don't want to.''
- 28 November 1900
-
-
- Two days before his death, when he was already rather ill. It's not
- very dramatic though.
-
-
- William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)
- +-----+ +----+ +---+ +---------+
-
- Had I the heavens' embroidered cloths,
- Enwrought with golden and silver light,
- The blue and the dim and the dark cloths
- Of night and light and the half light,
- I would spread the cloths under your feet:
- But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
- I have spread my dreams under your feet;
- Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
- ``He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven'' (1899)
-
-
- A small step
- + +---+ +--+
-
-
- That's one small step for [a] man; one giant leap for mankind.
- Neil Armstrong (1930-)
- First words spoken by a man walking on the moon, 20 July 1969
-
-
- He didn't realize he had screwed up the line until after he got to
- Earth, according to the book _Chariots for Apollo_ by Charles R.
- Pellegrino and Joshua Stoff (not the NASA Technical Memorandum on the
- same subject and with an identical title). It was when presented with
- a plaque by the builders of the LM that he pointed out their mistake in
- failing to include the ``a'' at which point he was told that the word
- was not in the tapes. He insisted (at that time) that he had said it.
-
- The first words said upon _landing_ on the moon were ``Contact light.
- Okay, engine stop. ACA out of detent. Modes control both auto,
- descent engine command override, off. Engine arm off. 413 is in.''
- Then from Mission Control: ``We copy you down, Eagle.'' Eagle:
- ``Houston, Tranquility Base here, the Eagle has landed.'' Source: Dave
- Dooling ``L+25: A Quarter Century After the Apollo Landing'' in _IEEE
- Spectrum_ July 1994, p. 25. The words from the Eagle were also spoken
- by Armstrong.
-
-
- Go placidly amid the noise and haste
- ++ +------+ +--+ +-+ +---+ +-+ +---+
-
-
- Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there
- may be in silence. As far as possible, without surrender, be on good
- terms with all persons. Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and
- listen to others, even to the dull and ignorant; they too have their
- story. Avoid loud and aggressive persons, they are vexations to the
- spirit. If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and
- bitter, for always there will be greater and lesser persons than
- yourself. Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans. Keep
- interested in your own career, however humble; it is a real possession
- in the changing fortunes of time. Exercise caution in your business
- affairs, for the world is full of trickery. But let this not blind you
- to what virtue there is; many persons strive for high ideals, and
- everywhere life is full of heroism. Be yourself. Especially do not
- feign affection. Neither be cynical about love; for in the face of all
- aridity and disenchantment it is as perennial as the grass. Take
- kindly the counsel of the years, gracefully surrendering the things of
- youth. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
- But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings. Many fears are born
- of fatigue and loneliness. Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle
- with yourself. You are a child of the universe no less than the trees
- and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is
- clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.
- Therefore be at peace with God, whatever you conceive Him to be. And
- whatever your labors and aspirations, in the noisy confusion of life,
- keep peace with your soul. With all its sham, drudgery and broken
- dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be
- happy.
- Max Ehrman (1872-1945)
- ``Desiderata'' (1927)
-
- From _Respectfully Quoted_ (see below): ``There has been confusion
- about the authorship of this poem. In 1956, the rector of St Paul's
- Church in Baltimore, Maryland, used the poem in a collection of
- mimeographed inspirational material for his congregation. Someone
- printing it later said it was found in Old St Paul's Church, Baltimore,
- dated 1692. The year 1692 is the founding date of the church and has
- nothing to do with the poem, which was written in 1927. It was widely
- distributed with the 1692 date. . . . --Fred D. Cavinder,
- ``Desiderata'', _TWA Ambassador_, August 1973, pp. 14-15''
-
-
- It's better to burn out than to fade away
- +--+ +----+ ++ +--+ +-+ +--+ ++ +--+ +--+
-
-
- My my, hey hey
- Rock and roll is here to stay
- It's better to burn out
- Than to fade away
- My my, hey hey
- Neil Young (1945-)
- _Rust Never Sleeps_ (1979 album)
- ``My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue)''
-
- This is the oldest source I have heard of for this standard version.
- These words are also uttered in the movie _Highlander_, and they were
- quoted by Kurt Cobain in his suicide letter. As someone on a.q once
- pointed out, a much older similar line is
-
- It is better to wear out than to rust out.
- Richard Cumberland (1631-1718)
- in G. Horne _The Duty of Contending for the Faith_ (1786) p. 21, n.
-
- which may or may not be the original from which it is derived. An even
- older, similar looking line that more or less expresses the opposite is
-
- It is better to marry than to burn.
- Bible
- ``I Corinthians'' ch. 7, v. 9
-
-
- May the road
- +-+ +-+ +--+
-
-
- May the road rise to meet you.
- May the wind be ever at your back
- May the Good Lord keep you in the hollow of His hand.
- May your heart be as warm as your hearthstone.
- And when you come to die
- may the wail of the poor
- be the only sorrow
- you'll leave behind.
- May God bless you always.
- anonymous
- ``An Irish Wish''
- in Ralph L. Woods _A Third Treasury of the Familiar_ (1970) p. 644
-
- Another version--which is the version most often mentioned in
- alt.quotations--runs thus:--
-
- May the road rise up to meet you.
- May the wind be always at your back,
- May the sun shine warm upon your face,
- And the rains fall soft upon your fields,
- And, until we meet again
- May God hold you in the palm of His hand.
-
- Every once in a while, somebody wants to know about the full text of
- this ``Irish blessing''. The origin of the fascination remains a
- mystery to me.
-
-
- Success
- +-----+
-
-
- He has achieved success who has lived well, laughed often and loved
- much; who has enjoyed the trust of pure women, the respect of
- intelligent men and the love of little children; who has filled his
- niche and accomplished his task; who has left the world better than he
- found it, whether by an improved poppy, a perfect poem, or a rescued
- soul; who has never lacked appreciation of earth's beauty or failed to
- express it; who has always looked for the best in others and given them
- the best he had; whose life was an inspiration; whose memory is a
- benediction.
- Bessie A. Stanley (b.1879)
- in _Notes and Queries_ July 1976
-
- This quotation was tracked down for certain by Anthony W. Shipps in
- _Notes and Queries_ for July, 1976. It was written in 1905 by Bessie
- A. Stanley and was the first-prize winner in a contest sponsored by
- the magazine _Modern Women_. Shipps notes that _It is still quoted
- from time to time in American magazines and newspapers, but it is now
- often attributed to Emerson. Shipps says that ``The versions printed
- in the two local newspapers in 1905 do not agree, and in the many later
- appearances in print which I have seen, the wording has varied
- somewhat. However, the essayist's son, Judge Arthur J. Stanley, Jr.,
- of Leavenworth, writes me that the correct text is the one given in the
- eleventh edition (1937) of _Bartlett's Familiar Quotations_.'' That's
- the one that is here also, folks, thanks to William C. Waterhouse (who
- wrote practically all of this).
-
-
- Three kinds of lies
- +---+ +---+ ++ +--+
-
-
- On the remark ``There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies,
- and statistics.'':
-
- The following information comes from Ralph Keyes _Nice Guys Finish
- Seventh_ (HarperCollins, 1992) pp. 49-50.
- ``In his autobiography, Mark Twain attributed the remark . . . to
- Disraeli. . . . [It] has also been attributed to Henry Labouch\`ere,
- Abraham Hewitt, and others. No one other than Twain is known to have
- credited Disraeli with making the comment. British statistician John
- Bibby once appealed to his colleagues for a reliable source of the
- saying. The best anyone could come up with was this 1896 comment by a
- member of the Royal Statistical Society: ``We may quote to one another
- with a chuckle the words of the Wise Statesman, lies, damned lies,
- statistics...'' After consulting a Disraeli biographer, Bibby
- concluded that he probably wasn't this Wise Statesman. Bibby is still
- trying to determine who was.''
- In the notes, Keyes gives the Twain source as _Mark Twain's Own
- Autobiography_, Madison, WI 1924, 1990, p.185.
- The 1896 source is _Journal of the Royal Statistical Society_
- 59:38-118, on page 87.
- Bibby's work was privately published in Edinburgh (1983, 1986)
- under the title _Quotes, Damned Quotes, and..._
-
- _Respectfully Quoted_ mentions an attribution to Holloway H. Frost
- next to some of the those mentioned above, and has the following
- amusing piece on the quotation:--
-
- The quotation, or a variation, seems to be known internationally.
- When a Russian citizen was interviewed, following the death of
- Chernenko, he began by saying, ``As one of your writers said, `There
- are three kinds of lie: a small lie, a big lie and politics.''' --
- _Time_, March 23, 1985, p. 21.
-
-
- The shoulders of giants
- +-+ +-------+ ++ +----+
-
-
- If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of
- giants.
- Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
- Letter to Robert Hooke, 5 February 1676
- in H. W. Turnbull (ed.) _Correspondence of Isaac Newton_
- vol. 1 (1959) p. 416
-
- Earlier uses are well known:--
-
- A dwarf standing on the shoulders of a giant may see farther than a
- giant himself.
- Robert Burton (1577-1640)
- _The Anatomy of Melancholy_ (1621-1651)
- ``Democritus to the Reader''
-
- A dwarf on a giant's shoulders sees farther of the two.
- George Herbert (1593-1633)
- _Jacula Prudentum_ (1651)
-
- It was proverbial by then. _Oxford_ gives something earlier yet:--
-
- Bernard of Chartres used to say that we are like dwarfs on the
- shoulders of giants, so that we can see more than they, and things at a
- greater distance, not by virtue of any sharpness on sight on our part,
- or any physical distinction, but because we are carried high and raised
- up by their giant size.
- Bernard of Chartres (d. c.1130)
- John of Salisbury _Metalogicon_ (1159) bk. 3, ch. 4
-
-
-
-
- Notes:
-
- [1]
-
- @A: Whistler, James (1834-1903) *
- @Q: [Oscar Wilde:] I wish I had said that.
- [Whistler:] You will, Oscar, you will.
- @R: in L. C. Ingleby _Oscar Wilde_ p. 67
-
- [2]
-
- @A: Murphy, Edward A. (1918-) *
- @Q: I was project manager at Edwards Airforce Base during Colonel J.
- P. Stapp's experimental crash research testing on the track at North
- Base. The law's namesake was Captain Ed Murphy--a development engineer
- from Wright aircraft lab. Frustration with a strap transducer which
- was malfunctioning due to an error by a lab technician in the wiring of
- the strain gauge bridges caused Murphy to remark: ``If there's _any_
- way to do it wrong, he will!'' I assigned Murphy's Law to the
- statement and the associated variations.
- @R: George E. Nichols in _The Listener_ 16 February 1984
-
- @A: Peter, Laurence J. (1919-1990) and Hull, Raymond (1919-) *
- @Q: My analysis . . . led me to formulate _The Peter Principle_: In a
- Hierarchy Every Employee Tends to Rise to His Level of Incompetence.
- @R: _The Peter Principle_ (1969) ch. 1
-
- [3]
-
- @A: anonymous *
- @Q: So much chewing gum for the eyes.
- @R: in James Beasley Simpson _Best Quotes of '50, '55, '56 _ (1957) p. 233
- @%: A small boy's definition of certain television programmes. Commonly
- attributed in a different form to Frank Lloyd Wright and others.
-
- [4]
-
- @A: Lincoln, Abraham (1809-1865) *
- @Q: People who like this sort of thing will find this the sort of thing
- they like.
- @R: in G. W. E. Russell _Collections and Recollections_ (1898) ch. 30
- @%: Judgement on a book.
-
-
- --
- Vor Allem kein Gedanke! Nichts ist kompromittierender als ein Gedanke!
- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche _Der Fall Wagner_ (1888)
-