Well, everyone who was heartily sick of me grumbling about the somewhat uninteresting dilemmas with which last year's desk calendar presented me will be delighted to hear that this year we have... the Forgotten English calendar. Every day I get an outdated word, and some random trivia.
Today's is slightly disappointing - apparently a monkey spoon is a spoon bearing the figure of a monkey. However, yesterday's trivia pleased me muchly.
Tuesday 6th, 1734 marked the death of John Dennis, English playwright and critic. In 1709, he "devised a method of simulating thunder onstage with a large mustard bowl for his dramatic work Appius Virginia."
The play flopped, but he later heard his thunderclaps being used in a production of Macbeth, and apparently exclaimed "See how the rascals use me. They will not let my play run, yet they steal my thunder!"
A quick google suggests that a mustard bowl is... well, a small bowl, to put mustard in. So presumably even a large mustard bowl wouldn't be huge. So how does one make a thunderclap with such a thing ? I guess dropping a metal bowl might suffice, but I'm assuming it was something more complicated than that, or it would hardly have needed someone to "devise" it...
Today's is slightly disappointing - apparently a monkey spoon is a spoon bearing the figure of a monkey. However, yesterday's trivia pleased me muchly.
Tuesday 6th, 1734 marked the death of John Dennis, English playwright and critic. In 1709, he "devised a method of simulating thunder onstage with a large mustard bowl for his dramatic work Appius Virginia."
The play flopped, but he later heard his thunderclaps being used in a production of Macbeth, and apparently exclaimed "See how the rascals use me. They will not let my play run, yet they steal my thunder!"
A quick google suggests that a mustard bowl is... well, a small bowl, to put mustard in. So presumably even a large mustard bowl wouldn't be huge. So how does one make a thunderclap with such a thing ? I guess dropping a metal bowl might suffice, but I'm assuming it was something more complicated than that, or it would hardly have needed someone to "devise" it...
no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 06:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 06:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 06:45 am (UTC)(you mean you don't spend the first two days of the year reading all the way through to find out what happens next?)
no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 06:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 07:16 am (UTC)Could be worse - our admin person came through with a wall calendar for us today, except we worked out that we actually don't have any wall to put it on.
no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 07:20 am (UTC)No! NO! Nononono.
That is very wrong indeed. Looking ahead in calendars is utterly dreaful, besides removing the most enjoyable thing I meet at my desk most mornings (reading the day's entry while my pc wakes up).
no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 07:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-01-07 07:25 am (UTC)I'm with you
Date: 2004-01-07 08:50 am (UTC)That's about the only time I can think when I'm more "in it's proper place" then "want it now".