Last updated on 18 November 2006 by
Bob Ames
There are some references that show up in the Annotations of
more than one book. If I find it twice I'll link back to the
first one. When the count is up to three or more I move it here.
Or so I said at one time. I have expanded it to include info from two
pages that were too long to duplicate and too inconvenient to point back
to. As a few authors have noted, I reserve the right to change the rules
when I have a better idea.
Ah, Wilderness
An adder's sting
Badges
Bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds
sang.
Because it's there
Cherchez la femme
Course of true love
Curiouser and Curiouser
Death is the mother of beauty
Different drummer
Dress for Success
Enough with the love talk, off with
the clothes
Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty
Every dark cloud has a silver lining
Fire is the heart of the house
Float like a butterfly, sting like a
bee
Good man is hard to find
He ain't heavy, he's my brother
He can run but he can't hide
Here's looking at you, kid.
Home on the range
Hot diggity dog
Human voices wake us and we drown
I can't sing or dance
If a tree fell in the forest and no
one was around to hear it, would it make a sound?
If at first you don't succeed, try,
try again
If t'were be done, t'were well it be done quickly
I'm shocked, shocked I tell you
It would be easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle
I was misinformed
Live fast, die young, and leave a
good looking corpse
Lochinvar
Love doesn't alter where it alteration
finds
Malt does more than Milton can, to justify God's ways
to man
Man's reach must exceed his grasp,
else what's a heaven for
Margaret are you grieving
My strength is as the strength of ten, because
my heart is pure
Of all the gin joints in all the
world
Only where love and need are one, and the
work is play for mortal stakes
Open-shuttered and passive
Prepare for what the enemy can do, not what
he might do
Pretty to think so
Readiness is all
Say it ain't so, Joe
Small Rain down does fall
Sound mind in a sound body
Spuds McKenzie
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Stuff that dreams are made of
Sweet bird of youth
Tank McNamara
The nose knows
The more I looked the more she wasn't
there
There's no such thing as a bad boy
Think long thoughts
Tough, but oh so gentle
Twelfth of never
Was this the face that launched a thousand
ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
Ways of the lord are often dark, but never
pleasant
We Never Sleep
What do you mean 'we' white man
Woman needs a man like a fish needs
a bicycle, A
Ah, Wilderness
RBP answers this one in Crimson Joy, Chapter 12 with the
following exchange between Spenser and Susan:
"'Ah, wilderness.' I said.
'Isn't that supposed to involve a loaf of bread and a jug of
wine?'
'And thou, sweets, don't forget thou.'"
It's a reference to Edward Fitzgerald's Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam [1879], stanza 12:
"A Book of Verses underneath the Bough,
A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread--and Thou
Beside me singing in the Wilderness--
Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow!"
Okay, that explains "Oh, Wilderness." What about
"Ah?"
In 1933 Eugene O'Neill wrote a coming-of-age play wherein the teenage protagonist
loved to quote scandalous poetry, which his old-fashioned mother found quite
shocking. The Rubaiyat had touched the soul of a few other characters,
and they each quote the odd quatrain.
The name of the play is "Ah, Wilderness."
Used in: Mortal Stakes, Ceremony, A Catskill Eagle, Taming a Seahorse, Crimson Joy,
Paper Doll.
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An adder's sting
Dr. Parker likes this phrase enough to include it in three books
so far:
-
Playmates Ch. 8: "More deadly than the adder's
sting...is the foul mouth of an unusually short gym owner."
-
Paper Doll Ch. 17: "How much crueler than an
adder's sting"
-
Bad Business Ch. 33: ""More deadly than an
adder's sting."
As to its origin, consider the following:
-
King Lear, Act 1 scene 1: "How sharper than a
serpents tooth it is to have a thankless child."
-
Proverbs 23: 31-32: "At the last it biteth like a
serpent, and stingeth like an adder."
-
Adder (according to Webster) is the common European
viper, Vipera berus.
Why substitute one serpent for another in a reference to
Shakespeare instead of quoting the original? Your guess is a good as mine.
Used in Playmates, Paper Doll, Bad Business.
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Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges
Another one of those lines, like "play it again Sam", that are
remembered in popular culture but almost always misquoted. In the 1948
John Huston film "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" Fred C. Hobbs (Humphrey Bogart)
and a Mexican bandit in a gold hat (Alfonse Bedoya) exchange the following
lines:
Dobbs: "If you're the police, where are your badges?"
Gold Hat: "Badges? We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't
have to show you any stinking badges."
In the original novel by B. Traven the film was based on
(written in 1927, translated to English in 1935), the dialogue is a follows:
- "Allright," Curtain shouted back. "If you are the
police, where are your badges? Let's see them."
"Badges, to god-damned hell with badges! We
have no badges. In fact, we don't need
badges. I don't have to show you any
stinking badges, you god-damned cabrón
and ching' tu madre! Come out from that
shit-hole of yours. I have to speak to you."
Thanks to George Waller for leading me back to the original
source. See
http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery;jsessionid=546vmmmap6l9w?tname=b-traven&curtab=1538_1&sbid=lc08a
and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stinking_badges for more information.
Used in: Looking for Rachel Wallace, Paper Doll.
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Bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds
sang
William Shakespeare, Sonnet 73. See Poetry
Used in: Early Autumn, Ceremony,
Pastime, Walking Shadow.
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Because it's there
This is the reason George Mallory gave in 1923
for why anyone would try to climb Mount Everest. New Zealand's
Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay finally did so in
1953.
Used in Mortal Stakes, A Savage Place, and A Catskill Eagle
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Cherchez la femme
"Let us look for the woman."
- originally attributed to Fouche, also spoken by Alexandre Dumas the Elder, in The
Mohicans of Paris [1854-5], vol III, chapters 10, 11. Or
as Mike Doonesbury phrased it in the early '70's: "Keep an eye pealed for
broads."
Used in Pale Kings and Princes, Playmates, Paper Doll, Thin Air, Potshot.
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The course of true love
From the pen of William Shakespeare. A
Midsummer Nights Dream, Act 1 scene 1, Lysander to Hermia: "The
course of true love never did run smooth." You may also remember the Gene Pitney song from 1963,
"True Love Never Runs Smooth." Words by Hal David, music by
Burt Bacharach. See
Lyrics
Used in Walking Shadow, Hush Money, Bad Business,
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Curiouser and Curiouser
Writing as Lewis Carroll, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson achieved literary immortality with his
classic books, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass
and What Alice Found There. This is from chapter two of the first
book, after Alice had eaten a cake labeled "Eat Me" and begun to grow
to enormous size.
`Curiouser and curiouser!' cried Alice (she was so much surprised, that for the moment
she quite forgot how to speak good English); `now I'm opening out like the largest
telescope that ever was! Good-bye, feet!' (for when she looked down at her feet, they
seemed to be almost out of sight, they were getting so far off). `Oh, my poor little feet,
I wonder who will put on your shoes and stockings for you now, dears? I'm sure I shan't be
able! I shall be a great deal too far off to trouble myself about you: you must manage the
best way you can; --but I must be kind to them,' thought Alice, `or perhaps they won't
walk the way I want to go! Let me see: I'll give them a new pair of boots every Christmas.'
BTW let me be clear that this passage is from Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland. Not only did Mike Loux on this site and
Dodd Vickers on his attribute it to Through the Looking Glass, but so
did a voiceover by Robert Urich in the Spenser: For Hire episode "A Madness Most
Discreet."
Used in Valediction, Hugger Mugger, Back Story
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Death is the mother of beauty
Wallace Stevens, Sunday Morning [1923], stanza 5.
(See Poetry) The thought boils down to this: If we were never aware of down we couldn't
possibly understand the concept of up, or think about how remarkable it
is. Let me quote Sigmund Freud from Civilization and Its
Discontents:
"What we call happiness in the strictest sense comes from
the (preferably sudden) satisfaction of needs which have been dammed up to
a high degree, and it is from its nature only possible as an episodic
phenomenon. When a situation that is desired by the pleasure principle is
prolonged, it only produces a feeling of mild contentment. We are so made
that we can derive intense enjoyment only from a contrast and very little from a
state of things."
As Susan notes in Potshot:
"Supply and demand. If everyone lived forever life
would devalue."
Robert Frost also noted there is no satisfaction in things that
are too easy:
"For my pleasure I had as soon write free verse as play
tennis with the net down."
Used in: A Catskill Eagle, Taming a Sea Horse, Pale Kings and
Princes, Double Deuce, Hugger Mugger, Potshot, Family Honor
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Different Drummer
From chapter 18 of Walden [1854]
by Henry David Thoreau:
"Why should we be in such
desperate haste to succeed,
and in such desperate enterprises?
If a man does not keep pace with his companions,
perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.
Let him step to the music which he hears,
however measured or far away."
Used in The Godwulf Manuscript, Valediction, Ceremony,
The Widening Gyre, Hugger
Mugger, Family Honor, Perish Twice
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Dress for success
David Gerber contributed the following:
"Dress for Success was the title of a popular and perhaps rather crass
book, written by John Molloy, and published in 1975. Its motto was (as I
just found on Amazon.com), 'The #1 book to make you look like a million
so you can make a million...'. For the author, it seemed, appearance was
everything. It would probably make pretty amusing reading now, with so
many changes in styles, but apparently there's an updated edition."
Yes, it was updated in 1988. Thanks for the info, David.
Used in Double Deuce, Widow's Walk, Shrink Rap
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Enough with the love talk, off with your
clothes
This one sat unanswered for years and rather than make up a joke
from scratch I waited for someone to find it. Tony Brooks sent in the
following:
Yes, as you say, the plot is obvious, but here's the best,
and probably the original,
version:
Scene, a train on the Trans-Siberian railway. In one compartment there is a
Russian
officer and a peasant girl.
After two days in silence,
Officer: Have you ever been to OMSK?
Girl (terrified): No, sir.
The train trundles on across the steppes for two more days,
Officer: Have you ever been to TOMSK?
Girl (terrified): No, sir.
Two more days pass
Officer: Have you ever been to DNIEPERPROSHINSK?
Girl (terrified): No, sir.
Officer: Enough of this lovemaking. Take off your clothes.
Used in God Save the Child, Mortal Stakes, All Our Yesterdays
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Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty
In 1770 the following words were
apparently first used by John Philpot Curran in his speech upon
his election as Lord Mayor of Dublin:
"The condition upon which God hath
given liberty to man is eternal vigilance."
Then Wendel Phillips, in an address
before the Massachusetts Anti Slavery Society in 1852 said:
"Eternal vigilance is the price of
liberty"
Thanks to http://www.rsl.org.au/about/motto.html for this one.
Used in: The Godwulf Manuscript, Looking
for Rachel Wallace, Walking Shadow.
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Every dark cloud has a silver lining
Meaning there is some good in every tragedy, like a line of
reflected sunlight along the edge of a storm cloud.
EVERY CLOUD HAS A SILVER LINING – “John Milton’s masque (dramatic entertainment) ‘Comus’
(1634) gave rise to the current proverb with the lines, ‘Was I deceiv’d, or did a sable
cloud/ Turn forth her silver lining on the night?’ Charles Dickens, in his novel
‘Bleak House’ (1852), recalled the lines with ‘I turn my silver lining outward like
Milton’s cloud,’ and the American impresario Phineas T. Barnum first recorded the wording
of the modern saying in ‘Struggles and Triumphs’ (1869) with ‘Every cloud,’ says the
proverb, ‘has a silver lining.’”
From “Wise Words and Wives’ Tales: The Origins, Meanings and Time-Honored Wisdom of Proverbs and Folk Sayings Olde and New” by Stuart Flexner and
Doris Flexner (Avon Books, New York, 1993).
Used in Pale Kings and Princes, Chance, Small Vices, Hugger Mugger
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Fire is the heart of the house
Dennis Tallett originally wrote to tell me that this was indeed
from Frank Lloyd Wright, who said fireplaces were "the heart of the whole
and the building itself."
In the interest of "trust but verify" I asked for more
detail. He responded:
"The Frank Lloyd Wright on fireplaces came from one of
the many books of photographs of his works including those on his houses. It
is a quote which would often come from his many seminars, talks and
interviews. I have not found it in any bios on him. Will keep up my search
until I can nail it down with a date and place. He was full of these
one-liners. Met him at Taliesen West, Scotsdale, AR, before he passed away.
Five of us spent the weekend there and he had plenty of advice and sayings
like this."
Used in Paper Doll, Thin Air
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Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee
(The following is from Mike's original page of Pastime:)
Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali). This was his boxing credo; how he described his
skills in the ring. Modest chap, wasn't he? The credo was actually devised by
his aide Drew "Bundini" Brown.
Mikael Igge Holmberg adds:
F.Y.I. the complete speech by Muhammad Ali was 'Float like a butterfly,
Sting like a bee. Your hands canīt hit what your eyes canīt see.'
Immortalized by Instant Funk, another soul group. The song Float like a
Butterfly (round 1). By A. Bell/ B. Sigler/R.Tyson. Philadelphia International
Records 1976
Used in: God Save the Child, Valediction, Pastime, Hush Money
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Good man is hard to find
It originated in the song "A Good Man
Is Hard to Find (You Always Get the Other Kind)" words and
music by Eddie Green, 1917. It's a blues standard and I've found
recordings by Bessie Smith, Viola McCoy, Bix Beiderbecke, Fats Waller,
Rosemary Clooney, Eddie Condon, and Les Brown. The renowned writer
Flannery O'Connor also used it as the title of a short story in 1953.
The rephrasing is a widely used penis joke.
Dennis Tallet, who is better than I at
keeping track of source material, adds the following information:
"It's attributed to Mae West by the Oxford Dictionary of Phrase,
Saying and Quotation (UK 1997) but found it in my local Borders (I do a lot of my research in places like that.)
'A Good Man Is Hard To Find.' A song by Eddie Green included in
the show he wrote, 'Vaudeville' on Broadway in 1927 and belted out on stage by Sophie Tucker, the last of the red hot mommas.
Ref. Who Wrote That Song, edited by Dick Jacobs,1988."
See Lyrics
Used in Promised Land, Sudden Mischief, Perish Twice
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He ain't heavy, he's
my brother
Father Flanagan started a home for
orphaned and troubled boys in Nebraska in 1917. One of their
symbols is a boy carrying another smaller boy on his back and the
phrase "He ain't heavy, Father. He's m' brother."
Actually it's folklore of a sort. The Father found the pen and
ink drawing in a magazine and purchased the rights to use it as a
symbol for his work. According to their old web site:
"The inspiration for
one of Boys Town's most famous symbols came from a drawing Father
Flanagan saw in a 1941 "Ideals" magazine. Father wrote to the magazine
and received permission to use the drawing of a older brother carrying his
younger brother on his back"
They were still known as "Boys Town" at that
time. The new web site gives slightly different information:
"The picture of the two brothers first came
to Father Flanagan’s attention as a line drawing in the Louis Allis Messenger,
a company publication. Over the years, Father Flanagan had seen numerous
examples of boys helping each other in a fashion similar to the one depicted in
the publication. He thought the drawing would be a perfect example to illustrate
the work done at Girls and Boys Town. Girls and Boys Town contacted the company
for permission to reproduce the two boys in full color and to change the caption
to "He ain’t heavy, Father . . . he’s m’ brother."
To clear up the confusion between the two accounts let me quote contributor
Dr. Mike Weiler:
"The article of a young boy carrying his brother can be found in The Louis Allis Messenger, November - December 1941, Page 44 (done in gold & black ink). Ideals Magazine had not come into being until November 1944 (1st Issue). Van B. Hooper was editor for both publications (The Louis Allis Messenger, publ. Louis Allis Co., & Ideals Publications (he was the owner of this when he left Louis Allis after serving as Sales Advertising Manager)."
The story of Father Flanagan was told in
the 1938 movie Boys Town starring Spenser Tracy and
Mickey Rooney. As noted they are still around but the mission has changed over
the years, and they are now called Girls and Boys Town. For more information
visit their web site at Girls
and Boys Town.
They no longer have a copy of the drawing on the site, but here's a statue
they made to commemorate it.

BTW: The Hollies had a song by this title in 1969 based on the above.
Update: Although the above is
how the phrase became widely known it originated even
earlier. Bill Cater, Past Governor of the NJ District Kiwanis
International writes:
"Found your reference to "He Ain't Heavy, He's My
Brother" on your oft-quoted site. While Boys Town did adopt this
phrase, I'm aware of an earlier usage of the quote. Can't say that it's
the first (which is what I was hoping to determine), but it seems to predate
any references I've found on the internet.
In 1924, the first editor of Kiwanis Magazine, Roe Fulkerson, published a
column carrying that title. Fortunately, when Roe retired, some of his
friends republished a number of his columns in a book called 'My Personal
Pages.'
So, while we Kiwanians are happy to see that the phrase has been put to good
use, it wouldn't hurt to give Roe Fulkerson a bit of the credit when you get
around to updating your site!"
Glad to do so Bill, and thanks for the information. I
found a copy of My Personal Pages and this was the first article, dated
September 1924. In it Mr. Fulkerson writes of his encounter with "a
spindly and physically weak lad" carrying a baby and "staggering
towards a neighboring park."
" 'Pretty big load for such a small kid' I said as I met him.
'Why, mister,' he smiled, 'He ain't heavy; he's my brother.' "
Roe goes on the examine how profound he regarded that statement
and how it could perhaps help us to view life in a better way.
Further Update:
Angela J Chambers decided to look into the matter more deeply
and contacted the current organization asking about the original drawing.
They were kind enough to write her as follows and send her a picture, which she
forwarded to me:
"Attached is a copy of the original Two Brothers image that
appeared in the Christmas 1941 edition of the Louis Allis Messenger. It was
created by Mr. Van B. Hooper. He later became the editor of Ideals
Magazine, and the drawing was repeated in the first issue of Ideals in
December of 1944. In August of 1943 permission was granted for the use of
this image by Father Flanagan's Boys' Home."

Used in: Early Autumn, Ceremony, A Savage Place, The
Widening Gyre, Playmates, Small Vices.
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He can run but he can't hide
The first ever televised championship fight was on 19 June 1946 between Joe Louis and
Billy Conn. Louis was warned to watch out for Conn's great speed and his tactic of darting in to
attack and then moving quickly out of his opponent's range. In a famous display of
confidence, Louis replied, "He can run, but he can't hide."
The "Brown Bomber" put Mr. Conn to rest with a KO in the eighth round.
Used in The Godwulf Manuscript, The Judas Goat, Pastime,
Double Deuce, Back Story
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"Here's looking at you, kid."
It's from Casablanca [1943], written by Howard Koch.
Spoken by Humphrey Bogart (Rick) to Ingred Bergman (Ilsa).
Used in The Judas Goat, Looking for Rachel Wallace, Stardust, Paper Doll, Double Deuce,
Small Vices, Sudden Mischief, Potshot.
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Home on the range
Lyrics by Dr. Brewster Higley,
music by Daniel Kelley, it was written in 1936 and is now the state song of Kansas. See
Lyrics
Update:
Howlin' Hobbit pointed out that the above original entry was not only wrong
but incomplete. "It was actually written in 1871 as a poem and the music
added two years later, being first performed for an audience at a private
dance." It was made the state song in 1947. HH supplied the
following link with the correct information:
http://www.ku.edu/heritage/kssights/home/official.htm
In the first and third books below he paraphrased the line as
"Never is heard" - it is actually
"seldom is heard..."
Used in Paper Doll, Potshot, Bad Business
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"Hot diggity dog."
Parker is using part of a very old phrase for humorous effect. Early in
this century the frankfurter, which is really a mild sausage of German
origin, was first advertised as a hot dog. It was served hot, the
shape suggested a dachshund, and German immigrants were the target of much
bigotry at the time so a popular cartoonist suggest it
was indeed made of dog meat.
The word "hot" has been used for a very long time to mean
"exciting." To use it as an exclamation another word had to be
added and "hot dog" became a popular phrase, although one is more
likely to hear "hot damn" in these more decadent times.
In 1956 Perry Como had a hit record where some nonsense words were added for
reasons of rhythm and rhyme. "Hot diggitty, dog diggitty, Boom
what'cha do to me" was the first line and the phrase "hot diggitty
dog" was popular for a while. It passed out of common usage some
time ago but it is used just often enough, as Parker did, that an American
would understand. It also tells the listener that the speaker is
either old
enough to have used it in its time or wants to be considered intelligent for
knowing the slang of another era. See Lyrics
Used in God Save the Child, The Widening Gyre, Stardust, Hugger Mugger, Widow's Walk.
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Human voices wake us and we drown
A line from The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T.S.
Eliot [1917]. See Poetry
Used in: A Savage Place, Valediction,
Playmates, Paper Doll.
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I can't sing or dance
I originally attributed this to 1976 movie Rocky with
the dialogue between Talia Shire and Sylvester Stalone:
Adrienne: "Why do you fight?"
Rocky: "Because I can't sing or dance."
But when Parker used it in Double Play, set in 1947, I had to look
further back. Rocky Balboa was a tribute to Rocky Marciano, "the only
undefeated champion in any weight class in the history of gloved boxing."
49-0-0. He supposedly told the patrons of an English nightclub:
"I don't know exactly what I'm doing here. I can't sing and I can't
dance, but just to be sociable I'll fight the best man in the house."
Used in Early Autumn, Back Story, Double Play.
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If a tree fell in the forest and no one was
around to hear it, would it make a sound?
For the longest time I answered this on the individual pages
with "Yes, deal with
it." I still stand by that short form answer.
When I found it for the fourth time I knew
more research was in order, and Simone Hochreiter pointed me to the source of
that philosophy. I think it's garbage, but your mileage may vary.
It's too difficult to summarize and too long to include here so I will have to
ask you to visit this page.
Then again if you believe in Solipsism I don't exist and you can
update these pages in your own mind, which will free up a lot of time in my view
of the universe.
Used in The Widening Gyre, Ceremony, Walking Shadow,
Sudden Mischief.
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If at first you don't succeed, try, try
again
Usually attributed to Thomas Palmer's Teacher's Manual [1840], it was
listed as such on the earlier pages for years until Dennis Tallett wrote in to
say he found an earlier reference:
"Although I've seen the poem attributed to
Palmer, the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations and the Bergen Evans Dictionary of
Quotations attributes it to W. E. Hickson (1803-1870). The poem: Try
and Try Again
Tis a lesson you should heed
Try, try again.
If at first you don't succeed,
Try, try again."
Used in The Godwulf Manuscript, The Judas Goat, Taming a Sea
Horse, Hush Money, Family Honor.
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If t'were be done, t'were well it be done
quickly
From Shakespeare's Macbeth, Act
I, scene vii.
Used in: Ceremony, A Catskill Eagle, Playmates
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I'm shocked, shocked I tell you
Casablanca, 1942. Major
Strasser tells Captain Renault to close down Rick's
place, and he uses the excuse that gambling is going on
there. Being handed his winnings at roulette slows him
down not a bit.
Used in Chance, Sudden Mischief, Hugger Mugger
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It would be easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle
David Freeman gave me the following when this one hit the third
citation:
-
Matthew 19:24 - "And again I way unto you, it is easier
for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to
enter into the kingdom of God."
-
Mark 10:25 - "It is easier for a camel to go through the
eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter inthe kingdom of God."
-
Luke 18:25 - "For it is easier for a camel to go through
a needle's eye, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God."
Used in Valediction, Walking Shadow, Bad Business
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I was misinformed
A classic scene from Casablanca (1942) between Captain Louis Renault (Claude
Rains) and Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart) :
Renault: "What in heaven's name brought you to Casablanca?"
Blaine: "My health. I came to Casablanca for the waters."
Renault: The waters? What waters? We're in the desert."
Blaine: "I was misinformed."
Used in Paper Doll, Thin Air, Hush Money
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Live fast, die young, and leave a good
looking corpse
I originally wrote:
Corruption of the favorite phrase of
James Dean (1931-1955); the original was "...beautiful
corpse." According to Bob Woodward in his book about
the life of John Belushi, Wired, it was the late
great comedian who often used the
"good-looking" version.
But wait, there's more. Long after I posted the above Dennis Tallett wrote in to say that he traced it back even further. This is a little longer than most citations I put up here but
it's the kind of raw data I
love. I usually boil a page of my own research down to a bullet point but I'll leave this one mostly intact. Take it away Dennis:
"It is found in the book Knock On Any Door (1947) by Willard
Motely.
Pretty boy Nick Romano has gone from altar boy, petty thief to cop killer in Chicago. His pregnant wife has committed suicide.
He has just been sentenced and returned to his cell. QUOTES follow:
Chapter 88. PRETTY BOY GETS ELECTRIC CHAIR
Nick, in the lock -up, leaned his head back against the bars and closed his eyes.
Live fast -
Die young -
And have a good-looking corpse.
Nick blinked his eyes wide.
Chapter 92. (Four pages from the end of the book and Nick is strapped down)
The show was over.
You don't have to pretend any more now.
All caught up.....
A kid in an electric chair all caught up.
Life had been fast.
Death had come young.
The good-looking corpse would be carried by its arms and legs to a slab in the autopsy room.
I came across the phrase in the book Film Noir (1979) by A Silver and E. Ward
which mentioned the film Knock On Any Door (1949) with John Derek as Romano and Bogart as the defense lawyer. In the film, Romano says it and in the book he thinks it."
Used in God Save the Child, Walking Shadow
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Lochinvar
In A Catskill Eagle Spenser was looking to rescue Susan
and sought help from Eliot Ives of the CIA. Ever since, Ives has referred
to Our Favorite Detective as Lochinvar. Iain Campbell wrote in to note:
"Spenser is in a hurry to rescue
the damsel in distress (Susan) as was the hero [of the song in] Sir Walter Scott's poem 'Marmion.'
The situation was very similar, because young Lochinvar 'so faithful in love
and so dauntless in war' was to lose his true love, the fair Ellen, to 'a
laggard in love and a dastard in war.' However, he galloped off to the
rescue."
To be more specific, Marmion (A Tale of
Flodden Field) is a rather dense book of poetic fiction whose climax is the
battle that led toward Scotland eventually knuckling under to English rule. It is
broken up into six cantos (sections of a long poem) in which Lochinvar
is part 12 out of 38 in canto five. In context it's also a rather pointed
dig at the main character but you'll have to read it to understand why.
Cliff's Notes doesn't cover it so I had to rely on a synopsis by Iain to even
begin to understand what was going on. See
Marmion
For Lochinvar itself see
Poetry
Used in A Catskill Eagle, Small Vices,
Potshot, Back Story
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Love doesn't alter where it alteration finds
From William Shakespeare's Sonnet 116:
Let me not to the
marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters where it alteration finds
Or bends with the remover to remove.
Used in: Thin Air, Playmates, Hugger
Mugger.
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Malt does more than Milton can, to justify
God’s ways to man
(The following was originally written by Mike on the Pastime page.
I added the actual words of the second stanza while moving it here.)
Alfred Edward Housman, A Shropshire Lad [1896] ch. 62,
"Terence, this is stupid stuff", stanza 2.
Why, if 'tis dancing you would be,
There's brisker pipes than poetry.
Say, for what were hop-yards meant,
Or why was Burton built on Trent?
Oh many a peer of England brews
Livelier liquor than the Muse,
And malt does more than Milton can
To justify God's ways to man.
Ale, man, ale's the stuff to drink
For fellows whom it hurts to think:
Look into the pewter pot
To see the world as the world's not.
And faith, 'tis pleasant till 'tis past:
The mischief is that 'twill not last.
On a side note, in Paradise Lost [1667], Milton stated:
"I may assert eternal Providence, / And justify the ways of God to
men." He went on to state in Samson Agnostes [1671]: "Just are
the ways of God, / And justifiable to men; / Unless there be who think not God
at all." However, Alexander Pope said in An Essay on Man
[1733-1734]: "Say first, of God above or man below, / What can we reason
but from what we know?" Milton stirred up quite a bit, didn’t he?
Used in Pastime, Valediction, Back Story.
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Man's reach must exceed his grasp, else
what's a heaven for
Robert Browning’s Andrea del Sarto [1855], line 97:
"A man’s reach should exceed his grasp, else what’s a heaven for?"
Used in Stardust, Taming a Sea Horse, Hugger Mugger.
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Margaret are you grieving
Gerald Manley Hopkins, Spring and Fall: To a Young Girl.
It's about the loss of innocence and idealism, and realizing that everything
ends. See Poetry
Used in The Widening Gyre, Double Deuce, Potshot.
My strength is as the strength of ten/because
my heart is pure
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Sir Galahad [1842], stanza 1.
See Poetry
Used in: Promised Land, The Judas Goat, A Savage
Place, The Widening
Gyre, A Catskill Eagle, Taming a Sea Horse, Pale Kings and Princes, Thin Air, Hush Money, Potshot.
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Of all the gin joints in all the world
One of Humphrey Bogart's best remembered lines from
Casablanca. "Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world,
she had to walk into mine."
The variations:
The Godwulf Manuscript: "Of all the outer offices in all
the towns in all the world, you had to walk into mine."
Walking Shadow: "One and a half billion males on the planet and I'm having
dinner with Heckel and Jeckel."
Hush Money: "Be about a hundred million white guys in this country, I end up
with you."
Widow's Walk: "Of all the banks, in all the world, you had to walk into
mine."
Bad Business: "All the biracial couples in all the world and I wind up
with you guys."
All our Yesterdays: "All the colleges in all the world...you had to walk
into mine."
Used in: See above
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Only where love and need are one, and the
work is play for mortal stakes
Robert Frost, Two Tramps in Mud Time [1936], stanza
3. See Poetry
Used in: Mortal Stakes, Early Autumn, A
Catskill Eagle, Pale Kings and Princes..
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Open-shuttered and passive.
From The Berlin Stories by Christopher Isherwood,
published in 1946. It was a compilation of two previously published semi autobiographical
works: Mr. Norris Changes Trains (1935) and Goodbye to Berlin (1939).
"I am a camera with its shutter open, quite passive, recording,
not thinking. Recording the man shaving at the window opposite and the woman in the kimono washing her hair. Some day, all
this will have to be developed, carefully printed and fixed."
The Berlin Stories was set in pre-World War II Germany and was the basis of the play
and later movie Cabaret. Isherwood called one of his later books I Am a
Camera.
Used in Paper Doll, Thin Air, Hush Money
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Prepare for what the enemy can do, not what
he might do.
General Carl Von Clausewitz, who wrote On War in
1832.
Even after skimming through two separate online editions of
the above book I have not been able to find it. It may be a
paraphrase of some of the concepts therein. RBP specified that it
was from Clausewitz in Hush Money, Chapter 50.
Used in: The Judas Goat, Looking for Rachel Wallace, Early Autumn, The Widening Gyre, Small Vices, Hush Money.
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Pretty to think so
The last line of The Sun Also Rises by Ernest
Hemingway. Lady Brett Ashley suggests that she and Jake Barnes
could have been happy together. The latter replies "Isn't it
pretty to think so." In context it's a very cynical line because it never
would have worked out.
Used in: Ceremony, Valediction, Crimson Joy, Pastime, Double Deuce, All
our Yesterdays.
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Readiness is all
William Shakespeare, Hamlet [1600-1601], Act V, Scene 2, line
232.
This line is cited in ten books, and holds second place only
to various lines from The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
in frequency of occurrence.
Used in: Early Autumn, A Savage Place, The Widening Gyre, Valediction, A
Catskill Eagle, Taming a Seahorse, Pale Kings and Princes, Small Vices, Hugger
Mugger, Bad Business.
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Say it ain't so, Joe
"Shoeless" Joe Jackson, of the Chicago White Sox was convicted of
taking a bribe to help throw the 1919 World Series. The "Black
Sox" scandal, as it was called, caused him to be banned from baseball for
life. But the above quote was just the result of a reporter making up a
cute story. The
Chicago Historical Society notes:
"According to Joe Jackson, the most famous line to emerge
from the Black Sox Scandal was never actually spoken. A
newspaper reported that as Jackson was walking through a
parking lot after the grand jury hearings, a small boy walked
toward Joe and said, "Say it ain't so, Joe." Joe was quoted as
replying "It's so kid, it's so." Jackson said he left the
courtroom, a deputy sheriff asked for a ride, the two got into
the car together and left. No one else spoke to him."
Used in Mortal Stakes, Ceremony.
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Small rain down does fall
Most likely it is from The Lover in Winter Plaineth for the the Spring
(Anonymous, c. 1530)
"O Western wind, when wilt thou blow,
That the small rain down can rain?
Christ, that my love were in my arms
and I in my bed again!"
Robert Bode at the University of St. Thomas supplies this translation of "The
Western Wind, by the prolific Anonymous":
"Oh western wind, when wilt thy blow,
The small rain down can rain,
Oh, that my love were in my arms,
And I in my bed, again."
The quotes are:
Ceremony: 'The small rain still fell."
Pastime: "The small rain down can rain."
Walking Shadow: " And the small rain down does fall."
All Our Yesterdays: "And the small rain down does fall."
Thom Pigaga notes that the quote from Pastime is dead on for that
anonymous poem, which makes me think that the one from Ceremony comes
from the same source. The other two are too specific and differently
worded, so the question remains open.
Used in Ceremony, Pastime, Walking Shadow. All Our Yesterdays is not a
Spenser book.
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Sound mind in a sound body
Juvenal, Satires, X, line 356:
"You should pray for a sound mind in a sound
body." Also used by John Locke in Some Thoughts
Concerning Education [1693], section 1:
"A sound mind in a sound body, is a short but full
description of a happy state in this world."
Juvenal wrote Saturae in the
first century AD, and the justly famous passage is
"mens sana in corpore sano." It also sounds
quite a bit like a saying from the teachings attributed
to Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, fifth century BC:
"On balance, to have a healthy body, you must also
have a healthy mind."
Used in Mortal Stakes, Taming a Seahorse,
Potshot
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Spuds McKenzie
Simone, my correspondent from Germany,
asked about this one after its mention in Potshot but a few
others noted it has been used before. The "raffish" looking character in
the neon sign was a little black and white Bull Terrier used in a series
of Budweiser beer commercials. They called him "the original party
animal" (yet another Americanism) and showed him being treated as a
celebrity in various high class drinking establishments. I have
not been able to find a picture of the pooch himself but Jeremy
Schofield found a copy of the neon sign:
And here's a cheap plastic mug with a little more detail:
Addendum: David Keech came through with a very nice
picture. For those of you who haven't studied the Greek alphabet, the
fraternity jersey he wears reads Delta Omicron Gamma.

Used in Small Vices, Hugger Mugger, Potshot, Perish Twice
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Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
Evening
One of Robert Frost's better known poems. It's in
Poetry,
but I thought I'd include it here also:
"Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other soundīs the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep."
Or as the National Lampoon
paraphrased it in the mid 70's:
"Whose woods are these I
think I know/ his house is in the village though/ he will
not see me stopping here/ to sign my name in yellow
snow."
Used in: The Godwulf Manuscript, Ceremony, Pale Kings and Princes, Walking
Shadow. Melancholy Baby.
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The stuff that dreams are made of.
Humphrey Bogart's last line in The
Maltese Falcon (1941), when asked about the statue. I
believe Sidney Greenstreet referred to it that way earlier. Note
that the line was from the movie, and not the 1929 novel by
Daschiell Hammett, which I have in my collection. John Hustin is
listed as writer for the screenplay, as well as directing the
film.
Interestingly, Mike found the following quotation from an
earlier source:
William Shakespeare, The Tempest [1611-1612], Act
IV, Scene i, lines 156-157: "We are such stuff / As
dreams are made on."
And Steven Rubio writes:
Spenser is most likely quoting Bogart in The Maltese
Falcon. "The stuff that dreams are made of" is
what Bogie's character says about the Falcon; since in Pastime, Spenser responds to the question "Like a
Private Eye?" with the answer "The stuff that
dreams are made of, sweetheart," we can assume this is
one of his frequent and awful Bogie imitations.
BTW: Carly Simon included the phrase in her song "Coming
Around Again."
Used in: Valediction, Stardust, Pastime
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Sweet bird of youth
The title of a 1959 play by Tennessee Williams pointing out the
transient nature of youth. A middle-aged and faded movie star has taken on a boy toy
as her traveling companion. When she finds that her latest movie has made
her a star again (for what we know will be a very brief comeback) she drops him
like a hot stone. Of course by then he has already become aware that at
the ripe old age of 29 he is washed up in his line of work.
Used in: Mortal Stakes, Ceremony, Crimson Joy, Thin Air, Hugger
Mugger.
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Tank McNamara
When Spenser is reading the paper he often mentions this comic
strip. Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds started it in 1973
and to quote from the web site of their syndicate:
"Sports is Tank McNamara's beat, his livelihood. A former
professional football player who's now a TV sportscaster, Tank McNamara
reports on the breaking sports stories of the day: the hot players and angry
coaches, the pending lawsuits and drawn-out strikes, the constant roar and
ever-increasing hype that make organized sports one of the world's most
lucrative businesses."
Here in Boston it does not appear on the comics page.
Spenser finds it on the scoreboard page in the sports section of the Boston
Globe.
BTW the writers returned the favor by doing two weeks worth of
strips starring Spenser and Susan. Find out about it here
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The nose knows
Not a quote at all, but Spenser being saved by his sense of
smell more than three times moves it onto this page.
A Catskill Eagle ch. 52: The smell of hairspray behind a
hidden door made the darkness less absolute, and made things less hopeless.
Walking Shadow ch. 22: He smells smoke from inside
his apartment where the Death Dragons are waiting.
Hush Money ch. 49: Hawk and Spenser know that the Last Stand goons are
waiting by their car by the smell of cigarette smoke.
Back Story ch. 15: Spenser smells hair spray the guy at his desk
uses and rolls into the room with his gun in one hand a a submarine sandwich in
the other.
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The more I looked the more she wasn't there
It was Iain Campbell who first found this usage from
A.A. Milne.
"This quotation is from The House at
Pooh Corner, Ch.1, beginning
'One day when Pooh Bear had nothing else to
do, he thought he would do something, so he went round to Piglet's
house to see what Piglet was doing. It was still snowing as he stumped
over the white forest track, and he expected to find Piglet warming
his toes in front of his fire, but to his surprise he saw that the
door was open, and the more he looked inside the more Piglet wasn't
there.'"
Used in Ceremony, Widening Gyre, Double
Deuce
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There's no such thing as a bad
boy
I originally attributed this to Father Flanagan's "Boy's Town" because
Spencer Tracy spoke that line in the movie of the same name. On further investigation, however,
I found the writers borrowed it from another source entirely.
It's the first line of the "Starr Commonwealth Creed" (although nowadays they substitute the word "child" for "boy";
more accurate and politically correct, but it played havoc with my search engines.) Floyd Elliott Starr had the same idea as Father Flanagan,
and started a home for troubled and wayward boys in 1913 on 40 acres and an old barn just west of Albion, Michigan. He, however, was not fortunate
enough to have a movie starring Spenser Tracy and Mickey Rooney to commemorate his name and idea. For further information visit
http://www.starr.org/creed.htm
http://girlsandboystown.org/home.htm
BTW: Thanks to Iain Campbell for starting me on this quest of
discovery.
Used in Early Autumn, Ceremony, Playmates, Potshot
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Think long thoughts
Thanks to contributor Dennis Tallett for catching this
one:
"'Write long letters, think long thoughts, pray long
prayers.' Martin Luther King, Letter from Birmingham Jail
addressed to My Fellow Clergymen. April 16, 1963. At the end
of para 48."
Used in The Godwulf Manuscript, Small Vices, Hugger Mugger
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Tough, but oh so gentle
- Larry
Wiener writes:
"There was a brand of piston rings that used to use
that motto. What you have to do is look into older
copies of the Saturday Evening Post (say the
1940s and early 1950s). The ads for this outfit used
to appear in there."
I
can't understand why there have been very few commercials recently
expounding the glories of parts for the internal combustion
engine.
Used in God Save the Child, Promised Land, The Judas Goat, Hush Money.
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Twelfth of never
It refers to the song The
Twelfth of Never written by Paul Francis Webster and Jerry Livingston and
recorded by Johnny Mathis in 1957. For the record, it peaked at #9 in the
charts that year, and I was stunned when I found that the Donny Osmond version
went to #8 in 1973. The melody was taken from the 16th-century English folk song "I Gave My Love a Cherry" (a/k/a "The Riddle Song")
See Lyrics
Used in All Our Yesterdays, Potshot,
Shrink Rap
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Was this the face that launched a thousand
ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
[The following is from Mike Loux's original page]
Christopher Marlowe, The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus
[1604], Act V, scene 1. The person referred to in
Marlowe's case is Helen of Troy.
By using this line, Spenser is comparing Susan's smile to that
of Helen of Troy. It's a compliment to Susan's beauty, and
hopefully Spenser will leave it at that (Helen was also
responsible for the fall of Troy).
Helen was also alluded to in William Shakespeare's All's
Well That Ends Well [1602-04] Act I, Scene iii, line 75:
"Was this fair face the cause, quoth she, / Why the Grecians
sacked Troy?"
Used in: Double Deuce, Walking Shadow, Chance, Hush Money.
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The ways of the Lord are often dark, but never
pleasant.
RBP once again made this difficult to track down because he refuses to do
research and relies on his somewhat-less-than-perfect memory, citing the author as "Theodore Reik" in Double Deuce
and "a guy named Reich" in Thin Air. Theodore Reik is a
well known Freudian psychotherapist. I haven't looked at his work too
closely because I have more respect for
"Have a Cigar" by Pink Floyd than the outdated rubbish that is
Sigmund's legacy.
Update: James Fulford found it!
A Google Books search found this in From
Thirty Years with Freud , Farrar & Rinehart, By Theodor Reik (1940).
I've attached a picture of the full quote, but I can't get the context, as
the full book is not available on the internet. However, if you want to look
at the original, you'll probably find that Reik is actually quoting
something Sigmund Freud himself said. And note that the original version
says "seldom pleasant," not "Never pleasant."

Used in: The Widening Gyre, A Catskill Eagle, Double Deuce,
Thin Air.
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We never sleep
Allan Pinkerton, a deputy-sheriff in Chicago, formed the Pinkerton Detective Agency in
1850. The first detective
agency in the United States, it solved a series of train robberies. In 1861 the agency was given the task of
guarding Abraham Lincoln. In Baltimore, while on the way to the inauguration, Pinkerton foiled a plot to
assassinate the president.
The Pinkerton Detective Agency was a great success. On the facade of his three-story Chicago headquarters was the
company slogan, "We Never Sleep". Above this was a huge, black and white eye. The Pinkerton logo
(along with a shortened version of the term "Private Investigator" or
"Private I") was the origin of
the term private eye.

They are a giant company now and well respected in their
field. The current logo is very modern and impressive, but the old one
just screams "gumshoe for hire."

Used in The Godwulf Manuscript, God Save the Child, Mortal Stakes, Hugger
Mugger, Bad Business.
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What do you mean 'we' white man
The punch line to an old joke, it goes
something like this:
The Lone Ranger and his faithful
Indian companion Tonto are surrounded by hundreds of hostile
Indians ready to attack
"I guess we've had it this
time, old friend," says the Lone Ranger, preparing for
death.
Tonto looks at him and says,
"What you mean 'we,' white man?"
Used in Taming a Sea Horse, Playmates,
Small Vices, Back Story.
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A Woman needs a man like a fish needs a
bicycle
Most sources I came across attributed this line to Gloria
Steinem but it is not so. I found the following at http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Vista/3225/herstory.htm
The letter below, from famed feminist Gloria Steinem, appeared
in Time magazine sometime in September or October 2000.
In your note on my new and happy marital partnership with
David Bale, you credit me with the witticism 'A woman needs a man like a fish
needs a bicycle.' In fact, Irina Dunn, a distinguished Australian educator,
journalist and politician, coined the phrase back in 1970 when she was a
student at the University of Sydney. She paraphrased the philosopher who said,
"Man needs God like a fish needs a bicycle." Dunn deserves credit
for creating such a popular and durable spoof of the old idea that women need
men more than vice versa.
Gloria Steinem
Irina Dunn has confirmed this story, in an e-mail of January 28,
2002:
Yes, indeed, I am the one Gloria referred to. I was paraphrasing from a
phrase I read in a philosophical text I was reading for my Honours year in
English Literature and Language in 1970. It was "A man needs God like a
fish needs a bicycle". My inspiration arose from being involved in the
renascent women's movement at the time, and from being a bit if a smart-arse.
I scribbled the phrase on the backs of two toilet doors, would you believe,
one at Sydney University where I was a student, and the other at Soren's Wine
Bar at Woolloomooloo, a seedy suburb in south Sydney. The doors, I have to
add, were already favoured graffiti sites.
Used in A Savage Place, Pastime, Small Vices, Family Honor, Melancholy
Baby
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This Page Created by Bob
Ames
Find out the history of
this project here.