Dear Mr. Crimmins: You ask for discipline and I shall do my best to vanquish any notion of it completely. From your comments it is obvious that your are an unrepentant and diverting meticulist who also quite shamelessly satirizes innocent juveniles in his spare time. Be that as it may I shall attempt to defend my dishonor and answer your scurrilous charges with what little merit and sobriety I now possess. On Mar 20, 2008, at 5:45 AM, Barry Crimmins wrote: > Dear B.A., How dare you respond so negatively to intentional > aggravation by a narcissistic troll who has become the self-appointed > gatekeeper of this forum? I did so out an offended sense of dignity for the poor and wholly unaccountable straw that finally gave the poor old camel a hernia from having to carry so many fears for so long. However, I don't think my response negative so much as anti-positive because on the other side of this debate I'm positive such fearsome displays have no probitive value and are wholly prejudicial to the cause and glory of Twain. > Please refrain from challenging our new > supreme authority lest we risk returning to the primitive days when > we had to make our way without the guidance of a person who > understands that this gathering is akin to a virtual cocktail party. Most of this is now moot since the coot has resigned and left the party. However, I do believe that this gathering well possesses all the meritorious virtue of a virtual cocktail party of sorts but one in which the virtues of the freely flowing madeira and port outweigh the occasional disruptive influence of someone who has partaken of their own boxed rebarbative rotgut on what now seems far too many an occasion. > Someone has to put on the lampshade and make oafish remarks or else > we won't know just how much fun we're having. I feel hurt and most displeased that you have not noticed the authentic colonial-style tasseled shade I have perched just above my ears (especially as it came with a Genuine Certificate of Authenticity signed by Thos. Jefferson.) Perhaps I need to speak up more often or simply speak louder and become more oafish or simply go fish. > > This country has really lost something because politically correct > fascists refuse to see the value of the vivid sobriquets of the past. It has indeed lost a great deal but since these vivid things are now cold, charred briquets at the bottom of the societal bonfire I don't see how they can be reanimated without resorting to either black magic or the darker and far more sinister technology that keeps our sitting Vice President in a faux vivid state resembling something just shy of the walking dead. > Some extremists go so far as to take offense to these colorful > reminders of the brutal inhumanity of our halcyon days. I am not > offended by them. I am rewarded by them because they make it so much > easier to identify annoying and impervious blowhards. I am not offended either but my rewards come in a different measure. I simply make a request based on the contemporary sense of usage in a forum dedicated to a man who was, of course, never one to make a request for less or more than the reasons he puts forth at each request. Twain if anything is surely to be taken at face value since he couldn't possibly have written anything with a straight face for the public while thinking of something else, let alone something else entirely of the public itself. [B.v.d.W.'s editor's note: He wrote that last sentence whilst rolling his eyes and pouring yet another glass of Cossart-Gordon. Caution advised.] > And while I'm airing grievances-- I am steamed that a certain quotes > page is not 100% exhaustive yet people still refer to it as if it's > an extremely valuable resource. Have you no shame, Barbara Schmidt? Ms. Schmidt is apparently quite shameless in thinking anything less than infinity adds up to something worthwhile. She should be severely disciplined, perhaps by some wealthy misanthrope giving her a staff of several hundred accomplished indexers to help her work verge on the infinite that was apparently the feared standard of perfection. > What we really need is a transcript of Twain's life. Until we possess > every utterance he ever made, timed down to the very second, how can > we really be sure of what to make of the man? Indeed! You get the shovel and I'll telephone Dr. Frakenstein and see if there is lightning in the forecast 'round his castle. We'll then set Mr. Twain down with a very patient and tranquilized stenographer and oh, in about 50 years or so, should have everything written down again and in proper chronological order regulated by the second. This is assuming of course he'd not use the occasion to have a wonderful time pretending to be Howells or even General Grant. > And without the > suggestion of such a document, how else could we bring things around > to yet another reminder of a task that is at once so massive and > picayune that it deserves to dominate this forum until it has been > abandoned like a nightmarish cocktail party. Abandoned? Perhaps. Consigned to a future age when the very atoms will chatter freely about their every orbit and compounding and thus produce such a document? Maybe. In any case until such times arrive I strongly advise you to never abandon a party unless they run out of drinks. > > Awaiting discipline, > > Barry Crimmins Very well, you have worn me down to my cellars. Here you go: 1. Day one, go spend whatever you have in the bank on a bottle of 1745 vintage port. 2. Place it on your desk in front of you. 3. Meditate on the bottle until you know each scintillating reflection and nuance. 4. Do not open it. 5. Day two through six, continue your meditations and do not open it. 6. Day seven, imitate the vast wisdom of the Almighty and drink yourself into a nice rest. If you can do this you can tell Rudyard Kipling and his ridiculous "If" to take a hike as you will be more than a man, you will be a gentleman. (And also drunk as a lord, which is simply an added bonus.) To close, what all has this to do with Mark Twain? Perhaps nothing if we're to assume he never tossed anyone out of his house for being a boor. Personally I can't imagine him actually ejecting someone by inelegant brute force but perhaps indeed by the force of his words. Can anyone imagine what it would be like to be at the focus of his vituperation or opprobrium? I shudder to think about such things but nevertheless bravely hope the grand universe will place a certain, particular fear within earshot of Mr. Twain so that it may be much improved before flights of cigar-smoking, white-suited angels wing it to sleep. And now for me, I'm back to all things one to twain and remain to all here Yours cordially, Benjamin A. van der Wel [log in to unmask]