Showing posts with label quotations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quotations. Show all posts

June 14 - Happy Birthday, John Bartlett

   Posted on June 14, 2022     


This is an update of my post published on June 14, 2011:




Quotations will tell the full measure of meaning, if you have enough of them. ~ James Murray
A fine quotation is a diamond on the finger of a witty person, but a pebble in the hands of a fool. ~ Author Unknown
A book of quotations... can never be complete. ~ Robert M. Hamilton
I hate quotations. Tell me what you know. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

John Bartlett
On this day in 1820, John Bartlett was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts. He was an early reader—he started to read at age three, and he'd read the entire Bible by age nine! 

Bartlett began working at the Harvard University bookstore when he was 16 years old, and he soon owned the store. He was so well known for his memory of quotations and trivia, in his community of Cambridge, MA, that people commonly turned to him as a quick reference resource. You would often hear, when people disagreed about the wording or source of a quote, when people didn't know a fact, when people were stumped, “Ask Bartlett!”

Remember, they didn't have Google back then!


Bartlett began to publish a book of quotations called Bartlett's Familiar Quotations. About one third of the quotes came from the Bible and from William Shakespeare. Many quotes came from famous British poets.

He also wrote about fishing and chess, and he spent an estimated 16,000 hours creating a massive concordance of Shakespeare (a reference book with an alphabetized list of words used in a body of work, with their contexts). But Bartlett is most famous for his books of quotations. He oversaw nine editions of this book - and new editions, with updated quotations, were published for another 100 years after his death!

So, you see, Robert M. Hamilton was right: A book of quotations can never be complete!


Compile your own!

Get a blank book—maybe an attractive hardbound book, or an inexpensive spiral notebook, one with lined or blank pages—and start to compile your own personal favorite quotations. You can jot down favorite lines from songs or poems, a bit of graffiti, lines from movies, TV shows, or books, or stirring words from the speeches of great women and men. Here are just a few of my favorites:

  • Everybody is entitled to their own opinions, but not their own facts."  Daniel Patrick Moynihan


  • You're gonna need a bigger boat.” – the Brody character in the movie Jaws, when he saw for the first time just how large the shark they were trying to catch really was


  • Our species needs, and deserves, a citizenry with minds wide awake and a basic understanding of how the world works.” – Carl Sagan
  • Someone has to save our skins. Into the garbage chute, fly boy.” – Princess Leia


  • Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.” – Carl Sagan


  • If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can solve them.” – Isaac Asimov


  • "Inconceivable!"
"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." – Inigo Montoya and Vizzini, in The Princess Bride

 





Flag Day in the U.S.A.












Worldwide Knit in Public Day


(Second Saturday in June)





(Second Saturday in June)







(Saturday closest to June 15)




Plan ahead:



Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for:


November 4: Use Your Common Sense Day

Posted on November 4, 2014

A fellow named Bud Bilanich decided that the occasion of humorist Will Rogers's birthday (see “Also on this date” below) was a great day to celebrate using common sense....because part of Rogers's humor was pointing out that “common sense ain't all that common.”

How can you celebrate such a day? Here are some ideas:

  • Congratulate yourself on the common sense things you already do. Like always wearing your seatbelt. And not smoking.
  • Observe your life as if you were an outsider. Is there something you haven't been doing, that common sense says you SHOULD be doing? Or, is there something you have been doing your shouldn't have been doing? Make one change, if you can.
  • I was looking for a warning sign that speaks 
    to people lacking common sense...
    and boy, did I find it: OF COURSE you 
    shouldn't slap a panda!!!
    As you go about your day, look for warning tags that show you that not everyone uses their common sense. (Here's one: on a certain brand of printer ink, customers are warned not to eat the ink. Um...yeah!)

  • Read Common Sense by Thomas Paine, and learn how this small pamphlet changed history.
  • Did you know that Common Sense Media rates movies, games, TV shows, apps, websites, books, and music? ? The ratings found on this website are supposed to be geared toward what is developmentally age-appropriate, not toward censorship.
  • Find some quotes about common sense that you like. Here are two people saying pretty much the same thing Rogers said:



Here are a few other points about common sense:















And here Einstein and Giambattista Vico warn that common sense doesn't always serve us well, because our assumptions may be based on anecdotal experience and even prejudice.




Also on this date:






Anniversary of the first cash register









National Chicken Lady Day










Humorist Will Rogers's birthday




















Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for:

May 11, 2013 - Happy Birthday, Martha Graham

She is considered by some the Picasso of Dance!


Martha Graham (who was born on this date in 1894) helped to create a new era in modern dance. Modern dance rejects some of the rigid choreography and costuming of traditional ballet and focuses more on torso movements. It's also known for occasionally using distinctly non-ballet feet with flexed, not pointed, toes.

Oh, and (often) dancers dancing with bare feet!

Here are some impressive facts about Graham:

  • She danced and choreographed for more than seventy years!

  • She was the first dancer ever to perform at the White House.

  • She received the highest non-military award of the U.S., the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

  • She received the Key to the City of Paris and Japan's Imperial Order of the Precious Crown.

  • She was named Dancer of the Century by People magazine.

An amazing quote from Graham:

If you want to be great, but you're not sure you are, or that you ever will be, remember what Martha Graham told another dancer:

There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all of time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and it will be lost. The world will not have it.

It is not your business to determine how good it is nor how valuable nor how it compares with other expressions. It is your business to keep it yours clearly and directly, to keep the channel open. You do not even have to believe in yourself or your work. You have to keep yourself open and aware to the urges that motivate you. Keep the channel open....

No artist is pleased. [There is] no satisfaction whatever at any time. There is only a queer divine dissatisfaction, a blessed unrest that keeps us marching....”

The Google Doodle from two years ago portrays some of the "feel" of Graham's choreography.

Here is a video of a Graham-choreographed dance.  





Plan Ahead...

Check out my Pinterest boards of May holidays, historical events in May, and May birthdays.


Also on this date:













Anniversary of the first printed book (maybe)