Observations

Pensées of Mauritian aphorist Malcolm de Chazal:

  • Birdsong is always in pitch. Birds sound wrong only when frightened.
  • The underbrush makes the light chubby.
  • A trotting dog: his hind legs knit and his forelegs crochet.
  • Night softens the mind’s irritations and inflames the body’s.
  • The mouth and eyes are each anagrams of the other.
  • An animal’s feet are as intelligent as a man’s hands.
  • Women make us poets, children make us philosophers.
  • A cat purrs himself to sleep, being the only creature who sings his own lullaby.
  • Shadows round everything out. The lacework of light is based on a circular pattern.
  • Good taste has no fixed rules, though fashion has. Taste amounts to being fashionable with a sense of style.
  • The eyes of the overly fearful stammer.
  • Servants eventually come to resemble their masters. “Professional” churchgoers end up looking like priests.
  • Suffering doesn’t ennoble unless there is greatness to begin with.

And “Number is the alphabet of form, which is why children always want to touch whatever they count.”

Misc

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sitta_villosa1.jpg

  • NUTHATCH and UNTHATCH are nearly the same word.
  • Vladivostok is farther south than Venice.
  • Thackeray called George IV’s prose style “lax, maudlin slipslop.”
  • dollop reads the same upside down.
  • “I shall stipulate that I will only go into Heaven on condition that I am never in a room with more than ten people.” — Edward Lear

Misc

  • Angkor Wat and Machu Picchu are roughly antipodal.
  • WONDER is UNDERWAY in Pig Latin.
  • By convention, current flows from positive to negative in a circuit; electrons, which are negatively charged, move in the opposite direction.
  • The immaculate conception describes the birth of Mary, not Jesus.
  • “A man’s style in any art should be like his dress — it should attract as little attention as possible.” — Samuel Butler

10/22/2024 UPDATE: Interesting addendum from reader Mark Thompson: The capital cities Asunción, Canberra, and Kuwait City are nearly equidistant on great-circle routes:

Kuwait City to Canberra: 12,768 km
Canberra to Asunción: 12,712 km
Asunción to Kuwait City: 12,766 km

“Their mutual distances apart (along the earth’s surface) happen to be very close to one Earth-diameter [12,742 km]: so, sadly, they don’t all lie on a single great circle (since pi is not 3).” (Thanks, Mark.)

Unquote

“I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.” — Stephen Jay Gould, The Panda’s Thumb, 1980

Unquote

“If it were not for the intellectual snobs who pay — in solid cash — the tribute which philistinism owes to culture, the arts would perish with their starving practitioners. Let us thank heaven for hypocrisy.” — Aldous Huxley