Skip to content
home Harvard Magazine
E-mail updates

Sign up to be notified of new issues.

View a sample newsletter

Follow Harvard Magazine on Twitter
  • Eliot Spitzer to speak on institutional corruption at Harvard's Safra Foundation Center for Ethics http://ow.ly/zSTd 1 day 15 hours ago
  • The Undergraduate: Melanie Long ’10 writes about her decision to leave pre-med behind http://ow.ly/zSEs 1 day 17 hours ago

 STAY CONNECTED

    

Charleston. The address is Charleston, South Carolina, where there’s truly no place like home. For the best in luxury Charleston real estate visit–www.charlestonaddress.com and find the perfect Charleston Address! Search Charleston SC Real Estate for the finest historic, intra-coastal, oceanfront and golf course living. www.locountry.com.

View more classifieds

Chapter and Verse

Chapter & Verse

 

Helen Snider hopes someone can provide all the verses to a song dating at least to 1907 that begins, “The elephant goes round and round,/The band begins to play./The little boys around the monkey cage/Had better stay away.”

 

Gregg Hurwitz requests a source for the statement “There is no justice. There is only the law.”

 

Henry Urrows asks who first wrote or said, “The well-educated Englishman is the noblest work of God.”

 

Emily DeHuff has heard that the sentence “The sheep are asleep on the hillside” is significant in World War II cryptography, but has been unable to find out why. She requests assistance.

Harry Goldgar would welcome a citation for the comment “Wagner is the Puccini of music,” which he has heard attributed to Igor Stravinsky.

 

“I smell a rat” (March-April). Jon Weinberg was first of several readers to report that the original statement (which continues, “I see him forming in the air and darkening the sky; but I’ll nip him in the bud”) is attributed to Sir Boyle Roche, an eighteenth-century member of the Irish parliament. Sharon Fenwick noted that Roche is also alleged to have said, “Half the lies our opponents tell about us are not true.”

 

Send inquiries and answers to “Chapter and Verse,” Harvard Magazine, 7 Ware Street, Cambridge 02138.        

Add a new comment

Your email address is kept private and will not be shown publicly
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote> <span> <b> <i> <br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • SmartyPants will translate ASCII punctuation characters into “smart” typographic punctuation HTML entities.

Copyright ©1996—2009
Harvard Magazine Inc.
Contact the webmaster