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
  • An episode Kenya would rather forget: Megan Shutzer '10 examines the lasting effects of the 2007 election violence http://ow.ly/E6Wo 14 hours 23 min ago
  • Telling the stories of mental illness and mental-health care in Ghana http://ow.ly/E6Uy 15 hours 15 min 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

 

Dorothy Richardson reports that in William Dunlap’s 1828 farce A Trip to Niagara, the character Job Jerryson (a black waiter who claims to manage a black acting company, the Shakespeare Club) says at one point, "As I told Miss Diana Dingy, ‘The service of the fair sex is my delight.’" Richardson would like further information on "Diana Dingy" and asks whether Jerryson is quoting another source.

 

David Olson requests information on the origin and earliest uses of "Sleep the sleep of the just." Burton Stevenson’s Home Book of Quotations (sixth edition) offers "She slept the sleep of the just" (Elle s’endormit du sommeil des justes) from Racine’s Abrégé de l’his toire de Port Royal (vol. iv, l. 517); can readers supply other sources?

 

Graham Owen would like to learn the identity of the "ancient philosopher" alleged to have said, on seeing a human corpse, "See the shell of the flown bird." That anecdote appears in William Wordsworth’s "Essay upon Epitaphs," which the poet included in notes to "The Pastor," the fifth book of his long didactic poem The Excursion.

 

"map…more real than…land" (September-October 2004). David Olson identified D.H. Lawrence’s "Study of Thomas Hardy" as the source of "Like Clym [Yeo bright], the map appears to us more real than the land." The essay appears in Phoenix: The Posthumous Papers of D.H. Lawrence, edited by Edward D. Mc Donald (1936); the quotation is on page 420.

 

"lost on a Ferris wheel" (November-December 2004). Martha Bennett Stiles recognized William Peden’s "Night in Funland," first published in New Mexico Quarterly 29, no. 4 (Winter 1959-60), on pages 395 through 402.

 

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