rolanni: (i've often seen a cat without a smile)
rolanni ([personal profile] rolanni) wrote2010-01-27 06:05 pm
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No fish today. . .

...on the other hand, I found out that two huge tasks at the day-job have shifted -- one out of my office entirely, and the other out by a year -- moving me from "Ohmighod, how am I going to survive the spring semester, much less finish writing a novel?" to "Hey! I can do this!"

The Gods of Chaos Giveth; the Gods of Chaos Taketh Away. Blessed be the name of Chaos.

...at least, in this instance.

At home, finished shifting the 2009 files out of the drawer and into the file box, made 2010 files, finished the 2009 filing. I'm counting this as a Job Well Done and am retiring to the sofa to finish reading the book I've been slugging around with me for dern near a month.

Appropos of Nothing Much, I lately somewhere came across this quote:

These things cannot be retrieved:
The arrow sped from the bow,
The word spoken in haste,
The missed opportunity.


...which is all right, except I remember learning it this way:

For four things there is no recall: The spoken word, the arrow sped from the bow, the march of fate, and time that is past.

Anybody have another variation?

[identity profile] keristor.livejournal.com 2010-01-28 01:01 pm (UTC)(link)
A similar traditional Welsh one (translated) is:

Three things are not easily restrained:
the flow of a torrent,
the flight of an arrow,
and the tongue of a fool.

This form is a classic Triad in Celtic literature (Welsh and Irish in particular). Some of them became double-triads, when they realised that there were more than three similar things. They were used for proverbs and aphorisms, and were probably originally passed verbally (certainly some of them were used in songs). Some became double triads, with the first line of the second worded slightly differently ("cannot be retrieved" / "there is no recall" for example).

I haven't heard that the four item[1] versions ever got a specific name, or were as formalised, there seem to be lot more variations.

[1] It is generally accepted that a set of five or more items tend to be forgotten, three is the classic number and grouping things in threes often gets applause (think of Churchill's "blood, sweat and tears" and other famous speeches).
pedanther: Picture of the Pink Panther wearing brainy specs and an academic's mortar board, looking thoughtful. (pedantry)

[personal profile] pedanther 2010-02-05 12:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Maybe this is why you mentioned it, but that line of Churchill's is actually a really good example of the phenomenon, because when Churchill said it, it was four things, but people tend to only remember three. (The fourth was "toil".)