Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: used (Page 17 of 47)

Eh wot? Can I have a word wi’ ye?

I know. Depends on what words…

The Health Department Inspector came ‘round to give the kitchen a look. It passed with flying colors.

That is to say, he went over the inspection points and finding everything in order (I do need to put a screen over a drain…), we both signed the form and he went on his way. Or maybe you already knew what “passing with flying colors” implies. It’s a old nautical phrase that made reference to a victorious ship returning to the harbor with every flag, streamer, and banner hanging from the sails and masts. The ship was “flying its colors” to signify a victory or a successful return to port after a long journey.

I’m explaining the phrase because – as that relatively young inspector and I were talking – I asked him if he had called on a neighboring restaurant.

Me: They have the business down the block. Maybe you’ve called on them.

Inspector: No. I haven’t called anyone.

Me: I mean, visited them. You know – “called” on them.

He didn’t know. He had never heard the phrase before. After he left, I deduced that we pick up these old-style phrases from people around us who use them. When I was selling advertising years ago, at the end of the day the boss would ask me – How many folks did you call on?

He meant visit.

Business cards were referred to as “calling cards” years ago, since you handed them to the person you were “calling on.” If they were a new invention, I suppose we would hand our business card to the person we were “businessing on.” Who knows?

Some of these phrases die out over time. Others disappear due to contemporary replacement. That is – they “went missing.” (Things don’t disappear anymore.)

I know I’ve touched on some of these things in the past, and I don’t want to “beat a dead horse.” (It doesn’t matter how many times you land the riding crop, the dead animal won’t move any faster. In fact, a dead horse doesn’t move much at all on its own.) That’s another phrase that I’ve used over the years when I want to point out there is a risk of doing something over and over pointlessly. Like talk about how the English language changes.

Technology often makes a phrase irrelevant. A guest asked me the time of day, and I replied that it was ten minutes before five. Probably should have said four-fifty. That’s the way the digital clocks display the time these days. My guest likely had to mentally calculate the hour, like translating a Spanish phrase into English. In the old analog days, the minute hand was “before” the hour, or “after,” with the twelve representing the “hour.”

In fact, “o’clock” is a throwback of its own. In days gone by, the phrase would be asked, “What hour of the clock is it?” or What is the hour of the clock?” That wordy phrase – just like our “medicines” being shortened to “Meds” – was reduced to “o’clock.”

The executive used to ask his secretary to “take a letter.” He wasn’t asking to have an envelope picked up and moved elsewhere. It was a shortened version of “Take down my words and apply them to paper using a pen.” That was just too much of a mouthful. Take a letter.

Now we take a number to insure our place in a line or waiting list.

Some old phrasings change without much documentation. In years past, a twenty-five year old was said to be “five-and-twenty-years.” Maybe you remember the nursery rhyme in which “four-and-twenty” blackbirds were baked in a pie. Obviously, that’s twenty-four blackbirds – which makes for a pretty big pie. (Not that you’d get a single bite of that in my mouth.) I spent a little time trying to figure out when the word-order of numbers changed, but could not find a definitive answer.

Not that it makes a tinker’s damn of difference. (A tinker was an itinerant tinsmith who made his living traveling around and repairing household utensils. They were notorious for their swearing, so to hear such words coming from their mouths was almost insignificant. An extremely common thing had little value, and wasn’t worth a “tinker’s damn” or “tinker’s cuss,” as it was often phrased in England.

And if you’ve read this note to the bitter end, you may be wondering why the end is bitter. It isn’t. On the old sailing ships, the anchor rope was tied to a wooden post (called a bitt) on the front railing with a colored rope attached at the point the rope went over the deck and down into the water. If the sailor dropping the anchor reached the point of the rope where the rag was attached and the anchor had not yet reached the bottom, the water was too deep to anchor the boat. The rope had reached the “bitt-end” or “bitter-end” or – as a landlubber might say – “the very end.”

With that additional useless information, you have officially reached:

The Bitter End.

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main Street, Broken Arrow OK!

Talk to the hand. A whole new meaning.

Will everybody be talking into the back of their wrists? It’s the big new thing and I’m not even comfortable with the old-style stuff. The whole Bluetooth thing threw me off, not knowing if that person talking nearby said something to me or to the party at the other end of their phone conversation. I actually said something stupid to a nearby woman (this was early on in the Bluetooth timeline, honest…), like “What’s that you say?” or “Were you talking to me?”

Of course, she wasn’t.

She had one of those Bluetooth ear-things and I had never seen one before. Obviously, she didn’t even respond to my question – she was busy talking to her imaginary friend. That’s what it seemed like to me. She was talking to someone at the other end of an invisible connection and I was old-school. If she’d only had a hand-set. It’s funny how holding a device to your ear legitimizes talking aloud in public with no one nearby.

By now, you’ve seen the commercial for the latest thing. Dick Tracy’s two-way wrist radio. If you haven’t, you can see it by clicking here.

It has taken us nearly 70 years to catch up with Mr. Gould’s vision, but we seem to be in an invention conundrum. We want to watch our videos and read our eBooks on screens the size of elementary school blackboards, but we want the device to be thin and light and snap-able and easy to tuck into our pocket (granted – the pocket has to be the size of a mail-carrier’s bag).

Samsung’s Galaxy Gear super-duper wrist radio/telephone/go-go-gadget has met with mixed early reviews. History, though, is on its side. The popular culture is filled with references to people talking into their wrists to contact the police captain, the Starship’s transporter room, Inspector Gadget’s cohorts, or the alien’s mother ship (foreign language model). Samsung has every reason to believe we’ll want to strap a thing on our wrist and start jabbering (oh – and also have the current time available at a glance).

Chester Gould was amazingly ahead of his time. Or maybe inventors are coming up with their stuff based on his old comic strips. He had an orbiting space-station thing with bold black lettering on the side identifying it as a POLICE vehicle. We’ve got SWAT vans and space stations, but so far we haven’t got a combination of the two.

I liked the comic strip back then. I was a kid too young to drive. My neighbor’s older brother had a driver’s license and a car. When you’re young and wrangle a ride into town, it becomes a spending spree. Surely, you remember (or lived within walking distance and don’t know what I’m talking about). In our neighborhood at that time, we didn’t get into town much. When my buddy and I talked his brother into driving us, we pooled our money and went wild. We bought a pizza (had to share it with his brother as a payoff) and a bakery-tin of Divinity, assorted packs of sports cards, and a plastic model of Dick Tracy’s space coupe. Oooh, Space Coupe and Moon Maid. The coolest things we’d ever seen. (Of course, the word “Cool” had not yet been invented back then.)

Just saw the commercial again. Even Fred Flintstone talked to his wrist. The Gould-gadget has pervaded our popular culture, retro-fitted to the stone age.

It turns out, I have an associative memory connected with Dick Tracy and now it’s scaring me. When my neighbor and I sprang for the plastic space coupe model and the tin of Divinity, we assembled the project immediately upon our return home. Maybe it was the fumes from the toxic plastic cement that fixed it in my cranium. We put the coupe together while we ate the Divinity – what has to be one of the sweetest concoctions ever invented. We devoured every last crumb of it.

It was nauseating. And I’m not just talking about our completed glue-blobbed space coupe, finished project. Too much Divinity is not a good thing.

As a result of the associative memories, whenever I see a picture of Dick Tracy, I think of the space coupe and my plastic model. That makes me recall Divinity, that white-colored, sweeter than fudge dessert. And when I think of Divinity I get slightly nauseous.

I worry that if the Samsung Galaxy catches on, I’ll see people talking into their wrists like Dick Tracy, which will make me think of… (you can extrapolate the rest). I’ll see someone talking into their two-way wrist radio/TV and I’ll get nauseous.

When the Weedeater was first introduced, I thought “What great idea!” When that first videotape (predecessor of digital) machine came out, I bought one. Cool, I thought. (The term had been invented by then.) Computers? I might have bought the first one. Google me or check Wikipedia. (I could be wrong.)

It concerns me a little that – at my age – even as a technology-accepting-consumer, this is going to be a tough sell. I’m going to see a random Samsung Galaxy wearer talking into their Dick Tracy style two-way wrist radio/TV and I’m going to experience nausea – or worse. (I might lose my lunch.)

Divinity won’t be a factor, though. Haven’t tasted that sweet confection since that fateful day, way back when.

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main Street, Broken Arrow OK!

What’s that? You say you want a revolution?

How young they look! Dapper pink suits and stripey bell-bottom pants. Of course, in those days, ruffled-front shirts were de rigueur, particularly for rock-and-roll bands.

The magazine came in yesterday, ordered as part of a research project. It was ordered based on an article inside, but it was the cover that caught my attention.

It’s a time-capsule, all right. I looked the boys over and – seeing the youthful face of John Lennon – thought what a loss his death represented. The shame of it is, it took until later for me to remember that George was gone, too, the victim of a health bullet.

The LOOK magazine is dated September 13, 1968. Came in the mail almost exactly 45 years after its cover date. It was a big year for Beatle fans, which might have been translated as a big year for the Beatles, but even then it was the beginning of the end.

Here’s what was going on in that year: the release of the so-called “White Album.” The group was at what later turned out to be the peak of their popularity. They were coming off of the success of Sgt. Pepper’s. Critically acclaimed. Popular success. Hit songs followed from that white-jacketed double album titled only with embossed lettering of the band’s name.

That much, I’ve known for years. Here’s what the research project arrival turned up for me due to a curiosity that spurred a little (off-the-clock) investigating. (I do projects on the side to help pay the bills. So sue me.) Seeing the Fab Four and noting the coincidence of the cover date and today’s date bonked that gotta-find-out button. For years (okay, up until a few minutes ago) I thought the album cover was all-white because it was to replace the “Two Virgins” photograph in which John and Yoko posed naked. Not like Miley Cyrus Arty-Twerky naked. Just standing there, showing-your-business naked.

That is what my good friend Mike told me.

Ahhh, Mike. It wasn’t like that.

Just found out that the album you were talking about was an independent thing. Also released in 1968. It turns out the white album wasn’t a censor-thing at all. A guy named Richard Hamilton DESIGNED it that way. (Would have loved to have heard him sell that idea. Yeah, he says. Totally white. Name? Sure. It’ll say classy. Embossed. Turn it at an angle and you can read The Beatles.” You’ll love it.)

Ahhh, Mike. Come on. You’re a PHD now. Lennon fan then. Thought you would’a had that one figured out.

This one I’ll give you. As I recall, we both thought the later album Let It Be was the last Beatles album. It turns out – if not technically – in all other respects the White Album was the last hurrah. Maybe that was even beyond the finish line. Many of the White Album songs were recorded independently. The band members didn’t even see each other during the recording. Ringo wanted it to be released as two separate records. When he didn’t show a couple of times, Paul McCartney filled in on drums. Two songs worth.

That’s one you didn’t tell me about.

The White Album was released just weeks after this LIFE magazine profile. The band was on top of the world. The band was – internally – lost beneath the waves.

Retrospection is a heck-of-a thing. Especially when it is has never been easier to grab up and listen to older music.

Oh, and here they come. Those long, lost memories. White Album. Hey Jude. First slow dance. Ever. Becky – the most beautiful girl in the entire high school – and my hand is on her hip for one of the longest songs ever commercially released. And I can dance with her until it is finally over.

I’m telling you now… for me, that song never ended. Naaaaaah-na-na, Na-na-nah-nah, Hey Jude.

No dance floor here, but – Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main, Broken Arrow OK!

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