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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Path: sparky!uunet!world!jcf
- From: jcf@world.std.com (Joseph C Fineman)
- Subject: Re: Origin of Limerick?
- Message-ID: <C18MoM.I64@world.std.com>
- Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
- References: <QfLgMNy00VozMIJkU3@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 04:19:33 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- "Vincent J. Matsko" <vm0h+@andrew.cmu.edu> writes:
-
- >The following is my advisor's paraphrase of a limerick he once heard.
- >We would like to use it in a book we are co-authoring, and would
- >appreciate a reference. Has anyone heard of it and/or know its source?
-
- This has been around for a long time, and I doubt if its author is
- known. At any rate, it appears, as "Anon.", in _A Little Treasury of
- Modern Poetry_ (Oscar Williams, Ed., rev. ed., Scribner's, 1952) in
- the form
-
- There was a young lady named Bright,
- Who travelled much faster than light.
- She started one day
- In the relative way,
- And returned on the previous night.
-
- -- which scans a little better than your advisor's version.
-
- It is only reasonable that there should also be a limerick about the
- spatial component of the Lorentz transformation:
-
- There was once a young fellow named Fisk,
- At fucking exceedingly brisk.
- So rapid his action,
- Fitzgerald contraction
- Shrunk his dingdong darn down to a disk.
-
- Heard at Caltech in the summer of 1956.
- --
- Joe Fineman jcf@world.std.com
- 239 Clinton Road (617) 731-9190
- Brookline, MA 02146
-