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#133854 10/21/04 11:51 AM
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Tsk, tsk. How could you stoop to so low a pun?

dxb: sorry, I slipped up; it must've been that slipping sickness I caught from a tse-tse fly on a trip down the Limpopo river.


#133855 10/21/04 11:53 AM
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The Limpopo! Always makes me think of the elephant's child.


#133856 10/21/04 11:56 AM
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The Limpopo! Always makes me think of the elephant's child.

"You mean, of course, the Crocodile."


#133857 10/21/04 12:38 PM
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Well, the crocodile was *in 'the great grey-green, greasy Limpopo', but I always felt an affinity with the elephant’s child and his 'satiable curtiosity'.

I Keep six honest serving-men:
(They taught me all I knew)
Their names are What and Where and When
And How and Why and Who.



#133858 10/21/04 12:41 PM
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And the Limpopo is also known as the Crocodile.


#133859 10/21/04 01:01 PM
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AH! It starts off as the Krokodil. But, as I'm sure you know, but I'll repeat it anyway (pour encourager les autres!), I was referring to Kipling's 'Just So Stories'. The stories are ostensibly for a small child addressed only as 'Best Beloved', and this particular story explains how the elephant got his nose.


#133860 10/21/04 01:08 PM
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Thanks, dxb. For some reason old Kipling's story gets mixed up in my mind with Professor Twist's story:

The Purist
by Ogden Nash


I give you now Professor Twist,
A conscientious scientist,
Trustees exclaimed, "He never bungles!"
And sent him off to distant jungles.
Camped on a tropic riverside,
One day he missed his loving bride.
She had, the guide informed him later,
Been eaten by an alligator.
Professor Twist could not but smile.
"You mean," he said, "a crocodile."

For RK: http://www.boop.org/jan/justso/elephant.htm

Seems like 'satiable is short for insatiable.



#133861 10/21/04 01:17 PM
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Seems like 'satiable is short for insatiable.

Yep. The elephant's child was very young and only just beginning to 'speriment with long words.

Anyway, we're even there because I wasn't familiar with the unsentimental Professor Twist!


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