-- (Terry Pratchett)
- He might have been talking about SYM...
No worries,
Beldin
Your source is, unfortunately, inaccurate. (No offense meant to you.) The opera in question was Mozart's Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail (literally Abduction from the Seraglio), and the Emperor in question was Joseph II. The remarks were actually correct: Mozart was experimenting with a new, bold musical form, and in one aria, has the soprano sing a very long piece while the action grinds to a halt, and everybody watches. It *was* too long.Originally posted by Curdis
Tying this thread to Human stupidity and people say the dumbest things - We have The Art of Being Wrong :-
'Far too noisy, my dear Mozart. Far too many notes.' - The Emperor Ferdinand after the first performance of The Marriage of Figaro.
I remember reading that Sedgwick was hit twice, while leading his men in a charge, which leads me to suspect he didn't say the words mentioned above. As for the "English-Portugese Phrasebook," that was intended as a joke volume.Originally posted by Curdis
The book is the best non-chemical anti-depressant I know of called - "The Book of Heroic Failures" Stephen Pile, Futura Publications, 1980 ISBN 0 7088 1908 7. The English-Portuguese phrase book features as the star event in "The Worst Phrasebook"
"They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist..." The last words of General John Sedgwick spoken while looking over the parapet at enemy lines during the battle of Spotsylvania in 1864.