Friday 27 May 2011

Was Little Miss Muffet a Local Girl?

From ERIC SHACKLE in Sydney, Australia. <ericshackle*bigpond.com>

This story was first posted in 2001, in the Brookmans Park (London) newsletter.


Dr. Thomas Muffet, who lived in Brookmans Park in the 16th century, would have been delighted to see a news item featured on this website of his old hometown. Under the headline Rare hornet found in Brookmans Park, it says "A hornet seldom seen in England has been captured in Brookmans Park. A resident living in Woodlands spotted the large insect flying around his kitchen."

The website also shows a page of colour photographs of local insects, most of which he would have recognised, for he was a famous entomologist, who wrote The Theatre of Insects, the first scientific catalogue of British native species. 


Many Brookmans Park residents believe the good doctor, who lived from 1553 to 1604, was the father of Little Miss Muffet, and that he had composed the cute little nursery rhyme which millions of children around the world have recited since his day:

Little Miss Muffet sat on a tuffet,
Eating her curds and whey;
Along came a spider, who sat down beside her
And frightened Miss Muffet away.

 
One theory suggests that his daughter Patience was Little Miss Muffet, but as the oldest printed version of the rhyme is dated 1805, that seems unlikely. Muffet had no children of his own; and the two stepdaughters from his second marriage to a widow named Catherine Brown would probably have been Little Miss Browns. 

In that case, the doctor would have written Little Miss Brown / Went to Town...

A second theory was that Little Miss Muffet referred to Mary, Queen of Scots (1542-1587), who was said to have been frightened  by John Knox (1505-1572), Scottish religious reformer. The rhyme might then have been Along came John Knox / That wily old fox.. The 1812 edition of Songs for the Nursery has a rhyme telling us that Little Mary Ester sat upon a tester. Thirty years later, Halliwell's 1842 collection included Little Miss Mopsey sat in a shopsey. 

Curds and whey, the dish Little Miss Muffet enjoyed was none other than junket, a custard-like food made of sweetened milk, which is better-known in Britain than in America. It got its name because it was taken to market in little reed baskets called jonquettes (from Latin joncus, reed.)  Jonquil has a similar derivation.
These days, junket describes a politician's luxury trip charged to the taxpayers. That use of the word dates back to 1814, when a picnic basket was known as a junket basket. The politicians were having a picnic at public expense. Curds and whey was also an old name for cottage cheese, the curds being lumpy and the whey milky.

There's doubt too, as to what sort of tuffet Little Miss Muffet sat on. It could have been either a low three-legged stool or a small mound of grass-covered earth. You can buy the former kind today from dozens of furniture suppliers advertising them on the internet.


The Little Miss Muffet mystery was revived last week (June 2001) in the London Times, in an article headed Riddle of Dr Moufet's vanishing mole kricket. Mark Henderson, the newspaper's science correspondent, and Mia Jarlov wrote:

"The mole cricket (Gryllotalpa gryllotalpa) was named in 1634 by the entomologist Thomas Moufet (from whom Little Miss Muffet got her name) in The Theatre of Insects, the first scientific catalogue of British native species. The name comes from the spade-like front legs with which it makes underground burrows similar to miniature molehills.

"Dr Moufet wrote: 'If we make names, we may call it Gryllotalpa; a Mole kricket, a Kricket because it makes the same shrill noyse which a Kricket doth towards night; a Mole, because it digs the earth continually. It is an insect ugly to sight and monstrous.'"

Researchers from the Natural History Museum, English Nature and London Zoo have asked the public to help compile a national census of  mole crickets, known in Britain since the 16th century but sighted only four times in the last 25 years.

Dr Muffet didn't spend all his time studying insects. In 1595 he wrote in Health's Improvement: "[Sweet potatoes] nourish mightily...engendering much flesh, blood, and seed, but withal encreasing wind and lust."

You can't believe everything you read on the internet, but one website tells us that in those days, doctors in England used spiders as medicine.  "To treat a fever, a doctor would roll a spider in bread crumbs and feed it to the patient," it asserts.   "Dr. Thomas Muffet admired spiders so much, he kept them as pets and let them have the run of his house.  His daughter, Patience Muffet, did not share her father's love of spiders.”

Another site says "Miss Muffet was a really little girl. Her father, Dr. Thomas Muffet, was a medical doctor and an expert on spiders. He believed that eating mashed spiders was a cure for the common cold. It was said that Miss Muffet ate her share of mashed spiders."

Yet another site says  "Miss Muffet was a 16th century little girl whose name was Patience. Her father, Dr. Thomas Muffet (possibly Moffett or Moufet), an entomologist who died in 1604, wrote The Silkworms and their flies 'lively described in verse.'  Patience did not share her father's love of bugs. One morning while eating breakfast, one of her father's bugs appeared. She leapt up spilling the curds and whey and ran out of the house."

The U.S. website Planet Proctor tells an even better story. "This once-famous 16th century naturalist got the notion that spiders were not only beautiful but therapeutic," it claims. "He turned a bunch of them loose in his house and when his little daughter got sick, he emptied a sackful of them on her head and body, thinking they would make her well. They didn't. She was terrified. The father was Thomas Muffet, the daughter the real-life Little Miss Muffet."

Planet Proctor promotes famous U.S. film and TV personality Phil Proctor, who supplies a voice for such animated series as Rugrats and The Tick and is featured in the Rugrats movie. He won praise in the summer of 1998 for his voice work as the drunken monkey in the Eddie Murphy movie Dr. Dolittle. By a happy coincidence, Phil and David Ossman also lend their voices to the Disney/Pixar animated movie A Bug's Life. 

Back to Little Miss Muffet:  In 1893, American poet Guy Wetmore Carryl (1873-1904) composed an engaging poem, which deserves to be reprinted here. It's full of clever rhymes reminiscent of W.S. Gilbert, of Gilbert and Sullivan fame, who wrote, in the Lord Chancellor's song from Iolanthe, “When you're lying awake, with a dismal headache"

The Embarrassing Episode of Little Miss Muffet
By Guy Wetmore  Carryl

Little Miss Muffet discovered a tuffet,
(Which never occurred to the rest of us)
And, as 'twas a June day, and just about noonday,
She wanted to eat - like the rest of us:
Her diet was whey, and I hasten to say
It is wholesome and people grow fat on it.
The spot being lonely, the lady not only
Discovered the tuffet, but sat on it.

A rivulet gabbled beside her and babbled,
As rivulets always are thought to do,
And dragon flies sported around and cavorted,
As poets say dragon flies ought to do;
When, glancing aside for a moment, she spied
A horrible sight that brought fear to her,
A hideous spider was sitting beside her,
And most unavoidably near to her!

Albeit unsightly, this creature politely, said:
"Madam, I earnestly vow to you,
I'm penitent that I did not bring my hat.
I should otherwise certainly bow to you."
Thought anxious to please, he was so ill at ease
That he lost all his sense of propriety,
And grew so inept that he clumsily stept
In her plate - which is barred in Society.

This curious error completed her terror;
She shuddered, and growing much paler, not
Only left tuffet, but dealt him a buffet
Which doubled him up in a sailor knot.
It should be explained that at this he was pained:
He cried: "I have vexed you, no doubt of it!
Your fists's like a truncheon."  "You're still in my luncheon,"
Was all that she answered. "Get out of it!"

And the Moral is this: Be it madam or miss
To whom you have something to say,
You are only absurd when you get in the curd
But you're rude when you get in the whey. 

 
Footnote: There's an enchanting painting of Little Miss Muffet by Scott Gustafson on the Internet. The caption reads, "There are so many light and interesting touches in this beautifully colored and bordered work. She sits in a formal garden of the 18th century, next to her faithful King Charles Spaniel. A suave little spider has come to 'sit down beside her' but perhaps this Miss Muffet will not be frightened away. Scott says: 'The sheet music at her feet is a Tarantella, a popular dance of the period that, according to folklore, when danced wards off the effects of the venomous bite of a tarantula. Whether or not that's true I don't know, but it was a nice musical tie-in to the spidery theme I was painting.'"

Thursday 26 May 2011

Death of a Truly Colorful Character

From ERIC SHACKLE, in Sydney, Australia. <eshackle*bigpond.com>

BBC News last month reported the death of Jean-Baptiste("Buster") Martin, a truly colorful character. I first
wrote about him two years ago. That story is posted at
 
"A London man who claimed to be the world's oldest marathon runner has died," said the BBC.

"Buster Martin said he was 101 when he ran the London Marathon in 2008.

"He was still working as a van cleaner at Pimlico Plumbers. His boss Charlie Mullins said:
'Buster sadly passed away last night at the age of 104.'

"Mr Martin was not awarded the Guinness World Record as the oldest person to complete a marathon after being unable to verify his age.

"He features in a film by American documentary-maker Mark Wexler being released in the US in May, called How to Live Forever.

"In a blog entry on London firm Pimlico Plumbers' website, managing director Charlie
Mullins wrote: 'I can't believe it, only yesterday afternoon was he in the canteen knocking back one of Buster's beers, and now today he is gone. Buster certainly enjoyed life and was living life to the full right up until the end.'

"Several months after his marathon run, Mr Martin claimed to have been issued a passport with a date of birth verifying his age, after there were suggestions that he was 'only' 94.

"Guinness World Records were still not able to verify the record because of the absence of a birth certificate.

"Pimlico Plumbers said that Mr Martin completed the 2008 marathon in just under ten hours, and he raised £20,000 for charity.

"A biography on the website for the film that features Mr Martin, described him as 'Britain's oldest working man' and said he enjoyed 'a beeror two and 20 cigarettes daily.'"

Sunday 22 May 2011

Is Luke, Zach, or Terry World's Best Whistler?

From ERIC SHACKLE in Sydney, Australia. <EricShackle*BigPond.com>

Our bid to find the world's best whistler has taken a new turn. First we had Luke Janssen of Sydney, Australia, and Zach Wade, of Columbia, Missouri, claiming the title. Now we've discovered that 60-year-old Terry Rappold, of New Orleans, Louisians, has won the 2011 world whistling championship, just as he did in 2007.

"I've been whistling since I was about five years old," he told George Gurtner in a story in Louisiana's Country Roads Magazine.


"Walking down the street, in the school yard, you name it, I was usually whistling. Growing up, my whistling was a constant source of irritation for my brothers and sisters. But into adulthood, as I progressed and got better, they came to appreciate it."


Gurtner recalled Mae West's comment, "
You do know how to whistle, don't you? You just put your lips together and blow." He added.  "... unless you're Terry Rappold, of course. Rappold is the king of the whistlers, the pucker's pucker, the warbling wizard of Louisiana, the man who is as apt to make a joyful noise through his trilling lips as he shaves as when he's behind the wheel of his car.

So now we have to decide which of the talented trio truly deserves to be called The World's Best Whistler.

You can hear (and see) them performing in these videos:


Luke Janssen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVTAvt8GiCc

Zach Wade:
http://www.jschoolbuzz.com/meet-the-missouri-school-of-journalisms-youtube-celebrity/

Terry Rappold:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UE-uVX5hQic

Characteristics of People Who Live Beyond 90

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

By Vijai P. Sharma, Ph.D

Nonagenarians, that is, the people in their nineties, are adaptive, creative, and rather self sufficient.  They survive even the survivors. Professor Dunbar of Columbia University studied people in their nineties.  He called them "nimble nonagenarians."

Dunbar found that nimble nonagenarians don't accept what they hear from others about old age. They are well insulated from negative emotions, such as depression, anxiety, and conflict. They have a strong survival instinct along with a terrific sense of humor.

Psychological adaptability in face of stress may be the chief characteristic of people who make it to the ninetieth birthday and beyond. It includes the ability to bounce back from the setbacks of life, the grief, and the shock of the unexpected.. Perhaps, the "bounce-back-ability" of nonagenarians is higher than that of people who live only up to the normal longevity.

Nonagenarians keep themselves mentally and physically active. This does not mean that that they spend hours and hours doing mental and physical fitness programs, actually, "moderate" rather than an "exhaustive "mental and physical activity characterizes them best. They believe in the saying, "Use it or lose it."

Nonusers become old, weak, and infirm faster than users. Lack of physical activity wastes and makes muscles more fragile, weakens the heart and thickens the arteries.
 
Not exercising the mental muscle makes the mind dull, concentration poor, memory weaker, and the problem solving ability goes kaput. In many cases, obesity sets in, or depression and anxiety takes hold of the person, accelerating the aging process.

A psychologist, Allan Langer, carried out a fascinating experiment in a nursing home. He gave its elderly residents potted plants to tend, allowed them to make up their own menu and to clean and arrange their own rooms according to their own liking.

The health of these seniors improved considerably. From the former passivity, loneliness, and isolation, they became active and felt that they were in control of their lives.

So if you are one who is retired or ready to hang up the hat and are right now looking intently at the rocking chair, follow a moderate regime of physical and mental activity.

Learn something new every day.  Do crossword puzzles, learn a new language, read or listen to a book on tape, get into  gardening, learn crochet, macramé, some new game, some new skill, whatever. Do just about anything you can enjoy. To age well, use your physical and mental ability to the fullest. 

Satisfaction with life and acceptance of change is the hallmark of nonagenarians, They derive pleasure from daily activities. They regard their life inherently meaningful. They feel they have achieved their major goal and live content. They possess an intrinsic sense of self worth. They are optimists.

Someone rightly said, "Depressives may be more realistic, but the optimists live longer." 
Nonagenarians, the great survivors, respond creatively to change indicating a high adaptive energy..

They have the capacity to accept and integrate new things in life rather than shutting them out, as opposed to closing their eyes and hiding. They accept events they can't change rather than fight with them in a foolhardy manner. "If you can't fight the enemy, join them." 

There is strong survival instinct, manifest in wanting to live as long as possible. Bryant Gumbel of "Today" says, "It is never wonderful to walk away from a fight but you will live longer if you do."

Following the storms, the trees that bend with the wind stand firm in their place looking at the straight and unbending trees that has been broken by the wind. Flexibility is an essential part of adaptability.