Difference between revisions of "Nor had topsawyer's rocks"

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* Topsawyer's Rock: a formation on the [[Oconee]] River, the river on which Dublin, Georgia, in the USA, was founded
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* '''Topsawyer's Rock:''' a formation on the [[Oconee]] River, the river on which Dublin, Georgia, in the USA, was founded
  
* pun with the name Tom [[Sawyer]], character in [[Mark]] Twain's book and friend of Huckleberry [[Finn]]. Tom is [[Shaun]] to Huck's [[Shem]]. Is Mark Twain, their literary father, HCE (like his namesake King Mark), or is he the combined Shem-Shaun Tristan character (as his surname suggests: Twain = two, twin, both)?
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* '''Tom Sawyer:''' pun with the name Tom [[Sawyer]], the character in [[Mark]] Twain's book and friend of Huckleberry [[Finn]]. Tom is [[Shaun]] to Huck's [[Shem]]. Is Mark Twain, their literary father, [[HCE]] (like his namesake King Mark), or is he the combined Shem-Shaun Tristan character (as his surname suggests: Twain = two, twin, both)?
** Tom Sawyer → St Thomas à Becket, contrasted with St Lawrence O'Toole (003.08)
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** '''Tom Sawyer''' → St Thomas à Becket, contrasted with St Lawrence O'Toole (003.08)
  
* A top sawyer stands above a saw pit (i.e., above the pit sawyer).
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* '''top-sawyer:''' the person who stands at the top of a saw pit above the pit-sawyer
  
* rocks: slang for testicles
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* '''rocks:''' (''slang'') testicles, balls
**''Ulysses'' 062.13: "O, rocks! she [Molly] said."
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**'''''[[Ulysses]]'' 062.13:''' "O, rocks! she [Molly] said."
  
* Charles Dickens, ''David Copperfield'', Chapter 5: the naive David is bilked out of half a pint of ale by a dishonest waiter who tells him that "a stout gentleman, by the name of Topsawyer" died the previous day after drinking a glass of ale!
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* '''Topsawyer:''' Charles Dickens, ''David Copperfield'', Chapter 5: the naive David is bilked out of half a pint of ale by a dishonest waiter who tells him that "a stout gentleman, by the name of Topsawyer" died the previous day after drinking a glass of ale!
  
* Peter Sawyer: Dublin exile; supposed founder of Dublin, Georgia (actually it was a Jonathan Sawyer who founded the city)
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* '''Peter Sawyer:''' a Dublin exile; the supposed founder of Dublin, Georgia (actually it was a Jonathan Sawyer who founded the city)
**Peter: from the Greek, πετρος, "rock" → "Thou art Peter and upon this rock I shall build my church"
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** '''Peter:''' from the Greek, ''petros'' (''πετρος''), a masculine form of the Greek word ''petra'' (''πετρα''), "rock" → "Thou art Peter and upon this rock I shall build my church" (Matthew 16:18)

Revision as of 11:02, 13 September 2006

  • Topsawyer's Rock: a formation on the Oconee River, the river on which Dublin, Georgia, in the USA, was founded
  • Tom Sawyer: pun with the name Tom Sawyer, the character in Mark Twain's book and friend of Huckleberry Finn. Tom is Shaun to Huck's Shem. Is Mark Twain, their literary father, HCE (like his namesake King Mark), or is he the combined Shem-Shaun Tristan character (as his surname suggests: Twain = two, twin, both)?
    • Tom Sawyer → St Thomas à Becket, contrasted with St Lawrence O'Toole (003.08)
  • top-sawyer: the person who stands at the top of a saw pit above the pit-sawyer
  • rocks: (slang) testicles, balls
    • Ulysses 062.13: "O, rocks! she [Molly] said."
  • Topsawyer: Charles Dickens, David Copperfield, Chapter 5: the naive David is bilked out of half a pint of ale by a dishonest waiter who tells him that "a stout gentleman, by the name of Topsawyer" died the previous day after drinking a glass of ale!
  • Peter Sawyer: a Dublin exile; the supposed founder of Dublin, Georgia (actually it was a Jonathan Sawyer who founded the city)
    • Peter: from the Greek, petros (πετρος), a masculine form of the Greek word petra (πετρα), "rock" → "Thou art Peter and upon this rock I shall build my church" (Matthew 16:18)