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The Book Party

Judith Martin | 01/08/2009 11:00 am

Judith Martin: Words Worth Repeating

Judith Martin

Bookish families have their pet quotations and references that they use in everyday life. For example, my grandmother would say to my mother, and my mother would say to me, "Yes, Gwendolyn, dear, whatever you want, Gwendolyn, as long as you are happy, that’s all that really matters."

Now, neither of us was named Gwendolyn. But as teenagers, we both had been given to acting imperiously on occasion (as what teenager has not?) and this was the gently sarcastic reprimand. It is not a quotation, but refers to Gwendolyn Harleth in George Eliot’s Daniel Deronda, the glamour-puss of her family to whom her mother always deferred, and who came to a sad end.

If my grandmother conceded to going along with something others wanted to do, she did not say, "OK, whatever." She said, "Barkis is willin’." In Charles Dickens’s David Copperfield Barkis, the coachman, sends this message to the nurse, Peggotty, expecting her to understand that it is a proposal of marriage.

Such conversational habits are far from the grandeur of quoting literature, which is why Shakespearean references don’t quite qualify. Rather, this is family shorthand or code, taken from each family’s own favorite books and used in common situations. (In public, my grandmother had only to say "Gwendolyn" to have my mother think "Uh-oh" and adjust her demeanor.) It is also an effective way to get the children to read those books, to find out what on earth the old folks are talking about.

We would like to hear yours.
Here are some of the others in my family:

"Up to a point, Lord Copper."
In Evelyn Waugh’s Scoop, that is what the foreign editor of the Beast says when he cannot quite give his other standard response to his chief, the press lord ("Definitely, Lord Copper") because his chief has said something dead wrong. It allows us to avoid saying, "You don’t know what you’re talking about."

"It was the salmon."
From Dickens’s The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, used, as Mr. Snodgrass does, to justify being in a questionable state. As the author adds parenthetically,  "Somehow or other, it never is the wine in these cases."

"I am Duchess of Malfi still."
The title character in John Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi says this when she knows she is about to be strangled, so we use it as a way of saying, "You got me, but I’m not really giving in."

"I am Henry IV, and have been these 20 years."
A very different meaning from the above — this is said in Luigi Pirandello’s Henry IV by an alleged madman who is rich enough to have everyone indulge him in his impersonation of  that king; therefore, a way of saying, "OK, so I’m nuts, but that’s the way I am, so don’t give me a hard time."

"I’ve always wanted to wander in the Pyrenees."
"You’ll wander in them."

An exchange by the immobile characters in Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot (one of many we use, doing our best to reproduce the voices of Bert Lahr and E.G. Marshall in the great New York production), this serves as the "I dunno" answer to "What do you want to do?" or "Where shall we go?"

"He rode madly off in all directions."(Full version: "Lord Ronald said nothing; he flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse and rode madly off in all directions.")
Taken from Stephen Leacock’s Gertrude the Governess; or Simple Seventeen and useful when asked someone’s whereabouts, which you neither know nor think particularly important.

And of course, the most useful and widely quoted phrase of all —the triumph of the subordinate over the powerful — from Herman Melville’s Bartleby The Scrivener, in which the title character refuses orders from his employer, including that of vacating the premises after being fired, by saying: "I would prefer not to."

94 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Tee Zee
Not to mention the Kindle and Sony readers where you no longer get to hold a book in your hand! Which makes sense in the case of textbooks, the last few I have come in contact with have so many errors the book is a joke! But I love the feel of a book in hand…highlight the passages I want to remember or reference…sob.
By Tee Zee on 01/10/2009 1:31 pm
Dora M
I do too, Tee Zee, but then felt guilty because last year I got a Kindle as a gift, my first reaction was that it was going to be great, like an iPod for books, perfect to travel with, etc., but as much as I try I just can’t get into it. Nothing like cracking a book open for the first time, holding it in your hands, seeing it slowly come to an end, and finally giving it to a friend to share the experience. And I agree that it’s just about tragic to see small bookstores disappear (even though I do take advantage of the lower prices on Amazon, etc.) and I think the ones that will survive and prosper are those that manage to create a community around themselves, I’m seeing it in a local place that opened up a couple of years ago near me and they are doing very well (well enough to open a second store soon) but their success is due to having regular readings and signings and concentrating on local areas of interest, as well as having a very passionate and informed staff, they wind up making you feel like part of a special club.
By Dora M on 01/11/2009 3:05 pm
Tee Zee
Don’t feel guilty Dora, it’s a great tool for traveling, I always take too many books with me and regret the ones I left behind and would love to receive on as a gift! I just won’t give up my books, I love everything about them, just like you do. I too have a local bookseller with a very passionate staff and it’s such a delight to spend time there. Have you ever heard of BookCrossing, where 738,475 people in over 130 countries come to share their passion for books with the world. Where books take on a life of their own. Check it out sometime… http://www.bookcrossing.com/
By Tee Zee on 01/11/2009 8:57 pm
Dora M
Tee Zee, this Bookcrossing thing is brilliant! thanks for the tip :)
By Dora M on 01/12/2009 1:45 am
Lynne Perrella
Liz and all - I have joined this dialog late, but am enjoying every post. I keep a quotation journal in my studio, and - come to think - I love having a quotation dictionary on my drawing table to spur ideas. Images and words, side-by-side seem a perfect banquet. One of my favorites: “Adhere to your own act, and congratulate yourself if you have done something strange and extravagant, and broken the monotony of a decorous age.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson. As an author (I write books on mixed media and art journals), I find that Amazon is a mixed blessing. It calls the whole Universe to your camp fire, and makes them aware of what you are doing, etc. But, an author has to also brace themselves for the reader reviews and they can get dicey. I recently had a reader complain that I had not shown “all ten thousand” of the vintage photos that one of my contributing artists had collected. Um, er, gee — Didya really think we were going to show all ten thousand? Well, anyhow, needless to add…..a really strong thoughtful pithy review can set me dancing. “They got it! They really got it!”, etc. But, nothing beats the fun of going into our local indy book store and seeing my books on the shelf. In our section of the Berkshires, we have a happy abundance of independent book stores (long may they wave!) and also a couple of choice Used Book Barns. There is nothing to match the joy of finding a used art book that I coveted - years ago! - but didn’t have the finances to acquire. Now, there I am hugging it to me like a favorite doll, marveling that it will only cost me (gasp) seven bucks. “All things come to those who wait”, right? Many thanks for this dialog about quotations and books!
By Lynne Perrella on 01/31/2009 7:09 am
kermie b
Well behaved women rarely make history.” —Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
By kermie b on 01/09/2009 12:11 am
Chrome Toe
kermie - that’s the sticker I have on my helmet and a line that my youngest daughter keeps on her myspace. I actually had a magazine photographer take a picture of my helmet for an article they were writing once years ago. I still have the article. It was about women as a growing group of motorcycle riders. Love that line!
By Chrome Toe on 01/09/2009 9:28 am
Bonnie Oliver
In my parents home one would have found reading material in every room of the house except the bathrooms…. including literature, fiction or just plain comic books. Yet, I do not remember any particular phrase becoming a family codeword, reference or pet quotation. I do remember my Mom preparing dinner and suddenly while stirring something on top of the stove, she would break out in poetry and we children would hear her quoting Longfellow… “Between the dark and the daylight when the night is beginning to lower…” “Listen my children and you shall hear of the midnight ride of…” Both The Children’s Hour and The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere were two of her favorites. She also quoted Kipling often …. “Down to the sea in ships”.. Strange, even my own household where there is something to read in every room of the house, including the bathrooms , I never use lines from literature as a point of reference. I think we used dialogue from movies ….”Harvey took it” meaning no one knows or “Gambling! I’m shocked” meaning you’ve got to be kidding. What a great family tradition you enjoyed, Judith. Thanks for sharing.
By Bonnie Oliver on 01/09/2009 12:29 am
shirley adams
A friend once told me. (If you Don’t believe you wont receive)!
By shirley adams on 01/09/2009 5:46 am
beverly linens
We had books everywhere as I was raising my children and I don’t recall ever quoting out of books. Of course we were all reading different books. My favorite saying was “The faster I go the behinder I get!” I have no idea where that came from.
By beverly linens on 01/09/2009 6:13 am
Barbara
Beverly, I always heard it “The hurrier I go, the behinder I get.” I guess my family wasn’t as literary, although we were (and still are) avid readers. The line that seems to pop out a lot is “Badges! We don’t need no stinkin badges.” which is a line from The Treasure of the Sierra Madre and was spoofed in Blazing Saddles.
By Barbara on 01/09/2009 7:05 am
Marjorie C.
Judith Martin, You launched us all into some wonderful memories. Good literature is like a sunshiny day, to me. Thanks for the string.
By Marjorie C. on 01/09/2009 7:36 am
Lily Rose
For my wow friends, And do as adversaries do in law,- Strive mightily, but eat and drink as friends
By Lily Rose on 01/09/2009 10:55 am
Mugsy Peabody
Gee, George, now can I pet the rabbits?” was a perennial favorite between college friends, from Of Mice and Men. My Russian language colleagues often when bored would say, “To Moscow, Masha!” from The Three Sisters, a Chekhov play I was translating. When people were being particularly stupid, it was, “Hey, all you fat rich people, out for volleyball!!!!!” from A Thousand Clowns.” Mostly movies, rather than books in my generation, I suspect, Ms. Manners.
By Mugsy Peabody on 01/09/2009 4:02 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
A Thousand Clowns–––someone else remembers this movie!! “Come on , all you rich people, get up and get out–-….” A really precious movie. When my grandson, Diego, was a wee one, I would often say these lines after taking him outside–––don’t know why, they just came to me–––I’d stand in the middle of the driveway and yell––he loved it so being the ham I am I’d do this every time we’d go out. Once I forgot and though he couldn’t talk yet, he gestured the way I did standing in the middle of the driveway, his little hands flapping and his small mouth open like a big 0.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 01/09/2009 5:41 pm