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Monday, December 01, 2003

From Re: Curiosity you can have a full explanation of the origins of the idiomatic phrase "Curiosity killed the cat". In this phraseing, this is a relatively new expression.

This is the text:
CURIOSITY KILLED THE CAT – Anyone who has cats knows they tend to poke their feline noses everywhere. That could be dangerous. The saying is relatively new and its first written appearance was a 1921 or 1922 (depending on the source) play by Eugene O'Neill.

The “Random House Dictionary of Popular Proverbs and Sayings” (1996) by Gregory Titelman states: “An overly inquisitive person is likely to get hurt. Children are usually warned against curiosity. The proverb was first attested in the United States in 1909. In 1921, it was used by (playwright) Eugene O’Neill…(A variation is) ‘Curiosity killed the cat: satisfaction brought him back…’”

“Wise Words and Wives Tales” (1993, Avon Books) by Stuart Flexner and Doris Flexner has a more detailed explanation: “There is nothing new about the annoying tendency of some people to ask one question too many. Proverbial admonitions to the overly curious date back to ancient times, but ‘Curiosity killed the cat’ is apparently a recent invention. Of the earlier sayings, Saint Augustine recorded in ‘Confessions’ (397) the story of a curious soul who wondered what God did in the eons before creating heaven and earth. ‘He fashioned hell for the inquisitive,’ came the stern reply, and proverbial sayings of more recent times have been no less forgiving. The seventeenth-century saying, “He that pryeth into every cloud may be struck with a thunderbolt,’ appeared in John Clarke’s ‘Paroemiologia’ (1639), and in the nineteenth century, Lord Byron in ‘Don Juan’ (1818) roundly condemned the curious with ‘I loathe that low vice curiosity.’ An old saw, ‘Care (worry) killed the cat.,’ dated from Shakespeare’s time, but the connection between a cat and curiosity, however natural it may seem now, was not made until a reference to the current proverb appeared in 1909. The adaptation, ‘Curiosity can do more things than kill a cat,’ was recorded in O. Henry’s short story ‘Schools and Schools’ (1909), and the exact wording of the proverb appeared later in Eugene O’Neill’s ‘Diff’rent’ (1922).


I'll start here with my first attempt. These blogs can be either one of a variety of things: a) an exercise in narcissism; b) a string of platitudes; c) an attempt to describe an exploration; d) a dog-pissing exercise of marking a territory; e) an attempt to signpost a journey. And they can be all of these things, when one is not looking at the linearity of the development but tries to represent the simultaneity of reality.

I'll start here, and I don't know where I'll go. I probably just want to see it in action, and to dull my solitude - isn't the Internet the ideal solution to this: maintaining your solitude while accessing a virtual world?

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