tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3407624264627208128.post7485696180283335201..comments2024-01-26T21:38:25.924-08:00Comments on Duane's PoeTree: Arlene Corwin writesDuanesPoeTreehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17053093400086634552noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3407624264627208128.post-50972099679072379882019-03-29T17:53:46.273-07:002019-03-29T17:53:46.273-07:00The anonymous "master of Manta" painted ...The anonymous "master of Manta" painted a series of frescoes for the Salone Baronale in the Castello della Manta, about 50 km (31 mi) southwest of Torino ca. 1416-1424. They may have been commissioned by Valerano del Vasto, the bastard son of marchese Tommasso III di Saluzzo, who acted as regent for his 1/2 brother Ludovico. The various scenes illustrated episodes from Tomasso's long poem "Le Chevalier Errant," 1 of the most important chivalry texts. The aged and decrepit arrive from the left, rejuvenate themselves in the fountain in the center, and go a'hawking at the right. DuanesPoeTreehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17053093400086634552noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3407624264627208128.post-86275300487968344172019-03-29T17:21:07.135-07:002019-03-29T17:21:07.135-07:00In a 14 February 1931 "Cook-Coos" newspa...In a 14 February 1931 "Cook-Coos" newspaper column Ted Cook claimed that someone had asked Nobel laureate George Bernard Shaw what the most beautiful thing in the world was, to which Shaw replied, "“Youth ... -- and what a pity that it has to be wasted on children!” A few weeks later Rian James, in the 8 March issue of "The Brooklyn Daily Eagle," claimed Shaw had remarked "that youth is a wonderful thing. It is a shame it has to be wasted on children." On 22 April columnist O. O. Mcintyre gave another version: "Youth is always wonderful. As George Bernard once exclaimed, it seems a shame to waste it on children." On May 10 journalist Irvin S. Cobb was profiled in a piece in which he "quoted with deep feeling a recent epigram from Bernard Shaw: 'The most precious thing in the world is youth. Too bad it is wasted on children.'" And in the 28 December issue of the "New York Times" it was claimed that the new Riverside Church pastor Harry Emerson Fosdick gave a sermon in which he too indirectly quoted Shaw as saying "it was a pity youth had to be wasted in childhood." There is no evidence that Shaw ever made the remark attributed to him, but throughout the year 1931 American newspapers continued to credit him with the sentiment. The Shavian aphorism continued to evolve until 1945 when novelist Ann Pinchot perfected it as "a pity youth is wasted on the young."DuanesPoeTreehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17053093400086634552noreply@blogger.com