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| subject: | Spring enquiry... |
I'm sorry George. I composted a message earlier IRT this but the spellchecker ate it, sent your original and left me PO'd so I quit. So anyways...that's an interesting tale. I'd heard the saying but never the rest of the story. My earlier eaten compost referenced American rail track gauges, Roman chariots and the Compendium of Lost Words (http://phrontistery.50megs.com/clw.html) ...all IRT the frozen monkeyballs. But as earlier stated it got eaten. Oh well. -> Apparently, in days of olde, when ships used cannons for -> offense/defense, they stacked the cannonballs up in a pyramid shape atop -> a little brass device called a "monkey" that had holes in it to hold thi -> bottom row of balls. . . Because brass contracts in the cold more than -> the steel cannonballs, when it got cold enough, the bottom 'brass -> monkey' would contract so as to loosen the bottom layer of balls from no -> longer having a well-seated connection, and the whole stack would go -> flying, thus the saying, "cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass -> monkey"! *Origin: American Express: Don't leave Rome without it. --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v3.0pr5* Origin: Try Our Web Based QWK: DOCSPLACE.ORG (1:123/140) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 123/140 500 106/2000 633/267 |
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