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Saturday, January 4, 2014

Pope Francis and Woody Allen

"Pope Francis Links"

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Dear Tig,


Do you remember when we were kids and howled like banshees at Woody's story about "The Discovery of the Sandwich?"

It's pasted below.

Love

Alan

PS The following video clip of comedian-juggler Michael Davis is hilarious.  http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/01/hilarious-comedian-juggler-michael-davis.html

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(The entire text of "Getting Even" can be read at http://www.angelfire.com/blog2/endovelico/WoodyAllen-GettingEven.txt)

Yes, But Can the Steam Engine Do This?

I was leafing through a magazine while waiting for Joseph K., my 
beagle, to emerge from his regular Tuesday fifty-minute hour with a 
Park Avenue therapist—a Jungian veterinarian who, for fifty dollars 
per session, labors valiantly to convince him that jowls are not a social 
drawback —when I came across a sentence at the bottom of the page 
that caught my eye like an overdraft notice. It was just another item 
in one of those boiler-plate specials with a title like "Historagrams" or 
"Betcha Didn't Know," but its magnitude shook me with the power of 
the opening strains of Beethoven's Ninth. "The sandwich," it read, 
"was invented by the Earl of Sandwich." Stunned by the news, I read 
it again and broke into an involuntary tremble. My mind whirled as it 
began to conjure with the immense dreams, the hopes and obstacles, 
that must have gone into the invention of the first sandwich. My eyes 
became moist as I looked out the window at the shimmering towers of 
the city, and I experienced a sense of eternity, marvelling at man's 
ineradicable place in the universe. Man the inventor! Da Vinci's 
notebooks loomed before me—brave blueprints for the highest 
aspirations of the human race. I thought of Aristotle, Dante, 
Shakespeare. The First Folio. Newton. Handel's Messiah. Monet. 
Impressionism. Edison. Cubism. Stravinsky. E=mc2 . . .

Holding firmly to a mental picture of the first sandwich lying 
encased at the British Museum, I spent the ensuing three months 
working up a brief biography of its great inventor, his nibs the Earl. 
Though my grasp of history is a bit shaky, and though my capacity for 
romanticizing easily dwarfs that of the average acidhead, I hope I 
have captured at least the essence of this unappreciated genius, and 
that these sparse notes will inspire a true historian to take it from 
here.

1718: Birth of the Earl of Sandwich to upper-class parents. Father 
is delighted at being appointed chief farrier to His Majesty the King—
a position he will enjoy for several years, until he discovers he is a 
blacksmith and resigns embittered. Mother is a simple Hausfrau of 
German extraction, whose uneventful menu consists essentially of 
lard and gruel, although she does show some flair for culinary 
imagination in her ability to concoct a passable sillabub.

1725-35: Attends school, where he is taught horseback riding and 
Latin. At school he comes in contact with cold cuts for the first time 
and displays an unusual interest in thinly sliced strips of roast beef 
and ham. By graduation this has become an obsession, and although 
his paper on "The Analysis and Attendant Phenomena of Snacks" 
arouses interest among the faculty, his classmates regard him as odd.

1736: Enters Cambridge University, at his parents' behest, to 
pursue studies in rhetoric and metaphysics, but displays little 
enthusiasm for either. In constant revolt against everything academic, 
he is charged with stealing loaves of bread and performing unnatural 
experiments with them. Accusations of heresy result in his expulsion.

1738: Disowned, he sets out for the Scandinavian countries, where 
he spends three years in intensive research on cheese. He is much 
taken with the many varieties of sardines he encounters and writes in 
his notebook, "I am convinced that there is an enduring reality, 
beyond anything man has yet attained, in the juxtaposition of 
foodstuffs. Simplify, simplify." Upon his return to England, he meets 
Nell Smallbore, a greengrocer's daughter, and they marry. She is to 
teach him all he will ever know about lettuce.

1741: Living in the country on a small inheritance, he works day 
and night, often skimping on meals to save money for food. His first 
completed work—a slice of bread, a slice of bread on top of that, and a 
slice of turkey on top of both—fails miserably. Bitterly disappointed, 
he returns to his studio and begins again.

1745: After four years of frenzied labor, he is convinced he is on 
the threshold of success. He exhibits before his peers two slices of 
turkey with a slice of bread in the middle. His work is rejected by all 
but David Hume, who senses the imminence of something great and 
encourages him. Heartened by the philosopher's friendship, he 
returns to work with renewed vigor.

1747: Destitute, he can no longer afford to work in roast beef or 
turkey and switches to ham, which is cheaper.

1750: In the spring, he exhibits and demonstrates three consecu-
tive slices of ham stacked on one another; this arouses some interest, 
mostly in intellectual circles, but the general public remains 
unmoved. Three slices of bread on top of one another add to his 
reputation, and while a mature style is not yet evident, he is sent for 
by Voltaire.

1751: Journeys to France, where the dramatist-philosopher has 
achieved some interesting results with bread and mayonnaise. The 
two men become friendly and begin a correspondence that is to end 
abruptly when Voltaire runs out of stamps.

1758: His growing acceptance by opinion-makers wins him a 
commission by the Queen to fix "something special" for a luncheon 
with the Spanish ambassador. He works day and night, tearing up 
hundreds of blueprints, but finally—at 4:17 A.M., April 27, 1758—he 
creates a work consisting of several strips of ham enclosed, top and 
bottom, by two slices of rye bread. In a burst of inspiration, he 
garnishes the work with mustard. It is an immediate sensation, and 
he is commissioned to prepare all Saturday luncheons for the 
remainder of the year.

1760: He follows one success with another, creating "sandwiches," 
as they are called In his honor, out of roast beef, chicken, tongue, and 
nearly every conceivable cold cut. Not content to repeat tried 
formulas, he seeks out new ideas and devises the combination 
sandwich, for which he receives the Order of the Garter.

1769: Living on a country estate, he is visited by the greatest men 
of his century; Haydn, Kant, Rousseau, and Ben Franklin stop at his 
home, some enjoying his remarkable creations at table, others 
ordering to go.

1778: Though aging physically he still strives for new forms and 
writes in his diary, "I work long into the cold nights and am toasting 
everything now in an effort to keep warm." Later that year, his open 
hot roast-beef sandwich creates a scandal with its frankness.
1783: To celebrate his sixty-fifth birthday, he invents the 
hamburger and tours the great capitals of the world personally, 
making burgers at concert halls before large and appreciative 
audiences. In Germany, Goethe suggests serving them on buns—an 
idea that delights the Earl, and of the author of Faust he says, "This 
Goethe, he is some fellow." The remark delights Goethe, although the 
following year they break intellectually over the concept of rare, 
medium, and well done.

1790: At a retrospective exhibition of his works in London, he is 
suddenly taken ill with chest pains and is thought to be dying, but 
recovers sufficiently to supervise the construction of a hero sandwich 
by a group of talented followers. Its unveiling in Italy causes a riot, 
and it remains misunderstood by all but a few critics.

1792: He develops a genu varum, which he fails to treat in time, 
and succumbs in his sleep. He is laid to rest in Westminster Abbey, 
and thousands mourn his passing.

At his funeral, the great German poet Holderlin sums up his 
achievements with undisguised reverence: "He freed mankind from 
the hot lunch. We owe him so much."



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