I was given a copy of A Mencken Chrestomathy for Christmas. So far and for the most part it is about as amusing as it was claimed it would be.
At the end there’s a collection of "Mencken sententiae." I think some of these nicely capture kernels of truth (e.g., "Tombstone–An ugly reminder of one who has been forgotten"). Others confuse me and don’t seem to capture much of anything.
So for this, my very first post, I present four perplexing sayings from HL Mencken:
1. Fame — An embalmer trembling with stagefright.
2. Jealousy is the theory that some other fellow has just as little taste.
3. How little it takes to make life unbearable…A pebble in the shoe, a cockroach in the spaghetti, a woman’s laugh.
4. Man weeps to think he will die so soon; woman, that she was born so long ago.
What, if anything, are 1-4 are supposed to be getting at?
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