torsdag 8 december 2016

Grattis James!

"All human beings should try to learn before they die 
what they are running from, and to, and why."
                                                 James Thurber

 James Thurber
8 december 1894 - 2 november 1961 

Han var författare, journalist, humorist och skämttecknare, skrev för såväl vuxna som för barn, och var kanske mest känd för sina noveller  — men inte mycket av hans böcker finns på nätet, däremot har både adlibris och bokus hans böcker för den som är nyfiken.

En enda av hans noveller hittar jag på nätet, The Greatest Man in the World”, (läsvärd!) den skrev han 1931, och har i dag fått många att lyfta på ögonbrynen eftersom huvudpersonen har många gemensamma drag med Donald Trump! 
“it was inevitable that some day there would come roaring out of the skies a national hero of insufficient intelligence, background, and character.

Men ett par böcker kan du hitta på nätet, hans självbiografi från 1933, "My Life and Hard Times ", med hans egna illustrationer, och "Further Fables for Our Time", från 1956, också den med hans egna illustrationer.

 The Foolhardy Mouse and the Cautious Cat

Such sport there had been that day, in the kitchen and the pantry, for the cat was away and the mice were playing all manner of games: mousy-wants-a-corner, hide-and-squeak, one-old-cat, mouse-in-boots, and so on. Then the cat came home.
"Cat's back!" whispered Father Mouse.
"Into the wainscoting, all of you!" said Mother Mouse, and all of the mice except one hastily hid in the woodwork.
The exception was an eccentric mouse named Mervyn, who had once boldly nipped a bulldog in the ear and got away with it. Mervyn did not know at the time, and never found out, that the bulldog was a stuffed bulldog, and so he lived in a fool's paradise.
The day the cat, whose name was Pouncetta, came back from wherever she had been, she was astonished to encounter Mervyn in the butler's pantry, nonchalantly nibbling crumbs. She crept toward him in her stocking feet and was astounded when he turned, spit a crumb in her eye, and began insulting her with a series of insults.
"How did you get out of the bag?" Mervyn inquired calmly. "Put on your pajamas and take a cat nap." He went back to his nibbling, as blasé as you please.
"Steady, Pouncetta," said Pouncetta to herself. "There is more here than meets the eye. This mouse is probably a martyr mouse. He has swallowed poison in the hope that I will eat him and die, so that he can be a hero to a hundred generations of his descendants."

Mervyn looked over his shoulder at the startled and suspicious cat and began to mock her in a mousetto voice. "Doodness dwacious," said Mervyn, "it's a posse cat, in full pursuit of little me." He gestured impudently with one foot. "I went that-a-way," he told Pouncetta. Then he did some other imitations, including a pretty good one of W. C. Fieldmouse.
"Easy, girl," said Pouncetta to herself. "This is a mechanical mouse, a trick mouse with a built-in voice. If I jump on it, it will explode and blow me into a hundred pieces. Damned clever, these mice, but not clever enough for me."
"You'd make wonderful violin strings, if you had any guts," Mervyn said insolently. But Pouncetta did not pounce, in spite of the insult unforgivable. Instead, she turned and stalked out of the butler's pantry and into the sitting room and lay down on her pillow near the fireplace and went to sleep.
When Mervyn got back to his home in the woodwork, his father and mother and brothers and sisters and cousins and uncles and aunts were surprised to see him alive and well. There was great jollity, and the finest cheese was served at a family banquet. "She never laid a paw on me," Mervyn boasted. "I haven't got a scratch. I could take on all the cats in the Catskills." He finished his cheese and went to bed and fell asleep, and dreamed of taking a catamount in one minute and twenty-eight seconds of the first round.
MORAL: Fools rush in where angels fear to tread, and the angels are all in Heaven, but few of the fools are dead.
ur "Further Fables for Our Time"

2 kommentarer:

  1. så roligt att du skriver om honom! vi hade en lärare som hade haft honom som lärare, så vi läste mycket av honom.
    take care!

    SvaraRadera
    Svar
    1. Debbie,
      Så spännande att få en förstahandsrapport! För mig är han en tämligen ny bekantskap.
      Margretha

      Radera