A River Runs Through This
Previous topic clue: River
Fans of heavy metal rock may be familiar with a band which called itself “Styx,” but the name itself goes back to antiquity. Mythology buffs would know that’s the river to which Milton referred as “a flood of deadly Hate,” and just to let everybody know it meant business, it encircled the infernal regions nine times. Named for a daughter of a god, the Styx also flowed through the ancient land of Arcadia. It was said that whenever a god made a false oath on its banks, he would be forced to sip from a glass of its toxic waters, which rendered him speechless for a full year. (Kinda makes me want to --ahem-- buy some certain parties a “drink”, if you catch my drift.)
I know the rules against cracking wise about certain politicians, alas. Even so, New York state officials are all gaga about the quadricentennial celebration of the discovery of the lengthy stream often called “The Rhine of America.” In 1609 a British explorer was hired by the Dutch to find the coveted Northwest Passage. What Henry Hudson found instead was the great river that would one day be named after him. Henry must've known something was up. The minute he started heading due north of New York harbor, he was stuck with two speeding tickets and waylaid by a bunch of wild-eyed guys insisting that they squeegee the Half Moon.
With that, let’s sail on to the quiz.
A River Runs Through This
1. Name the military and political leader (102-55 B.C.) who upon crossing the Rubicon River said some Greek words, most often quoted in Latin as “Iacta alea est.” (“The die is cast.”)
2. What was the acclaimed novel by James Dickey and 1972 movie about four urban men whose wilderness experience on a fictional river in Georgia deteriorates into a struggle to survive?
3. Name the influential poet (1885-1972) and colleague of T. S. Eliot who wrote English versions of Chinese works such as “The River Merchant’s Wife.”
4. Who was the Austrian composer (1825-1899) whose most famous waltz was “The Blue Danube” ?
5. What was the rock on the banks of the Rhine better known as the name siren who sat atop it, as she lured river boatmen to their deaths?
6. What’s the four-syllable “r” word that means “of, adjacent to, or living on the banks of a river or, occasionally, a lake or a pond”?
7. Eminent 19th century author and nature-lover Henry David Thoreau saw his first book published in 1849. What was its title?
8. Name the poet (1902-1967), the most famous contributor to the Harlem Renaissance, who wrote these lines: “I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young./ I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep. . .”
9. What is the mammal whose name literally means “river horse”?
10. When Thomas Wolfe submitted the sequel to Look Homeward, Angel, his editor Maxwell Perkins made him cut out some thousand pages and then publish the manuscript as two separate volumes, the second of which was called The Web and the Rock. What was the title of the first one?
11. Name the promising actor ( Stand by Me, My Own Private Idaho, and a portrayal of the young Indiana Jones) who met his tragic end outside a Hollywood nightclub in 1993.
12. What was the title of Mark Twain’s 1883autobiographical work, the first part of which recalled his experience as a riverboat pilot?
13. And finally, what is the three-word phrase that’s a slang term for being sent to prison, specifically to Sing Sing, a few miles north of New York City?
Answers
1. Julius Caesar
2. Deliverance3. Ezra Pound
4. Johann Strauss
5. Lorelei
6. Riparian
7. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
8. Langston Hughes
9. Hippopotamus
10. Of Time and the River
11. River Phoenix
12. Life on the Mississippi
13. “up the river”
Next topic clue:
Fill in the missing word in the song by The Standells about the Charles River, often played as part of victory celebrations at Fenway Park: “I love that dirty _____(what?)”
LitNutters are cordially invited to send me, via PM, questions and answers on this topic for the next quiz.
Sources:
Dictionaries, The Video Hound’s Golden Retriever, The Reader’s Encyclopedia, and Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. (Publishing info previously noted.)
If you can't sea Auntie every night, you can't sea Auntie at all
Previous quiz topic clue: sea
Since seventy-five percent of the earth’s surface is covered with water, mostly by saltwater oceans, it is no wonder that the sea has fascinated mankind for eons. Although we are landlubbers,we're also sea-lovers, for the great deep never fails to stir the soul, be it through the romance of adventurous voyages or the romance of. . .well, romance. Concerning the former, in ancient times the sea was the only venue for exploration of lands waiting for discovery and naval battles to be fought. As for the latter, personal ads for the lovelorn contain so many wistful desires for “moonlit walks on the beach” that the reader almost believes that if she shook the newspaper, grains of sand would fall out. But soon the waves of reality sweep in, as the experts warn that someday the beach will become a geological fossil, if global warming and constant erosion have their way, that is, if the real estate agents for the rich haven't already swallowed up the entire world’s wealth of “waterfront property.”
Oh well, tide and time wait for no one, so let’s launch the quiz.
Now Sea Here
1. The first question was sent in by LitNutter DickZ:
Name the British Poet Laureate who penned these words:
"I must down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by…"
2. We find the symbol of the albatross as a bird boding bad luck for ships in which poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge?
3. Who was the Russian author who wrote the 1896 play, The Sea Gull?
4. What’s the title of the T.S. Eliot poem containing the lines: “I should have been a pair of ragged claws/Scuttling across the floors of silent seas”?
5. Posthumously published in 1924, a novella by Herman Melville depicts an innocent young seaman who is so innocent that his last words invoke a blessing upon the Captain who ordered his execution. What is the title of this short but transcendent study of good and evil?
6. The twentieth of this month will mark the fortieth anniversary of the first manned lunar landing, during which the astronauts proclaimed “We came in peace for all mankind.” What is the aptly-named area of the moon’s surface where the two space astronauts took those historic (and actual) steps?
7. Name one of the three plays by Shakespeare in which a sea voyage and/or a shipwreck is an integral plot point.
8. What is the title of one of Virginia Woolf’s novels which is also the historical military term for the women’s section of the U.S. Naval Reserves?
9. What is the anonymous Old English poem from the 8th century about the joys and sorrows of a mariner’s life as well as a comparison between this world and the next?
10. Based on Herman Wouk’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, what was the title of the acclaimed 1954 movie in which Humphrey Bogart portrays the obsessive-compulsive Captain Queeg.
11. Now one more movie title, please: Starring Al Pacino and Ellen Barkin, what is the steamy 1989 thriller whose title was derived from an R&B hit single by Phil Phillips?
12. The author of the 1904 novel, The Sea Wolf, was (for a time, anyway) the highest paid and most widely read writer in the United States. Who was he?
13. And finally, who was the spirited thoroughbred (1933-1947) whose winning ways lifted spirits up from the depths of the Great Depression?
Answers:
1. John Masefield
2. “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
3. Anton Chekov
4. “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”
5. Billy Budd, Foretopman
6. The Sea of Tranquillity (Mare tranquillitatis)
7. The Tempest, Twelfth Night, or The Merchant of Venice
8. The Waves (WAVES)
9. “The Seafarer”
10. The Caine Mutiny
11. The Sea of Love
12. Jack London
13. Seabiscuit
Clue for the next quiz:
Whether we like it or not, at some point in our lives, many of us might have a need for a member of the profession described by the missing word in this definition from Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable:
“A seaman who is constantly arguing about his rights . . .”[or]”nautical slang for a shark” is a sea ______(what?)”
sources: the usual suspects, previously noted.