Thursday, February 28, 2013

Control

Control
Carlomagno
Nicaragua
Alice
Aguacate
Darío 
Nickel
Níquel
NINI
Ham
Sopa Negra 
Gest
Quest
Prov.14:9
"Fools make a mock at sin: but among the righteous there is favour." 


Sopa Negra

 Máscaras en la celebración del Güegüense (NICARA- güense ?)


“In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o’clock in the morning.” ---F. Scott Fitzgerald

“His mouth was wide and mobile, the mouth of an actor or preacher”---Joyce Cary



“Nicoiano spoke of another lord named Nicaragua who lived about 150 miles  to the west and Gil González continued there, persuading him to become a Christian, along with 9,000 of his people. Nicaragua gave the Spaniards 15,000 pesos in the form of gold necklaces. Gil González presented him in return with a silk jacket, a linen shirt and a red hat.

  A long  conversation followed during which Nicaragua said that the total destruction of the human race would soon come, brought on by man’s many crimes and unnatural lusts. This lord aske all kinds of interesting questions of Gil González de Ávila which the conquistador must have found surprising: what was the cause of heat and cold? Were dancing and drinking acceptable? Did men have souls? Gil González  delivered a good sermon describing the benefits of Christianity and the evils of human sacrifice. He was mader aware that these Indians were terrified of the Spaniards’ beards.”---Hugh Thomas : THE AGE OF GOLD: The Spanish Empire of Charles V .Ch.X Pedrarias, Panama, and Peru; Guzmán in New Spain p.122
Chess:  "Gest" "Quest" “Control”  “Carlomagno” “Nicaragua” “Alice” “Aguacate”  “Darío”  “Salisbury Plain” “nickel” "Ham" "Sopa Negra" "Stonehenge": a prehistoric ceremonial ruin on the Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, England, constructed at its stage in the megalithic period, 1900-1700 B.C., of circular formations of huge upright stone slabs and lintels.           “Stony Point”  “Cleveland”    Saxo Grammaticus: Danish historian of  the 13th century; transmiter of the Hamlet legend.   “Coraza” “Potemkin” “NINI”
 ham    jamón

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Maldives

Void
Empty
Over
Sur
Azulado
Azure
Supra
Super
Clean
Maldives
Luke 12:1
"In the mean time, when there were gathered together an innumerable multitude of people, insomuch that they trode one upon another, he began to say unto his disciples first of all, Beware ye of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy. "

Uninhabited Island, Maldives


Chess: "Void" "Empty" "Over" "Sur" " "Azure""Azulado" "Blue" "Clean" "Maldives""Supra" "Super"

‘Empire of Blue Water’



Dioscuri

Dioscuri
Gemini
Castor and Pollux
Phoenix
Castañas
Luke 12.6
"Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of them is forgotten before God?"


One of the two dioscuri (Gemini twins - or Castor and Pollux) statues on the Capitoline Hill in Rome. By Michelangelo

Statue of the Dioscuri in Rome, the statue honours the twin horsemen ( the Dioscuri - Castor and Pollux ), the Dioscuri had helped Rome to victory in a battle against the Latins at Lake Regillus
Chess: Dioscuri" "Gemini" "Castor and Pollux" "Phoenix" "Castañas"

San Antonio

San Antonio
12:2 : LB
Loan
Lobster
Rochester
Lobby
Lob
Lobe
Lobster
Llama
Luke 12:2
 "For there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; neither hid, that shall not be known."




Chess:  "San Antonio"  "LB"" "Loan" "Lobster" "Rochester" "Lobby" "Lob" "Lobe " "Lobster" "Llama"

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Intuition

Intuition
Nido
Nada
Castro
Album
Oxford
Typical Ox-cart
Bianca
Albion
Johnny Weissmüller
Prov.14:4
 "Where no oxen are, the crib is clean: but much increase is by the strength of the ox." 
Matt.24:28

"For wheresoever the carcass is, there will the eagles be gathered together. Lk. 17.37 "



Job 39.9
 Will the unicorn be willing to serve thee,


or abide by thy crib?


Palenque, Chiapas

a security…nothing but the beasts of the forests could invade”---James Fenimore Cooper


Chess: “intuition” :  a security…nothing but the beasts of the forests could invade”---James Fenimore Cooper
“Gil González reported that, in this part of Central America (Nicoya?), all the carpenters’tools were made of gold, but he too must have been mistaken, confusing copper for gold. They passed through land where the rivers were alluvial and wound up their journey at a place which they named San Vicente at the foot of the volcano Chichontepec in the valley of Joboa. A little farther on, Gil González came upon a local Maya lord named Nicoiano, whom he persuaded to accept baptism and who, in consequence, gave him six gold figures of gods, each over a foot high.”--- Hugh Thomas: The Age of Gold. Ch.10 Pedrarias, Panama, and Peru; Guzmán in New Spain p.122
“Caballito Nicoyano”  “Bianca” “Nadar” “Nido” “Johnny Weissmüller”  “Ox-cart” “carreta típica” “Hostages” “Castro” : “About 1917 the shipworm invaded the harbor of San Francisco” –Rachel Carson
album        Albion:an ancient and poetical name for Great Britain, probably from the white (Lat. albus) cliffs that face Gaul, but possibly from Celtic alp.         albumen : egg white    Cornwall   corner : “Para nosotros no era todavía Francisco Real, pero sí un tipo alto, fornido, trajeado enteramente de negro, y una chalina de un color como bayo, echada sobre el hombro. La cara recuerdo que era aindiada, esquinada.” JLB: Hombre de la esquina rosada.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Gulf of Fonseca

Gulf of Fonseca
Martha Washington
Achilles
Armstrong 
Steenkamp
Prov.14:1
"Every wise woman buildeth her house: but the foolish plucketh it down with her hands."


Armstrong

 It is thought that Reeva Steenkamp had been staying with Oscar Pistorious in his South African home for several days

Chess: "Gulf of Fonseca" "Martha Washington" "Achilles" "Armstrong" 
"He was fond of the fine arts, fond of long words, and fond of me" ---Mary McCarthy


Gulf of Fonseca

The Gulf of Fonseca (Spanish: Golfo de Fonseca), part of the Pacific Ocean, a gulf in Central America, bordering El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua.
Fonseca Bay was discovered in 1522 by Gil Gonzalez de Avila, and named by him after his patron, Archbishop Juan Fonseca, the implacable enemy of Columbus.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Mariana

"Por el firme diamante y el agua suelta"---Borges 
Creed
Father Brown
World Series
Substantial 
Mariana
Mariana Trench
Mark 9:42
 "And whoever shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it is better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he were cast into the sea." Mk. 9.42-48 
Luke  17:2 
"It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones." Lk. 17.1, 2
Matt.18:6
"But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea."Mt. 18.6-7, 21-22

 Mariana
"Por el firme diamante y el agua suelta"---Borges

Swing Swing Swing 

Chess: "Mariana" "Mariana Trench" "Creed" "FatherBrown" "World Series" "Substantial"  "Mariana" "Mariana Trench"

Aureliana, designa una praxis o dimensión relacionada con "Aurelia" . Capisce? Ahora bien, es "aureliana" equivalente a "mariana"? Es "mariana" una praxis relacionada con "María" o con "Mario"?

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Rhodes

Panama Canal
Red
Read
Rhodes
Road
Rood
Rueda
Rude
Cardinal
The Scarlet Letter
A Study in Scarlet
Lyonesse
Prov.14:18
"The simple inherit folly: but the prudent are crowned with knowledge."


El secretario de Estado del Vaticano Tarcisio Bertone, cuando concluyó el cónclave que eligió al Papa Benedicto XVI en 2005. / Alessandro Bianchi (REUTERS)



Chess: "Panama Canal" "Red" "Read" "Rhodes" "Road" "Rood" "Rueda" "Rude" "Cardinal" "The Scarlet Letter" "A Study in Scarlet" "Lyonesse

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Tiro

tiro
groundhog
Creed
back-hoe
tractor 
nota
La Paz
Peoria
Cavanagh
Palabra
Trip Advisor
Silver Phoenix
Bocas del Toro
Prov.14:15
"The simple believeth every word: but the prudent [man] looketh well to his going."







Chess: "Tiro" "Groundhog" "back-hoe" "tractor" "Creed" "La Paz" "Peoria" "Cavanagh" "Bocas del Toro" "Silver Phoenix" "Trip Advisor" "Palabra"


tiro s. m.
1   Disparo hecho con un arma de fuego.
— de gracia Tiro que se da a una persona o animal ya herido de gravedad para que muera rápidamente.
2   Ruido que produce este disparo: se oyeron tiros.
3   Señal o herida que produce este disparo: tiene un tiro en la pierna.
4   Conjunto de deportes que consisten en derribar un blanco o acertar en él con armas de fuego o arcos y flechas.
— al blanco Deporte que consiste en disparar a un blanco con un arma.
— al plato Deporte que consiste en disparar con una escopeta a un plato que es lanzado con fuerza hacia arriba.
— de pichón Deporte que consiste en disparar a un pichón al vuelo: en el tiro de pichón cortan las plumas de la cola a la paloma para que mantenga un vuelo más recto y sea más fácil acertar.
5   Conjunto de caballos o de otros animales que tiran de un carruaje.
6   Distancia que va desde el lugar de unión de las piernas hasta la cintura de un pantalón: pantalones cortos de tiro.
— libre Lanzamiento de la pelota directamente a la canasta que se hace desde un punto determinado como castigo a una falta del equipo contrario en el juego del baloncesto.
7   Lanzamiento de la pelota a la meta o a la canasta del equipo contrario, en fútbol, baloncesto y otros deportes: el tiro salió rozando el larguero.
8   Corriente de aire con la que se absorbe el humo en una chimenea o un horno.
9  jerga Inhalación de una dosis de droga, generalmente cocaína.

a tiro Al alcance de una persona: te dio porque te pusiste a tiro.
a un tiro de piedra Muy cerca: la cabaña está a un tiro de piedra del lago.
como un tiro fam. Muy mal o fatal: el pastel me sentó como un tiro; tu amigo me cayó como un tiro.
de tiros largos Vestido elegantemente o muy arreglado.
ir los tiros por ahí Se utiliza para indicar que una opinión, hipótesis o enfoque se dirige hacia el lugar determinado: no es exacto pero los tiros van por ahí.
ni a tiros fam. De ninguna manera: no se moverá de allí ni a tiros.
salir el tiro por la culata fam. Producirse un resultado negativo, contrario al esperado: pensaba ganar y le salió el tiro por la culata.


el Caso de la Nueva España bajoHernán Cortés


Con el fin de independizarse militarmente de su enemigo Diego Velázquez, que puso trampas al disidente (por ejemplo al no venderle yeguas, con la consecuencia de que Cortés tenía que comprar más caros todos los caballos (77)), buscó pronto materiales con un valor estratégicas. Encontró azufre para fabricar pólvora en el Popocatépetl, que fue una gran suerte, salitre, un poco estaño y cobre para cañones y hierro en varios lugares (78). Con razón, Cortés estaba orgulloso de sus importantes progresos, permitiéndose la tontería de regalar al emperador „un tiro que se llama Fénix de plata que pesó veinte e dos quintales e medio cuando se metió en la fundación“ (79), hecho en México y con la inscripción: AQUESTA NACIÓ SIN PAR / YO EN SERVICIOS SIN SEGUNDO / VOS SIN IGUAL EN EL MUNDO. Ésto no iba a ayudar en apaciguar las envidias que proliferaban en la Corte ... 

Un año después, cuando el dominio español en el país conquistado parecía asegurado, Cortés fue también destituido como capitán general. (147) Después de su historial personal como rebelde contra Velázquez no pudo exigir - sólo pedir.
El marqués por su parte, como vimos en el incidente con el Fénix tenía la opinión que ningún favor sería demasiado grande para su persona. Decepcionado, siempre se mantuvo leal al emperador y sus representantes en la Nueva España, aunque a veces resultó duro. Si realmente quería crear un propio estado feudal bajo el dominio del rey de España en ultramar,(148) Cortés fracasó (con la excepción de su valle) como todos los conquistadores que vinieron antes y después. Quizás también le traicionó su carácter de hombre de acción no aceptando que su tiempo en la Nueva España ya había pasado y lanzándose a otras zonas en las que desarrollar sus actividades: el Mar del Sur y las Molukkas.  


El tiro de plata que Cortés envió al Emperador



Antecedente:
LA CONQUISTA DE MEXICO

(C) ARTEHISTORIA



Comentario
El tiro de plata que Cortés envió al Emperador

Escribió tras esto Cortés al Emperador, besando los pies de su majestad por las mercedes y favor que le había hecho, desde México el 15 de octubre del año 24. Le suplicó por los conquistadores; pidió franquezas y privilegios para las villas que él tenía pobladas, y para Tlaxcallan, Tezcuco y los otros pueblos, que le habían ayudado y servido en las guerras. Le envió setenta mil castellanos de oro con Diego de Soto, y una culebrina de plata, que valía veinticuatro mil pesos de oro; pieza hermosa, y más de ver que de valor. Pesaba mucho, pero era de la plata de Michuacan. Tenía en relieve un ave fénix, con una dedicatoria al Emperador, que decía:
"Aquesta nació sin par;
Yo en serviros sin segundo;
Vos sin igual en el mundo".
No quiero contar las cosas de pluma, pelo y algodón que envió entonces, pues las deshacía el tiro; ni las perlas, ni los tigres, ni las demás cosas buenas de aquella tierra y raras aquí en España. Mas contaré que este tiro le causó envidia y malquerencia con algunos de la corte, por causa del letrero; aunque el vulgo lo ponía por las nubes, y creo que jamás se hizo tiro de plata sino éste de Cortés. La copia él mismo se la hizo, que cuando quería no trovaba mal. Muchos probaron sus ingenios y vena de coplear, pero no acertaron. Por lo cual dijo Andrés de Tapia:
"Aqueste tiro, a mi ver,
Muchos necios ha de hacer".
Y quizá porque costó de hacer más de tres mil castellanos. Envió veinticinco mil castellanos en oro y mil quinientos cincuenta marcos de plata a Martín Cortés, su padre, para llevarle su mujer, y para que le enviase armas, artillería, hierro, naos con muchas velas, sogas, áncoras, vestidos, plantas, legumbres y cosas semejantes, para mejorar la buena tierra que conquistara; pero lo tomó todo el Rey con lo demás que vino entonces de las indias. Con este dinero que Cortés envió al Emperador, quedaba la tesorería del Rey vacía y él sin blanca, por lo mucho que había gastado en los ejércitos y armadas que, como la historia os ha contado, había hecho. Llegaron al mismo tiempo a México muchos criados y oficiales del Rey, y de Ciudad Real, Alonso de Estrada, por tesorero; Gonzalo de Salazar, de Granada, por factor; Rodrigo de Albornoz, de Paradinas, por contador, y Peralmíndez Cherino, por veedor; que fueron los primeros de la Nueva España, y aun muchos conquistadores que pretendían aquellos cargos, se agraviaron, quejándose de Cortés. Entraron en cuentas con Julián de Alderete y con los otros que Cortés y el cabildo tenían puestos para cobrar y tener el quinto, rentas y hacienda del Rey, y no les pasaban ciertas partidas que habían dado a Cortés, que serían sesenta mil castellanos; mas, como él demostró haberlos gastado en servicio del Emperador, y pedía más de otros cincuenta mil que tenía puestos de lo suyo, se puso fin a la cuenta. Todavía quedaron aquellos oficiales en la idea de que Cortés tenía grandes tesoros, tanto por lo que en España oyeran sobre ellos y porque Juan de Ribera ofreció en su nombre al Emperador doscientos mil ducados, como porque no faltaba quien les decía al oído que cada día le traían los indios escondido el tesoro de Moctezuma, y robado el del Emperador y conquistadores, con indios que secretamente lo sacaban de noche por el postigo de su casa; y así, no considerando lo que había enviado a Castilla y gastado en las guerras, escribieron a España, especialmente Rodrigo de Albornoz, que llevó cifras para avisar secretamente de lo que le pareciese, muchas cosas contra él acerca de su avaricia y tiranía; pues, como no lo conocían y venían mal informados, y hallaban allí personas que no le querían bien, porque no les daba los repartimientos, o tantos repartimientos como ellos pedían, creían cuanto oían.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Match

Match
Parapluie
Tailor
Partido
Umbrella
"Chinos con sombrilla"
Thanksgiving
turkey 
Pavas 
Prov.14:14
"The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways: and a good man shall be satisfied from himself."




 Chess:   "Match" "Parapluie" "Tailor" "Partido" "Umbrella" "Chinos con sombrilla""Thanksgiving" "turkey" "Pavas"


“He saw the phosphorescence of the Gulf weed in the water.” [Hemingway (“Tailor”)]  

Friday, February 8, 2013

Georges Braque

Georges Braque
The Compleat Angler
Tottenham
Wall
Mark 7:11
"But ye say, If a man shall say to his father or mother, It is Corban, that is to say, a gift, by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me; he shall be free." 


Violin and Candlestick, George Braque 1910. Braque exhibited with the Fauvists before establishing himself as a Cubist in the early 1900s


Chess: "Georges Braque" "The Compleat Angler" "Tottenham" "Wall"

John Merwin, Angler With Story Angles, Dies at 66

 

The Lake 

Article by John Merwin. Uploaded on February 22, 2013





Catch Bass and Bluegills—Then Enjoy a Warm Meal and Sip Cold Drinks Out On The Porch
As we walk toward the inn, I can hear the occasional creaking of rocking chairs from the long front porch. It’s an old-fashioned kind of place; a horseshoe pit out back and a rolling lawn leading to boat docks out front, where I can see the shimmer of a northern bass lake through an ancient stand of white pines.
First things first. Right after we check in, I mosey into the dining room. Breakfast comes out at 6 a.m., and dinner service stops at 10 p.m., which means we can fish early and late, the best times for summer bass, without missing a meal. Perfect.
My wife hauls our luggage to a room down the hall while I launch our skiff at the boat ramp. By the time I get the boat tied to the dock and head back inside, she is already at the bar with a couple of cold longnecks. Like I said, first things first.

Early Risers

By 6 a.m. we’ve grabbed some coffees to go from the dining room. Time to fish. We putt-putt our way across the lake to a shallow, weedy cove, expecting to find some surface-feeding bass before the sun gets high.
I cut the motor and the boat drifts quietly near some reeds and large, under-water boulders. I hand my wife a medium-weight spinning outfit rigged with fresh 8-pound mono. She ties on a floating Heddon Tiny Torpedo and starts casting.
That’s right, I say. Along the edge of the reeds. Make it look like a little frog. Slow down a little and wait longer between twitches. Give the bass time to take a look. She turns to roll her eyes at me. A fish rolls on the plug when she’s not looking. Her strike is too late, and the lure floats amid fading ripples.
“I love you, too,” she says. “Now please shut up.”
So I do. She casts again and this time hooks a bass almost immediately. It’s a small fish but a fun fish. She releases the bass, then hands me the rod. “Your turn, Mister Smart Guy,” she says, smiling.
I make good on the deal after a couple of casts, landing another small bass. We trade the rod back and forth for the next couple of hours, picking up a dozen small largemouths along 200 yards of shoreline. By 9 a.m., the action slows as the morning sun intensifies, telling me most of the fish have moved deeper. Time for breakfast.
Afternoon Blues
Stuffed from waffles and bacon, we’re seated in the rocking chairs. “What’s next?” she asks. I explain that we could fish plastic worms deep along the outside edges of weedlines, where at least some bass have moved after the early bite. Or we could fish for bluegills, which might be a good bet considering that it’s within a couple of days of a full moon. The moon makes bluegills romantic, I say, so they start nesting and are easy to find. Sort of like me. She rolls her eyes again and opts for bluegills.
A low section of shoreline where steep hills aren’t plunging into the water promises an expanse of shallows. That’s spawning water in bluegill talk, so that’s where we go. Sure enough, there are saucer-shape bluegill beds along the bottom in water 2 to 3 feet deep that we can easily see, some with fish on them. Time for flyfishing practice.
I give her a 4-weight fly rod with a floating line and a 71⁄2-foot 4X leader—the short length makes for easy turnover in casting. She fastens on a small sponge-rubber spider with wiggly legs.
This time I know better than to advise. She casts fairly well and drops the bug next to one of the visible beds. A bluegill swims up and sucks in the spider, making a kind of kissing pop. After a dozen or so repeats, this starts to get old. Let’s catch some bigger ones, I say, and move the boat farther offshore, where the water’s about 6 feet deep. I add 3 feet of 5X fluorocarbon tippet to her leader, tie on a size 12 Tellico nymph made with wiggly hackle, and place one small split shot about a foot above the fly.
Cast out and let it sink for a while, I say, then retrieve in slow little twitches. And pardon the advice. Midway through her first retrieve the rod tip is yanked underwater. The rod bends deeper this time, and the fish takes longer to work to the surface. It’s a monster bluegill—all of 12 inches—and I land it with a net. I think of having it mounted. Then I think of eating it. Meanwhile, she lets it go. Oh, well.
By now it’s midafternoon, and the discussion topic is whether to have cocktails before or after this evening’s bass fishing.
“Both,” she says. Soon we’re back in the porch rockers, nursing frozen margaritas while I think about what a rough life this is.
Night Bites
The setting sun is kissing the treetops by the time we reach the outside edge of another weeded cove. We’ll be fishing until full darkness, which even in June’s long daylight means we can still make last call in the dining room.
I hand her a spinning outfit with 14-pound line this time because I’m hopeful of a bigger bass in the magic hour of near darkness. A 3⁄8-ounce, frog-pattern Jitterbug goes on the line. The lure’s noisy gurgling surface crawl should help bass find it in the half-light. I point out narrow lanes of open water between large lily-pad beds. Cast your lure right down those lanes, I say, so you can retrieve the plug close to fish cover without snagging. And remember that you’re a salesman, trying to convince a bass that your lure is good to eat. She doesn’t roll her eyes. Must be she’s getting serious.
So she casts and casts and casts. Don’t let your attention wander, I warn. Keep concentrating. By now I can just make out the glow of a rising moon behind the hilltops. Ka-chunk. I whip my head around to see my wife hard into a heavy fish. There’s lots of thrashing around until I can finally grab her line and lip the bass. Five pounds is my guess, as I hand her the fish to unhook and release. Not a giant but pretty darn good. We quit while we’re ahead and make the dining room with 10 minutes to spare.
Charcoal-grilled steaks arrive, and she raises a glass of Cabernet as a toast. “Here’s to weekends,” she says. Then adds with an evil grin, “And I think my fish was the biggest.”

The Perfect Post-Fishing Cocktail

Celebrate A Memorable Day On The Water

It even looks like the perfect summer drink. Tall, cold, and bubbly with a slice of lime, a gin and tonic is a tropical tradition dating back more than a century. British colonials in India and beyond mixed quinine with carbonated water as an antimalarial medication. Adding gin helped disguise quinine’s bitter taste. Modern tonic waters still contain quinine, but in much smaller, nonmedicinal amounts. It still works magic, though, when mixed with a proper London gin in an ice-filled glass. Then as now, a gin and tonic doesn’t actually repel mosquitoes. But after a couple you won’t mind the bites so much. —J.M.

The Great Egyptian

Atahualpa Yupanqui
Anticuchos
Memphis
Pereira 
Elvis
Mark 7:6
"He answered and said unto them, Well hath Esaias prophesied of you hypocrites, as it is written, This people honoureth me with their lips, but their heart is far from me."


Elvis Presley


 Atahualpa Yupanqui

Tortuguero
 Chess: "Atahualpa" "Yupanqui" "Anticuchos" "Pereira" "Elvis" "Tortuguero" "Macchu-Picchu" "Memphis"




Thursday, February 7, 2013

Anticuchos

Anticuchos
Electrical Engineering
75
57
OK
Mark 7:18
"And he saith unto them, Are ye so without understanding also? Do ye not perceive, that whatsoever thing from without entereth into the man, it cannot defile him;"
Matt.15:11
" Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man."
Prov.23:6-7
"Eat thou not the bread of him that hath an evil eye, neither desire thou his dainty meats: For as he thinketh in his heart, so is he: Eat and drink, saith he to thee; but his heart is not with thee."

Anticuchos peruanos



 The Secretary of Defense has delayed the deployment of USS Harry S. Truman and USS Gettysburg (CG 64). The carrier strike group will continue to conduct underway evolutions and remain ready to deploy on short notice as needed to respond where and when the nation needs them. Read more at http://t.co/QcTYJWyX








Chess:  "Anticuchos" "Electrical Engineering" "75" "57" "OK"

MacFarlane’s Geese.
The proverb is that “MacFarlane’s geese like their play better than their meat.” The wild geese of Inch-Tavoe (Loch Lomond) used to be called MacFarlane’s Geese because the MacFarlanes had a house and garden on the island. It is said that these geese never returned after the extinction of that house. One day James VI. visited the chieftain, and was highly amused by the gambols of the geese, but the one served at table was so tough that the king exclaimed, “MacFarlane’s geese like their play better than their meat.”   1