The Untieable Knot
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"There's no going back now!" -- Dr. Zachary Smith to Will Robinson, circa 1965 | "There's no going back now!" -- Dr. Zachary Smith to Will Robinson, circa 1965 | ||
- | "Let no man rent asunder what [[God]] has declared one." -- from Einstein's impassioned plea to the president against the Manhattan Project | + | "Let no man rend asunder what [[God]] has declared one." -- from Einstein's impassioned plea to the president against the Manhattan Project |
"The [[Boneyards|Boneyard]] and the [[Blind Man]] were long believed untieable. [[Albert Kook|Kook]] proved 'em wrong." -- William Flintrock, interview with ''Ebony'' magazine, 1975. | "The [[Boneyards|Boneyard]] and the [[Blind Man]] were long believed untieable. [[Albert Kook|Kook]] proved 'em wrong." -- William Flintrock, interview with ''Ebony'' magazine, 1975. |
Revision as of 22:20, 1 May 2006
untieable knot n 1. A Catholic marriage. 2. A "one-way" knot, that, once fixed, cannot be released. 3. The product or result of an irreversible decision, esp. one concerning a thorny issue. 4. A used noose. 5. The original slogan for superglue, apparently adapted from portions of Gnomic entrance ritual. 6. An un-makable configuration -- quite simply, a knot that cannot be tied.
Usage"Vasectomy, my dear: there will be no more..." -- Nevid Kessar's reply to churlish demands for a 15th child "John P. Merriweather: frozen dead with Gnomic robes laced about the belly..." -- nonexistent obituary "Knots come in two sizes -- figurable and the non-figurable. Such is the official language." - dismissive graffito discovered in the the bathroom, ruthlessly carved, Upender's Squat, 1979, reveried by Elisa Breton. "There's no going back now!" -- Dr. Zachary Smith to Will Robinson, circa 1965 "Let no man rend asunder what God has declared one." -- from Einstein's impassioned plea to the president against the Manhattan Project "The Boneyard and the Blind Man were long believed untieable. Kook proved 'em wrong." -- William Flintrock, interview with Ebony magazine, 1975. See Also |
DesiderataAlbert Kook's last words were mumbled, tongue tied.
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