Posts archive for: 4 November, 2006
  • Spell Check.

    I wish I'd written this - but I didn't.

    Spell Check

    Eye halve a spelling checker
    It came with my pea sea
    It plainly marks four my revue
    Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.
    Eye strike a key and type a word
    And weight four it two say
    Weather eye am wrong oar write
    It shows me strait a weigh.
    As soon as a mist ache is maid
    It nose bee fore two long
    And eye can put the error rite
    It's rare lea ever wrong.
    Eye Have run this poem threw it
    I am shore your pleased two no
    Its letter perfect awl the weigh
    My checker tolled me sew.

  • Tombstone Humour

    These epitaphs are reported to be from actual tombstones...

    On the grave of Ezekial Aikle in East Dalhousie Cemetery, Nova Scotia:
    Here lies
    Ezekial Aikle
    Age 102
    The Good
    Die Young.

    In a London, England cemetery:
    Ann Mann
    Here lies Ann Mann,
    Who lived an old maid
    But died an old Mann.
    Dec. 8, 1767

    In a Ribbesford, England, cemetery:
    Anna Wallace
    The children of Israel wanted bread
    And the Lord sent them manna,
    Old clerk Wallace wanted a wife,
    And the Devil sent him Anna.

    Playing with names in a Ruidoso, New Mexico, cemetery:
    Here lies
    Johnny Yeast
    Pardon me
    For not rising.

    Memory of an accident in a Uniontown, Pennsylvania cemetery:
    Here lies the body
    of Jonathan Blake
    Stepped on the gas
    Instead of the brake.

    In a Silver City, Nevada, cemetery:
    Here lays Butch,
    We planted him raw.
    He was quick on the trigger,
    But slow on the draw.

    A widow wrote this epitaph in a Vermont cemetery:
    Sacred to the memory of
    my husband John Barnes
    who died January 3, 1803
    His comely young widow, aged 23, has
    many qualifications of a good wife, and
    yearns to be comforted.

    A lawyer's epitaph in England:
    Sir John Strange
    Here lies an honest lawyer,
    And that is Strange.

    Someone determined to be anonymous in Stowe, Vermont:
    I was somebody.
    Who, is no business
    Of yours.

    Lester Moore was a Wells, Fargo Co. station agent for Naco, Arizona in the cowboy days of the 1880's. He's buried in the Boot Hill Cemetery in Tombstone, Arizona:
    Here lies Lester Moore
    Four slugs from a .44
    No Les No More.

    In a Georgia cemetery:
    "I told you I was sick!"

    John Penny's epitaph in the Wimborne, England, cemetery:
    Reader if cash thou art
    In want of any
    Dig 4 feet deep
    And thou wilt find a Penny.

    On Margaret Daniels grave at Hollywood Cemetery Richmond, Virginia:
    She always said her feet were killing her
    but nobody believed her.

    In a cemetery in Hartscombe, England:
    On the 22nd of June
    - Jonathan Fiddle -
    Went out of tune.

    Anna Hopewell's grave in Enosburg Falls, Vermont has an epitaph that sounds like something from a Three Stooges movie:
    Here lies the body of our Anna
    Done to death by a banana
    It wasn't the fruit that laid her low
    But the skin of the thing that made her go.

    More fun with names with Owen Moore in Battersea, London, England:
    Gone away
    Owin' more
    Than he could pay.

    Someone in Winslow, Maine didn't like Mr. Wood:
    In Memory of Beza Wood
    Departed this life
    Nov. 2, 1837
    Aged 45 yrs.
    Here lies one Wood
    Enclosed in wood
    One Wood
    Within another.
    The outer wood
    Is very good:
    We cannot praise
    The other.

    On a grave from the 1880's in Nantucket, Massachusetts:
    Under the sod and under the trees
    Lies the body of Jonathan Pease.
    He is not here, there's only the pod:
    Pease shelled out and went to God.

    Oops! Harry Edsel Smith of Albany, New York:
    Born 1903--Died 1942
    Looked up the elevator shaft to see if
    the car was on the way down. It was.

    In a Thurmont, Maryland, cemetery:
    Here lies an Atheist
    All dressed up
    And no place to go.

  • Your Home Town.

    Here's an interesting website I've found; it's called Weather Bonk. When you type in the name of anywhere in the world it displays the current weather conditions, a seven day forecast and the yearly climate statistics. It also features a fully interactive Google map, traffic reports and live local webcam feeds.

    Here's the link.

    Naturally I've set the default to Doncaster.

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