Categories
Literary Mythology

Bite the Dust

Homer Iliad: ‘May his fellow warriors fall round him to the earth and bite the dust.’

Categories
Literary

Bed of Roses

The Passionate Shepherd to His Love. ‘Come live with me and be my love….And I will make thee beds of roses.’

Categories
Literary Shakespeare

Come What May

Shakespeare (1606) –  Macbeth

‘Come what come may, time and the hour runs through the roughest day.’

Categories
Literary

Clean Slate

Edmond Yates (1868) – The Rock Ahead.

‘He had passed the wet sponge over the slate containing any records of his early life.’

Categories
Literary

Catch-22

“Catch-22” originated as the title of a 1961 novel by Joseph Heller. The original catch-22 in the novel was as follows: a combat pilot was crazy by definition (he would have to be crazy to fly combat missions) and since army regulations stipulated that insanity was justification for grounding, a pilot could avoid flight duty by simply asking, but if he asked, he was demonstrating his sanity (anyone who wanted to get out of combat must be sane) and had to keep flying. The label catch-22 suggested that 21 equally pernicious catches preceded it, but it was catch-22 that caught our attention and entered the language as the label for any irrational, circular and impossible situation.