Monday, January the 3rd, 2005
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“Cornelius Gemma, lib. 2. de nat. mirac. c. 4. relates of a young maid, called Katherine Gualter, a cooper's daughter, an. 1571. that had such strange passions and convulsions, three men could not sometimes hold her; she purged a live eel, which he saw, a foot and a half long, and touched it himself; but the eel afterwards vanished; she vomited some twenty-four pounds of fulsome stuff of all colours, twice a day for fourteen days; and after that she voided great balls of hair, pieces of wood, pigeon's dung, parchment, goose dung, coals; and after them two pounds of pure blood, and then again coals and stones, on which some had inscriptions bigger than a walnut, some of them pieces of glass, brass, &c. besides paroxysms of laughing, weeping and ecstasies, &c. Et hoc (inquit) cum horore vidi, this I saw with horror.” — Robert Burton, The Anatomy Of Melancholy…
… the greatest book in the English language, from which I could quote endlessly, did I not have a one-quotation-per-writer policy for the Hooting Yard quote of the day. Arbitrary and senseless, I know, but therein lies part of this site's charm.
Hooting Yard on the Air, January the 5th, 2005 : “Me and My Thorn-hog” (starts around 23:11)