------- I lay my failure directly at the door of Dr Wilfred Ponsonby who, at the Meeting of the American Scientific Society in Baltimore in 1929, made the remark, "The old boy (Dr Millmoss) never dug of half as many specimens as he has dreamed up."
**********************************************************************************8
=========These models were all destroyed in fire in 1930. "All that I have to show for them ", the good Doctor (Millmoss) once told a friend, "is two divorces".
************************************************************************************
==========The creature's eye was an integral part of its shell, a mistake made by Mother Nature, and not, as has been claimed by Ponsonby, "a bit of Millmoss butchery-botchery". The Mound Dweller is of interest today, even to me, principally because it was my friend’s first reconstruction, and led to his divorce from Alma Albrecht Millmoss.
***********************************************************************************
===========Dr Millmoss estimated that the Thake had inhabited the prairies of
*********************************************************************************
============Like so many of Dr Millmoss’s restorations, the Queech was made the object of a particularly unfriendly and uncalled-for remark by Dr Ponsonby. At a dinner of the New York Society of Zoologists, held at the old Waldorf-Astoria some fifteen years ago, Ponsonby observed, "There is no doubt in my mind that this pussy cat belongs to the Great Plasticine Age."
***********************************************************************************
=============The final plate (Plate VIII) was one of the last things that Wesley Millmoss did, more for relaxation, I think, than in the interests of science. It shows his idea, admittedly a little fanciful, of the Middle-Western Man and Woman, three and half million years before the dawn of history. When I asked him if it was his conviction that Man had got up off all fours before Woman did, he gave me a pale, grave look and said simply, "He had to. He needed the head start."
************************************************************************************
Even in death, Dr Wesley Millmoss did not escape the sharp and envious tongue of Dr Wilfred Ponsonby. Commenting upon the untimely passing of my great employer and friend, the New York Times observed that explorers in
======================================================
No comments:
Post a Comment