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Baltimore's sage, H. L. Mencken, coined a new term for strip-tease artistes: ecdysiasts-from Greek ekdysis; a getting out; ecdysis (in zoology): the act of molting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Apr. 29, 1940 | 4/29/1940 | See Source »

Little Harry Mencken, "a larva of the comfortable and complacent bourgeoisie," was the eldest son of August of Aug. Mencken & Bro., cigar makers. August's brother Henry, called Hen, lived next door, and in summers they all took a double house in the country. Little Harry went to F. Knapp's Institute, whose headmaster still wore "the classical uniform of a German schoolmaster-a long-tailed coat of black alpaca, a boiled shirt with somewhat fringy cuffs, and a white lawn necktie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Monologue on a Bugle | 1/29/1940 | See Source »

...Mencken was eight when he discovered Huckleberry Finn: the discovery, "probably the most stupendous event of my whole life," set him reading Life Among the Mormons, One Thousand Proofs That the Earth Is Not a Globe, everything available in English. No less important to his future was his father's gift for Christmas 1888: a printing press...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Monologue on a Bugle | 1/29/1940 | See Source »

...mother, Mencken tells little. Of Baltimore food (hardshell crabs with "snow-white meat almost as firm as soap"), of Baltimore sewage (in summer it masked the city with the odor of "a billion polecats"), of his own petty larcenies and light vices, of the alley Negroes (he calls them coons, Aframericans, blackamoors), of policemen, of livery stables, of trips to Washington with his father, he tells a great deal, most of it as solid as it is entertaining. He writes a beautiful chapter on his father as a businessman, drinker and practical joker, makes him, quietly, a great comic character...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Monologue on a Bugle | 1/29/1940 | See Source »

...serious regret of Mencken's life is that he was not well taught in music. "Lady music teachers . . . wrecked my technic and debauched my taste." He still likes to pound the piano but, "born with an intense distaste for vocal music ... to this day think of even the most gifted Wagnerian soprano as no more than a blimp fitted with a calliope." As for Karl Czerny, standard nightmare of every child's piano lessons: "So late as 1930, being in Vienna, I visited and desecrated his grave...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Monologue on a Bugle | 1/29/1940 | See Source »

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