Wednesday, 10 August 2022

Cat

 
 
  


 

 


Lister clutched the bazookoid - the heavy portable rockblasting mining laser - to his chest, and checked again that the pack on his back was registering 'Full Charge'.

 

Light flitted through the wire mesh of the rickety lift as it clumsily juddered its way down into the bowels of the ship.

 

Three miles of lift shaft. Over five hundred floors, most of them stretching the six-mile length of the ship.

 

These were the cargo decks, where all the supplies were stored.

 

The tiny, exposed cage shuddered and rocked slowly past floor after floor.

 

Down.

 

Perhaps twenty floors of food, vacuum-sealed, tin mountains, stretching out beyond vision.

 

Down.

 

Four floors of wood - a million chopped trees stacked in silent pyramids.

 

Down.

 

Floors of mining equipment.

 

Down.

 

Floors of raw silicates, mined from Ganymede.

 

Down.

 

Floors of water, stored and still in enormous glass tanks.

 

And down.

 

And the only sound was the metallic squealing of the lift cable as it plunged them deeper and deeper into the gloomy abyss.

 

'I don't know why I'm scared. I'm a hologram. Whatever it is, it can't do anything to me.'

 

'Thanks. That makes me feel really secure.'

 

The gloom enveloped them. The light on Lister's mining helmet cut only twenty feet into the darkness. Lister flipped down the helmet's night-visor and switched the beam to infra red.

 

Down.

 

Then, something strange. These floors were empty. Hundreds of cubic miles of supplies were missing! Food, metal, wood, water - missing.

 

'It's gone!'

 

'What has?' Rimmer squinted blindly into the darkness.

 

'Everything.'

 

'What d'you mean, everything?'

 

'All the supplies The last ten floors - they were all empty.'

 

'I'm so glad I'm already dead. I'm so, so glad.'

 

'You want to shut the smeg up?'

 

Down.

 

D

 

O

 

W

 

N

 

In the bottom right hand corner of Lister's visor a small green cross began to flicker.

 

'Oh, smeg. There is something here.'

 

'Where?'

 

The cross crept up the visor. Lister wanted to say: 'The next floor,' but he couldn't. He couldn't speak.

 

The lift coughed to a stop. The whine of the motor faded to nothing.

 

There it was.

 

Stretching before them, six miles in length, half-lit and desolate.

 

A huge, impossible city.

 

A city!

 

The lift doors folded open - cher-chunk! - and they stepped out onto the rough cobbled street.

 

Crudely fashioned igloo-shaped dwellings lined the roadway; hummocks of carved wood, without doorways. Each had only a slit, perhaps a yard wide and less than a foot high, cut six feet from the ground.

 

Lister checked the charge on the bazookoid back pack, and they both started cautiously down the street. Before them was a crossroads. The igloo hummocks stretched out in every direction. The flashing cross in Lister's visor throbbed more insistently and indicated they should turn right.

 

'What is this place?'

 

Lister slung the bazookoid over his shoulder and scrambled up one of the hummocks. He poked his head through a slit and peered into the dim interior.

 

'Some kind of house. But it's tiny just enough room for two people to crouch in and peer out of the gash at the top. Whatever lived here really liked confined spaces.' Built into a tiny recess in the wall was a small bookcase containing six books. Lister reached in and managed to grab three of them. He dropped down from the hummock.

 

Rimmer peered over his shoulder as he opened each book in turn. Every single page in every book was blank. Lister slipped the books into his haversack, grabbed the bazookoid, re-checked the charge, and they moved off again.

 

After five minutes or so, they reached a square. Rows of benches faced a television screen attached to a video recorder. Lister ejected the disc. It bore the ship's regulation supply logo.

 

'What is it?' asked Rimmer.

 

'...The Flintstones.'

 

They turned left. More hummocks. Another square, but this time set out like a street cafe: tables with parasols; wooden chairs. And in the centre : a table, fully laid, with two gold candelabra, both lit. A meal, half-eaten, sat steaming on a plate.

 

The blip on Lister's visor was pulsing faster than ever.

 

'It's here!' Lister's finger tightened on the beam button of the bazookoid.

 

'Whatever it is, it's right here!'

 

A flash.

 

A pink blur flashed from the top of a hummock, pinning Lister to the floor, and sending the weapon skittering across the cobbles.

 

Rimmer watched, half-paralysed, as the pink neon-suited man with immaculate coiffeur sniffed Lister, looked up with a puzzled expression, sniffed him more deeply, then finally got to his feet, took out a clothes brush and smoothed out his suit.

 

'Sorry, Man,' he said, 'I thought you were food'

 

SIX

 


From the moment he discovered that the cadmium II had achieved critical mass, Holly had less than fifteen nanoseconds to act. He sealed off as much of the ship as possible - the whole cargo area, and the ship's supply bay.

 

Simultaneously, he set the drive computer to accelerate far beyond the dull green-blue disc of Neptune in the distance, and out into the abyss of unknown space. Then he read the Bible, the Koran, and other major religious works : he covered Islam, Zoroastrianism, Mazdaism, Zarathustrianism, Dharma, Brahmanism, Hinduism, Vedanta, Jainism, Buddhism, Hinayana, Mahayana, Sikhism, Shintoism, Taoism and Confucianism. Then he read all of Marx, Engels, Freud, jung and Einstein. And, to kill the remaining few nanoseconds, he skipped briefly through Joe Klumpp's Zero Gee Football - It's a Funny Old game.

 

At the end of this, Holly came to two conclusions. First, given the whole sphere of human knowledge, it was still impossible to determine the existence or not Of God. And second, Joe Klumpp should have stuck to having his hair permed.

 

***

 

In the hold, Frankenstein's four offspring began to breed. Each litter produced an average of four kittens, three times a year. At the end of the first year, the second generation of kittens started to breed too. They also produced three annual litters of three to four kittens.

 

When Frankenstein died, at the great old age of fourteen, she left behind one hundred and ninety-eight thousand, seven hundred and thirty-two cats.

 

198,732 cats, who continued to breed.

 

***

 

Still Red Dwarf accelerated.

 

Holly witnessed at first hand phenomena which had never been witnessed before.

 

He saw phenomena which had only been guessed at by theoretical physicists.

 

He saw a star form.

 

He saw another star die.

 

He saw a black hole.

 

He saw pulsars and quasars.

 

He saw twin and triplet sun systems.

 

He saw sights Copernicus would have torn out his eyes for, but all the while he couldn't stop thinking how bad that book was by Joe Klumpp.

 

***

 

The cats continued to breed.

 

***

 

Red Dwarf continued to accelerate.

 

***

 

The forty-square mile cargo hold was seething with cats.

 

A sea of cats.

 

A sea of cats, sealed from the radiation-poisoned decks above with nowhere to go.

 

Only the smartest, the biggest and the strongest survived — The Mutants.

 

The Mutants, who had rudimentary fingers instead of claws, who stood on their hind legs, and clubbed rivals to death with crudely made clubs. Who found the best breeding mates.

 

And bred.

 

Felis erectus was born

 

***

 

Red Dwarf, still accelerating, passed five stars in concentric orbits, Performing a breathtaking, mind-boggling stellar ballet.

 

Not that Holly noticed.

 

He'd been on his own now for two million years and was no longer interested in mind-boggling stellar ballets. What he was really into was Netta Muskett novels.

 

The young doctor had just told Jemma she had only three years to live, as he held her in his powerful masculine grip, his dark brooding eyes piercing her very soul. Outside, the suns danced into a perfect pentagon and span, end over end, like a gigantic Catherine wheel.

 

But Holly didn't see it. He was too busy reading Doctor, Darling.

 

***

 

Then there was a plague.

 

And the plague was hunger.

 

Less than thirty Cat tribes now survived, roaming the cargo decks on their hind legs in a desperate search for food.

 

But the food had gone.

 

The supplies were finished.

 

Weak and ailing, they prayed at the supply hold's silver mountains: huge towering acres of metal rocks which, in their pagan way, the mutant Cats believed watched over them.

 

Amid the wailing and the screeching one Cat stood up and held aloft the sacred icon. The icon which had been passed down as holy, and one day would make its use known.

 

It was a piece of V-shaped metal with a revolving handle on its head.

 

He took down a silver rock from the silver mountain, while the other Cats cowered and screamed at the blasphemy.

 

He placed the icon on the rim of the rock, and turned the handle.

 

And the handle turned.

 

And the rock opened.

 

And inside the rock was Alphabetti spaghetti in tomato sauce.

 

And in the other rocks were even more delights. Sugar-free baked beans. Chicken and mushroom Toastie Toppers. Faggots in rich meaty gravy. All sealed in perfect vacuums, preserved from the ravages of Time.

 

God had spoken.

 

And Felis sapiens was born.

 

***

 

Holly was gurning. He was pulling his pixelized face into the most bizarre and ludicrous expressions he could muster. He'd been gurning now for nearly two thousand years. It wasn't much of a hobby, but it helped pass the time.

 

He was beginning to worry that he was going computer-senile. Driven crazy by loneliness. What he needed, he decided, was a companion.

 

He would build a woman.

 

A perfectly functioning human woman, capable of independent thought and decision-making. Identical to a real woman in the minutest detail.

 

The problem was he didn't know how.

 

He didn't even know what to make the nose out of.

 

So he gave the whole scheme up as a bad idea, and started gurning again.

 

***

 

And there was a war between the Cats.

 

A bloody war that laid waste many of their number.

 

But the reason was good.

 

The cause was sensible.

 

The principle was worth fighting over.

 

It was a holy war.

 

Some of the Cats believed the one true father of Catkind was a man called Cloister, who saved Frankenstein, the Holy Mother, and was frozen in time by the evil men who sought to kill her. One day Cloister would return to lead them to Bearth, the planet where they could make their home.

 

The other Cats believed exactly the same thing, except they maintained the name of the true Father of Catkind was a man called Clister.

 

They spent the best part of two thousand years fighting over this huge, insuperable theological chasm.

 

Millions died.

 

Finally, a truce was called.

 

Commandeering the fleet of shuttles from the docking bay, half the Cats flew off in one direction, in search of Cloister and the Promised Planet, and the other half flew off in the opposite direction, in search of Clister and the Promised Planet.

 

Behind them they left the ones who were too weak to travel: the old, the lame, the sick and the dying.

 

And one by one, they died.

 

Soon only two remained: one a cripple, one an idiot.

 

They snuggled together for warmth and companionship And one day, to the cripple and the idiot, a son was born.

 

SEVEN

 


So the last human being alive, a man who had died, and a creature who'd evolved from cats, stood around the metal table that was bolted to the floor of the sleeping quarters and listened to a computer with an IQ of six thousand, who couldn't remember who'd knocked Swansea City out of the 1967 FA cup, explain what the hell was happening.

 

'So he's a Cat,' said Lister for the fourteenth time.

 

The Cat took a small portable steam iron out of his pocket and started pressing the sleeve of his jacket.

 

Outwardly, at least, he was human in appearance - there was a slight flattening of his face: his ears were a little higher on his head; and two of his gleaming upper teeth hung down longer and sharper than the others, so they peeked, whitely, over his lips whenever he grinned. Which he did a lot.

 

He didn't seem to have a trace of super-ego. He was all ego and id - monumentally self-centred and, if he'd been human, you would have described him as vain. But you couldn't apply human values to Cats - there seemed to be very little connection between the two cultures. The invention which proved the turning point in Cat history wasn't Fire or the Wheel: it was the Steam-operated Trouser Press.

 

Getting information out of the Cat wasn't easy : if you asked him too many questions, he just got bored, and went off to take one of the five or six showers he appeared to need daily.

 

He didn't have a name. He found it difficult to understand the idea. He was of the unshakeable conviction that he was the absolute centre of the entire universe, the reason for its being; and the notion that someone might not know who he was was beyond his comprehension.

 

'What about in relationships?' Lister had persisted.

 

'Re-la-tionships?' The Cat rolled the word around on his tongue. The Cats had learned English from the vast number of video discs and training films that were stored in the cargo decks, waiting for delivery to Triton. But most human concepts eluded them.

 

'Yeah, you know, between a man cat and a woman cat What do you call each other?'

 

'Hey, you.'

 

'What? In the entire relationship' you never refer to each other by name?'

 

'You know how long a Cat relationship lasts? Three minutes. First minute's fine; second minute, you feel trapped! Third minute, you've got to leave.

 

The very thought of a relationship which lasted longer than three minutes brought the Cat out in a cold sweat, and he had to go and take another hot shower.

 

And so the evening progressed.

 

When the Cat wasn't showering or snoozing' he was preening. He appeared to have secreted about his immaculate person an arsenal of combs and brushes, none of which seemed to spoil the line of his immaculate pink suit.

 

For the most part, details of the Cat's background remained obscure. He found the concept of 'parents' bewildering. He couldn't believe there was ever a time he wasn't born. When he put his mind to it, he did recall two other Cats who used to be around, but most of the time they'd avoided each other. One of them, he reckoned, had probably been his mother - because she wouldn't sleep with him.

 

In fact, she'd got quite angry at his approaches and hit him on the head with a large frying pan.

 

The other must have been his father; a deeply religious Cat who was constantly reciting The Seven Cat Commandments: 

 

'Thou shalt not be cool; 

Thou shalt not be in vain; 

Thou shalt not have more than ten suits; 

Thou shalt not partake of carnal knowledge with more than four members of the opposite sex at any one session; 

Thou shalt not slink; 

Thou shalt not hog the bathroom; and 

Thou shalt not steal another's hair-gel.'

 

In the Dark Ages of religious intolerance, these laws were laid down by Cat priests to keep their race in check. It was only through denying certain lusts, certain natural urges to be cool and stylish, they said' that a Cat could find redemption. Strict punishments were meted to transgressors: Cats caught slinking in public would have their shower units removed; Cats condemned as vain would have their hair-driers confiscated, and be forced to wear fashions some two or three seasons old.

 

'Paisley? With thin lapels and turn-ups?? But that was last spring! Please, no!

 

Have mercy!'

 

Why Aren't Free Speech Arguments Persuasive?

Why Aren't Free Speech Arguments Persuasive?

Why aren't the old arguments 
for Free Speech working any more?

The Life of The Mind

Barton Fink (1991) I'll show you the life of the mind!
 
The Devil :
Barton. Brother, is it hot. 
How you been, buddy? 
 
Well, don't look at me like that. 
It's just me... Charlie
 
Barton Fink :
I hear it's ‘Mundt’. 
Madman Mundt’
 
The Devil :
Jesus, people can be cruel
If it's not My Build, 
it's my personality. 
 
They say I'm a madman, Bart, 
but I'm not mad at anyone. 
Honest, I'm not
 
Most guys I just feel sorry for. 
It tears me up inside 
to think about what 
they're going through, 
how trapped they are. 
 
I understand it. 
I feel for them. 
So I try and help them out. 
 
Jesus. Yeah. Yeah. 
I know what it feels like 
when things get all balled up 
at The Head Office. 
 
They put you through hell, Barton. 
So I help people out
 
I just wish someone would 
do as much for me
 
Jesus, it's hot. Sometimes it gets 
so hot I want to crawl 
right out of my skin. 
 
Barton Fink :
But, Charlie, 
Why me
 
The Devil :
Why... Because you don't listen
Jesus. I'm dripping again. Come on, 
Barton, you think you know pain? 
You think I made 
your life Hell? 
 
Look around this dump. 
You're just a tourist 
with a typewriter. 
I live here.
 
Don't you understand that? 
And you come into my home...
and you complain that 
I'm making too much noise
 
Barton Fink :
I'm sorry. 
 
The Devil :
Don't be. I'll be next door 
if you need me. 
 
Oh... I dropped in on 
your folks in New York. 
And Uncle Maury. 
Good People. 
 
By the way, that package
I gave you... I lied. 
It isn't mine. 

If You Want to Stay Alive, then Ante-Up



“Y'all know me

Know how I earn a livin'. 
I'll catch this bird for you, 
but it AIN’T gonna be easy
BAD fish. 

Not like going down the pond 
chasin' bluegills and tommycods

THIS SHARK — 
swallow you whole….

Little shakin', little tenderizin', 
an' down you go

And we gotta do it QUICK, 
that'll bring back your tourists, 
put all your businesses 
back on a payin' basis. 

But it's NOT gonna 
be pleasant

I value my neck a LOT more than 
three thousand BUCKS, Chief!

I'll find  him for three, 
but I'll catch him
and kill him, for TEN

But you've gotta 
make up your minds —
If you want to Stay Alive,
then ante up;
If you want to play it cheap
be on welfare the whole winter. 

I don't want no volunteers
I don't want no mates
There's just too many CAPTAINS 
on this island. 

$10,000 for me
by myself. 

For that you get 
the HEAD, 
the TAIL — 
the whole damn THING.”

The Bad Shepherd




Ygor
No. He cannot be destroyed. 
Cannot Die. 
Your Father made him 
Live for always. Now he is sick
Make him well, Frankenstein!

Baron Wolf von Frankenstein
I don't know whether I...

Ygor
Your Father made him! 
And Heinrich Frankenstein 
was Your Father too.

Baron Wolf von Frankenstein
Do you mean to imply, 
then, that, uh... 
That is My Brother?

 Ygor
But His Mother was Lightning.

Baron Wolf von Frankenstein
Oh, Electricity. We'll see.










If you had come out of Egypt, 

you would have been destroyed in The Desert 

with all those who 

worshipped The Golden Calf!


Danny, Champion 

of The World (Aged 11) :

Then Let Him Destroy Me Now

Go ahead. Kill Me. 

Here I am. Do it. 


Danny. Glad you came back. 

I wanted to take up that discussion we were having. 


Danny, Champion 

of The World :

I can't right now. 


About Abraham and Isaac

You remember what you said…? 

That Isaac actually died 

on Mount Moriah. 

I've been thinking maybe 

you were right about that. 


You remember what you said

That Isaac actually died 

on Mount Moriah. 

I've been thinking, maybe 

you were right about that. 


Died... and then reborn 

in The World to Come. 

You remember what you said…? 

That Isaac actually died 

on Mount Moriah. 


I've been thinking maybe you were right about that. Died... 

and then reborn in 

The World to Come. 


Danny, •STOP•. —

Where do you think 

you're going…


Don't you know?

There's nothing 

up there. 


"...Your Only Son 

whom you love

Isaac, and go unto 

The Land of Moriah 

and offer him there as 

a Sacrifice on a Mountain 

that I will show you.


So... "I will show you.


It was A Test 

of Abraham's Faith

of his Devotion to God. 


Danny, Champion 

of The World :

It's not about 

Abraham's Faith. 

It's about God's Power


Abstraction

They're obsessed 

with Abstraction

"Kill Your Only Son, 

because I'm Everything 

and You're Nothing." 


"You're nothing."

 Jews. Judaism. 


They're still just Jews. 

Differences exist, 

of course. All right? 


But they're irrelevant

'cause for a Jew, 

His Jewishness 

dominates everything


And even the ones 

who renounce it, 

and who hate its strength 

and want to cut it 

out of their hearts...

Monday, 8 August 2022

From The Depths





Out of the depths 
I cry to you, sir.
Lord, hear my voice.

Let your ears be attentive to the voice of my supplication.

Grant them eternal rest, O Lord.
And let perpetual light shine upon them.

Rest in peace.

Amen








“They WORK, Riley, but they take concentration. Being attuned with the forces of the universe.”

“ Right. You can'tjust go "librum incendere" and expect...”

“…..Xander, Don’t Speak Latin in front of The Books.”




Sunday, 7 August 2022

The Seed




[Engineering]

(Khan is working controls and listening to the intercom messages.)
 

SPOCK [OC]
Captain, acknowledge. 
Unable to flood Engineering section. 
I suspect 
—

SCOTT [OC]
This is Scott. Captain's headed 
for the Engineering section. 
I'll follow in case 
—

SPOCK [OC]
Negative. We must retake the vessel while the anesthesia lasts. 
Meet me in the Armoury. 
I'm blowing it clear first. Spock out. 


(Kirk dashes into Engineering and straight into Khan, who easily disarms him then crushes the phaser. Then an alarm beeps.) 


KHAN
If I understood your manuals, 
that's an overload in progress. 
Your Ship flares up like 
an exploding sun within minutes. 


(The two fight. Khan can throw Kirk around with little effort.

KHAN
I have five times your strength. 
You're no match for me.


(But Kirk gets himself a weapon and clubs Khan into unconsciousness before stopping the overload and saving his ship.)

Captain's Log. Stardate 3143.3. 
Control of the Enterprise has been regained. 
I wish my next decisions were no more difficult. 

Khan and his people. 
What a waste to put them in a reorientation centre. 

And what do I do about McGivers?

[Briefing room]
(The senior staff are in dress uniform again.) 


UHURA
Record tapes engaged and ready, Captain. 


KIRK
This hearing is now in session. 
Under The Authority vested in me 
by Starfleet Command, 
I declare all charges and specifications 
in this matter have been dropped. 


MCCOY
Jim. Agreed, you have 
The Authority 
—

KIRK
Mister Spock, our heading takes us 
near the Ceti Alpha star system. 


SPOCK
Quite correct, Captain. 
Planet number five there is habitable, although a bit savage, somewhat inhospitable. 


KIRK
But no more than Australia's Botany Bay colony was at The Beginning. 
Those men went on to tame a continent, Mister Khan. Can you tame a world? 


KHAN
Have you ever read 
Milton, Captain? 


KIRK
Yes. I understand. 
Lieutenant Marla McGivers :
Given a choice of court martial or accompanying them there. 


KHAN
(gazing into her eyes) 
It will be difficult
A struggle at first even 
to stay alive, to find food. 


MARLA
I'll go with him, sir. 


KHAN
A superior woman. I will take her. 
And I've gotten something else I wanted. 
A world to win, an empire to build. 


KIRK
This hearing is closed. 


(Khan and McGivers are escorted out.)


SCOTT
It's a shame for a good Scotsman to admit it, but I'm not up on Milton. 


KIRK
The statement Lucifer made when he fell into the pit. 
'It is better to rule in Hell 
than serve in Heaven.' 


SPOCK
It would be interesting, Captain, 
to return to that world 
in a hundred years 
and to learn 
what crop has sprung 
from the seed you 
planted today. 


KIRK
Yes, Mister Spock, 
it would indeed.

Acts of Savagery


  



[Daystrom conference room]
 
(Around a round table.)
 
MARCUS
Thank you for convening on such short notice. Be seated.
By now, some of you have heard what happened in London.
The target was a Starfleet data archive.
Now it's a damned hole in the ground.
 
Forty two men and women are dead. 
 
One hour ago, I received a message from a Starfleet officer
who confessed to carrying out this attack,
that he was being forced to do it by this man,
Commander John Harrison. 
 
He's one of our own.
And he is the man responsible
for this Act of Savagery.
 
For unknown reasons, John Harrison has just
declared a one man war against Starfleet.
And under no circumstances are we to
allow this man to escape Federation space.
 
You here tonight represent the senior command
of all the vessels in the region.
And in the name of those we lost,
you will run this bastard down.
 
This is a manhunt, pure and simple,
so let's get to work.
 
Earth's perimeter sensors have not detected
any warp signatures leaving the system,
so we know he can't be far.
 
You will park your ships in a blockade formation
then deploy search vehicles and landing parties
to run down every lead.
 
(Kirk is studying images from the bombing. He finds Harrison holding a case.)
 
MARCUS:
This man has shown willingness to kill innocent people,
so the rules of engagement are simple :
If you come across this man and fear for your life
or the lives of those nearby, you 
are authorised to use
deadly force on sight.
 
KIRK:
What's in The Bag?
 
PIKE:
James, not now.
 
KIRK:
It doesn't seem odd to you
that he'd target an archive?
 
It's like bombing a library.
 
MARCUS:
Chris, everything okay there?
 
PIKE:
Yes, sir. Mister Kirk is just acclimating
to his new position as First Officer.
 
MARCUS:
You got something to say, Kirk, say it.
Tomorrow's too late.
 
KIRK:
I'm fine, sir. My apologies.
 
MARCUS:
Spit it out, son. Don't be shy.
 
KIRK:
Why the archive? All that information is public record,
and if he really wanted to damage Starfleet,
this could just be The Beginning.
 
MARCUS:
The beginning of what, Mister Kirk?
 
KIRK:
Sir, in the event of an attack,
protocol mandates that senior command
gather captains and first officers
at Starfleet HQ, right here --
In this room.
 
SPOCK:
It is curious Harrison would commandeer
a jumpship without warp capabilities
 
(A bright light appears outside.)
 
KIRK:
Clear the room!
 

Saturday, 6 August 2022

How Do You Dance with The Devil?



You wanna have 
a better life than 
The Old Man's? 

Take care of The People Who Love You

Or Don't
It's Your Choice.
















Old Chum






chum (n.1)
"friend, intimate companion," 1680s, originally university slang for "roommate," an alternative spelling of cham, short for chamber(mate); the formation is typical of the late-17c. fondness for clipped words. 

Among derived forms used 19c. were chumship; chummery "shared BACHELOR quarters," chummage "system of quartering more than one to a room."

chum (n.2)
"FISH BAIT" consisting usually of pieces of some OTHER fish, 1857, perhaps from Scottish chum "food."

I Can Do Anything.





DHARMA (n.) :








Martin hates boats
Martin hates water
Martin sits in his car when we go 
on the ferry to the mainland. 
I guess it's a childhood thing. 
There's a clinical name for it, isn't there? 

Drowning


The Chief
Is it True that most people get attacked by sharks in three feet of water, about 10 feet from The Beach…? 
And that before people started to swim for recreation,  I mean before The Sharks knew what they were missing, that a lot of these attacks weren't reported? 

Hooper
That's right. 

The Chief
Now, this shark 
that swims ALONE, 
what's it called…? 

Hooper :
 ‘Rogue’. 

The Chief :
‘Rogue’, yeah…

Now, this guy, he keeps swimmin' around 
in a place where The Feeding is Good
until The Food Supply is Gone. Right? 

Hooper
That's called ‘Territoriality’ — 
It’s just A Theory,  
that I happen to agree with.


The Chief
Then why don't we have ONE more drink 
and go down and CUT That Shark OPEN? 

The Wife
Martin? Can you DO that? 

The Chief :  
I can Do Anything
I'm The Chief of Police.