(
go look it up)
Sorry for the late start today, we had friends over and it was a late night.

Happy
Dictionary Day . October 16, the birthday of
Noah Webster, is Dictionary Day. Celebrate the day by learning some new words, learning how dictionaries came to be, sprucing up your dictionary skills, or even creating your own dictionary!
Today in History:
On this date in
1792 (or
1799), there was baptised in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, a boy named
Francisco Morazàn. He was young, like most newborns, and full of idealism. After a disappointing childhood, in which he turned out not to have been born to wealth and privilege, he decided first to educate himself and then to enlist in the fight against Mexican annexation of Honduras.

After a disappointing loss, in which Honduras turned out to be a part of Mexico even though neither of them was any longer a part of Spain, Morazàn joined the government of the United Provinces of Central America. Two years later he was the president of the Honduras State legislature and the following year he became president of the entire United Provinces by means of the traditional Central American electoral process ("
civil war").
As president, he tried to limit the powers of the Roman Catholic Church, which eventually led to a new round of elections ("
civil wars") that produced a new president, this time from the State of Guatemala. The new president exiled Morazàn, who returned several years later calling for electoral reform ("
revolution") and was therefore impeached ("
shot in the head") by one of his own troops.
It's a holiday in Honduras today.

But it is not a holiday in Guatemala. Or Mexico.
October 16, 1793 -
Deposed French queen
Joséphe Jeanne Marie Antoinette sat in an open cart, enduring hours of public ridicule as she is slowly driven around the streets of Paris, on this day.

Finally, she was taken to the guillotine. Before she loses her head, Antoinette tells the crowd: "
Farewell, my children, forever. I go to your Father."
She wasn't having a good day.
It's also the birthday of
Oscar Wilde (
1854), known for his barbed wit, was one of the most successful playwrights of late Victorian London, and one of the greatest celebrities of his day.

In between bouts of buggery and posing for his Sodomite Trading Card photo, he found time to write the following passage in
The Picture of Dorian Gray: "
Humanity takes itself too seriously. It is the world's original sin. If the caveman had known how to laugh, History would have been different." Unfortunately for Oscar, had he fled England in the spring of 1895, his history would have been different.
I believe that cavemen did indeed know how to laugh, and that people who accuse humanity of being too serious obviously aren't paying attention. Voluminous scientific research has incontrovertibly proven that we are the only species to giggle at one other's farts.
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