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talk page for discussing improvements to the
Come and take it article. This is
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This is ridiculous, the assertion that what was said in Thermopylae had anything to do with Goliad. Is this just silly revisionism based on the current popularity of a Hollywood movie? Who among the great defenders of Goliad was a Greek historian? —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
121.1.110.74 (
talk)
09:20, 20 February 2011 (UTC)reply
Ancient Greek history (and language) was taught in schools as a matter of routine in the 19th century - one can assume that the ancient Greek origin of the phrase was common knowledge amongst educated men of the time. As pointed out above, McIntosh showed he knew the Spartan origin of the phrase with his use of the phrase "
laconic reply".
Sparta was in the ancient Greek region of Laconia, hence "laconic" meaning "Spartan".
Exactly so. The thing is, "laconic phrase" means "Spartan phrase', using "laconic" as a
metonym for "Spartan" (and as far as I can tell, nobody says "Spartan phrase" to communicate the meaning in question). I suspect me adding this point isn't remotely useful, but there you go.
Michael F 1967 (
talk)
15:59, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Also: "great defenders of Goliad"? Goliad isn't mentioned in the article. The town of Goliad is known for the
Goliad massacre during the Texas revolution, when Mexican forces massacred more than 400 Texian troops who had surrendered - the Wikipedia page suggests this was required by Mexican law at the time.
Michael F 1967 (
talk)
23:42, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Just a meta-comment here, while there's no specific policies regarding this, it's generally best not to reply to very old threads on the talk-page as took place here, on a more than decade commentary. This is not a complaint! The overriding problem is the lack of archiving, which I'll take care of now. cheers.
anastrophe,
an editor he is.04:44, 3 April 2024 (UTC)reply
I spotted that the comment at the start of this section was quite old. The reason I added remarks was that
Special:Permalink/1207338245 had removed the text referring to the Spartan origin of the phrase at 15:28, 14 February 2024.
The edit summary was similar in spirit at least to the reasoning put forward in the start of this section.
To my mind, that means that while the origin of this talk page section is essentially ancient history from the point of view of Wikipedia editing, it's also a currently-relevant discussion due to recent edits.
You are referring here to
this difflink You then quickly re-added the reference
here despite the words "
Molon labe" (translated: when you come, take [our arms]) only partially having the same meaning of "Come and take it [it = the fort, the flag, the post]." Similar but different: that is the reason why we have two different articles with long histories each, for each of the phrases. The English phrase does not subsume the Greek one: the latter is historically relevant and belongs into the history section, but not into the article intro as the most important example. No ancient Greek ever uttered the English phrase, not even in Old English - yet that is what the article claims.
0) "When you come, take it!" is a translation of "molon labe" given by the Wikipedia page on the phrase.
1) The article doesn't claim that an ancient Greek spoke English - I've no idea where you got that idea from.
2) The article doesn't claim to present the first use of the phrase - merely the first recorded use.
3) The article provides dated uses of the phrase in all cases, as you suggest.
4) The article quotes a recorded use of the phrase by an English speaker who overtly connected his use of the English phrase to what he considered its origin in ancient Sparta.
5) Since the earliest reference to the use of the English phrase includes an overt reference to its earlier use in ancient Sparta, the article needs to refer to that use in order to make sense of the English usage.
6) The precise meaning of the phrase "molon labe" is not crucial, if only because Leonidas spoke a different dialect of Greek. "Come and take it" was used in the sense of "come and take our arms" at the Battle of Gonzales in 1835. It's wrong to suggest that "Come and take it" in English hasn't been used in that sense.
The phrase is a defiance - you want it, you come and take it from us, and we're willing to fight. That's the important point.
All translations are approximations. The recorded ancient Greek version was an approximation to whatever version had been passed on. Exactly what the words refer to in English - well, that's a complicated matter of dialect and context and a whole load of other stuff. However, what's important is that the earliest recorded English use of the phrase is clearly based on an understanding of the recorded version of the supposed Spartan original. There's no point in being deadly literal about the translation when it's the spirit of the phrase that's important - as understood by Colonel John McIntosh in 1778.
7) The English and Greek versions of the phrases are linked by history and the record - the later version being inspired by the earlier. Therefore, Wikipedia needs to ensure that this link is made clear. Why not right at the start? That seems the most sensible place to me.
8) Quite why there are two articles for the two phrases is not at all clear - personally, I think that they belong together, but that would be linguistically awkward. Obviously, both the English and Greek versions of the phrase are connected, the later version derives from the earlier version, and they are both historical. There is no separate "historical" section of Wikipedia in any case.
9) I'm assuming good faith on the part of others here. I hope the same courtesy will be extended to me. I'm not going to raise the issue of
weasel phrases at this point, but that doesn't mean I've not noticed.
(Replying to Michael F 1967 comment) Totally cool, as I said, not a complaint. There are no rules, policies, guidelines, or anything about doing so on WP. As an "old-timer" on the internet, going back to the early 1980's before even UUCP ruled the "airwaves", I've plowed through probably a million threads on thousands of forums, BBS's, 'social media', ran BBS's, and there's even a forum site I administrated a couple of decades ago that's unbelievably still around. It sort of became an unwritten tradition to not "wake up" old threads.
Since WP isn't a BBS, forum, or social media—in fact, talk pages are specifically not to be used for socializing—I think perhaps my meta-comment was probably more out of place than on point.
Mmm... I reckon your meta-comment was totally on point. It's the sort of point that needs making.
It's a funny old thing, though, isn't it? Us humans are devils for communicating. Chat, chat, chat - but none of this chatter here will survive a century, unlike the record of the words of King Leonidas or Colonel McIntosh.
Now, that was a meta-comment which needn't have been made - I considered deleting it, but thought: perhaps it's a useful point to make. I might be wrong.
Actually, I'm reasonably sure that every word we've written here will survive beyond centuries. It's just that nobody will ever read them, nor will anyone ever shout, defiantly, in the war with SkyNet,
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
SupportI agree that the two articles should be merged, but I would suggest merging to
Molon labe instead; I suspect it is the more iconic usage, it is certainly the original, and the Fort Morris episode, at least, was explicitly invoking the Spartan myth – McIntosh specifically describes "come and take it" as a "laconic reply". (I note that both episodes discussed in this article are already mentioned at
molon labe).
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
09:20, 28 February 2022 (UTC)reply
I tend to agree with Caecilius in the Garden. This article is mostly about one episode, and the phrase is mostly derived from the use of the Greek original, although I'm sure many of the users are unaware of that, or may have come upon it by chance. Still, the episode is already part of molon labe and I see no difficulty in merging any additional material from this article there.
P Aculeius (
talk)
12:51, 28 February 2022 (UTC)reply
Strong Oppose - Come and take it has a life of its own, and there is sufficient content there to justify its own article. --
evrik(
talk)21:25, 13 March 2022 (UTC)reply
Oppose. The two articles have different content (and chronology), and it is likely that different readers could search separately for each one.
78.18.231.44 (
talk)
15:00, 15 March 2022 (UTC)reply
Oppose - Molon labe (come and take [them]) has a significantly different semantic meaning from Come and take it, with the former being similar to
From my cold, dead hands and the latter to dilly dilly, come and be killed.--Aurictalk01:01, 14 June 2022 (UTC)reply
Oppose - BUT remove most of the Come-take-it content from "
Molon labe" (a third of the article content is about American history, that's way to too much for an article about a Greek saying!); and vice-versa remove the Molon-labe mention from
Come and take it's introduction, work it into another part of the article, e.g. "Adapted uses". That way, the two articles are no longer redundant - as they are now. --
Enyavar (
talk)
10:40, 8 July 2022 (UTC)reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
This is the
talk page for discussing improvements to the
Come and take it article. This is
not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject.
This article is within the scope of WikiProject United States, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of topics relating to the
United States of America on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the ongoing discussions.
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Politics, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
politics on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.PoliticsWikipedia:WikiProject PoliticsTemplate:WikiProject Politicspolitics articles
This is ridiculous, the assertion that what was said in Thermopylae had anything to do with Goliad. Is this just silly revisionism based on the current popularity of a Hollywood movie? Who among the great defenders of Goliad was a Greek historian? —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
121.1.110.74 (
talk)
09:20, 20 February 2011 (UTC)reply
Ancient Greek history (and language) was taught in schools as a matter of routine in the 19th century - one can assume that the ancient Greek origin of the phrase was common knowledge amongst educated men of the time. As pointed out above, McIntosh showed he knew the Spartan origin of the phrase with his use of the phrase "
laconic reply".
Sparta was in the ancient Greek region of Laconia, hence "laconic" meaning "Spartan".
Exactly so. The thing is, "laconic phrase" means "Spartan phrase', using "laconic" as a
metonym for "Spartan" (and as far as I can tell, nobody says "Spartan phrase" to communicate the meaning in question). I suspect me adding this point isn't remotely useful, but there you go.
Michael F 1967 (
talk)
15:59, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Also: "great defenders of Goliad"? Goliad isn't mentioned in the article. The town of Goliad is known for the
Goliad massacre during the Texas revolution, when Mexican forces massacred more than 400 Texian troops who had surrendered - the Wikipedia page suggests this was required by Mexican law at the time.
Michael F 1967 (
talk)
23:42, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Just a meta-comment here, while there's no specific policies regarding this, it's generally best not to reply to very old threads on the talk-page as took place here, on a more than decade commentary. This is not a complaint! The overriding problem is the lack of archiving, which I'll take care of now. cheers.
anastrophe,
an editor he is.04:44, 3 April 2024 (UTC)reply
I spotted that the comment at the start of this section was quite old. The reason I added remarks was that
Special:Permalink/1207338245 had removed the text referring to the Spartan origin of the phrase at 15:28, 14 February 2024.
The edit summary was similar in spirit at least to the reasoning put forward in the start of this section.
To my mind, that means that while the origin of this talk page section is essentially ancient history from the point of view of Wikipedia editing, it's also a currently-relevant discussion due to recent edits.
You are referring here to
this difflink You then quickly re-added the reference
here despite the words "
Molon labe" (translated: when you come, take [our arms]) only partially having the same meaning of "Come and take it [it = the fort, the flag, the post]." Similar but different: that is the reason why we have two different articles with long histories each, for each of the phrases. The English phrase does not subsume the Greek one: the latter is historically relevant and belongs into the history section, but not into the article intro as the most important example. No ancient Greek ever uttered the English phrase, not even in Old English - yet that is what the article claims.
0) "When you come, take it!" is a translation of "molon labe" given by the Wikipedia page on the phrase.
1) The article doesn't claim that an ancient Greek spoke English - I've no idea where you got that idea from.
2) The article doesn't claim to present the first use of the phrase - merely the first recorded use.
3) The article provides dated uses of the phrase in all cases, as you suggest.
4) The article quotes a recorded use of the phrase by an English speaker who overtly connected his use of the English phrase to what he considered its origin in ancient Sparta.
5) Since the earliest reference to the use of the English phrase includes an overt reference to its earlier use in ancient Sparta, the article needs to refer to that use in order to make sense of the English usage.
6) The precise meaning of the phrase "molon labe" is not crucial, if only because Leonidas spoke a different dialect of Greek. "Come and take it" was used in the sense of "come and take our arms" at the Battle of Gonzales in 1835. It's wrong to suggest that "Come and take it" in English hasn't been used in that sense.
The phrase is a defiance - you want it, you come and take it from us, and we're willing to fight. That's the important point.
All translations are approximations. The recorded ancient Greek version was an approximation to whatever version had been passed on. Exactly what the words refer to in English - well, that's a complicated matter of dialect and context and a whole load of other stuff. However, what's important is that the earliest recorded English use of the phrase is clearly based on an understanding of the recorded version of the supposed Spartan original. There's no point in being deadly literal about the translation when it's the spirit of the phrase that's important - as understood by Colonel John McIntosh in 1778.
7) The English and Greek versions of the phrases are linked by history and the record - the later version being inspired by the earlier. Therefore, Wikipedia needs to ensure that this link is made clear. Why not right at the start? That seems the most sensible place to me.
8) Quite why there are two articles for the two phrases is not at all clear - personally, I think that they belong together, but that would be linguistically awkward. Obviously, both the English and Greek versions of the phrase are connected, the later version derives from the earlier version, and they are both historical. There is no separate "historical" section of Wikipedia in any case.
9) I'm assuming good faith on the part of others here. I hope the same courtesy will be extended to me. I'm not going to raise the issue of
weasel phrases at this point, but that doesn't mean I've not noticed.
(Replying to Michael F 1967 comment) Totally cool, as I said, not a complaint. There are no rules, policies, guidelines, or anything about doing so on WP. As an "old-timer" on the internet, going back to the early 1980's before even UUCP ruled the "airwaves", I've plowed through probably a million threads on thousands of forums, BBS's, 'social media', ran BBS's, and there's even a forum site I administrated a couple of decades ago that's unbelievably still around. It sort of became an unwritten tradition to not "wake up" old threads.
Since WP isn't a BBS, forum, or social media—in fact, talk pages are specifically not to be used for socializing—I think perhaps my meta-comment was probably more out of place than on point.
Mmm... I reckon your meta-comment was totally on point. It's the sort of point that needs making.
It's a funny old thing, though, isn't it? Us humans are devils for communicating. Chat, chat, chat - but none of this chatter here will survive a century, unlike the record of the words of King Leonidas or Colonel McIntosh.
Now, that was a meta-comment which needn't have been made - I considered deleting it, but thought: perhaps it's a useful point to make. I might be wrong.
Actually, I'm reasonably sure that every word we've written here will survive beyond centuries. It's just that nobody will ever read them, nor will anyone ever shout, defiantly, in the war with SkyNet,
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
SupportI agree that the two articles should be merged, but I would suggest merging to
Molon labe instead; I suspect it is the more iconic usage, it is certainly the original, and the Fort Morris episode, at least, was explicitly invoking the Spartan myth – McIntosh specifically describes "come and take it" as a "laconic reply". (I note that both episodes discussed in this article are already mentioned at
molon labe).
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
09:20, 28 February 2022 (UTC)reply
I tend to agree with Caecilius in the Garden. This article is mostly about one episode, and the phrase is mostly derived from the use of the Greek original, although I'm sure many of the users are unaware of that, or may have come upon it by chance. Still, the episode is already part of molon labe and I see no difficulty in merging any additional material from this article there.
P Aculeius (
talk)
12:51, 28 February 2022 (UTC)reply
Strong Oppose - Come and take it has a life of its own, and there is sufficient content there to justify its own article. --
evrik(
talk)21:25, 13 March 2022 (UTC)reply
Oppose. The two articles have different content (and chronology), and it is likely that different readers could search separately for each one.
78.18.231.44 (
talk)
15:00, 15 March 2022 (UTC)reply
Oppose - Molon labe (come and take [them]) has a significantly different semantic meaning from Come and take it, with the former being similar to
From my cold, dead hands and the latter to dilly dilly, come and be killed.--Aurictalk01:01, 14 June 2022 (UTC)reply
Oppose - BUT remove most of the Come-take-it content from "
Molon labe" (a third of the article content is about American history, that's way to too much for an article about a Greek saying!); and vice-versa remove the Molon-labe mention from
Come and take it's introduction, work it into another part of the article, e.g. "Adapted uses". That way, the two articles are no longer redundant - as they are now. --
Enyavar (
talk)
10:40, 8 July 2022 (UTC)reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.