APAD: The spirit of the staircase

来源: 2024-04-06 08:23:45 [博客] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:

Meaning:

   a witty response which, frustratingly, comes to one's mind just after the

   opportunity to utter it is passed.

 

Background:

 

   'The spirit of the staircase' or, as it is often written, 'the spirit of the

   stairway', is one of those obliging phrases that has a definitive origin, in

   that it is a quotation from Denis Diderot's Paradoxe sur le Com ien, written

   1773-78.

 

   In the text Diderot retells a situation in which Jacques Necker makes a

   remark that perplexes him:

 

     This confounds me and reduces me to silence, because the sensitive man,

     like me, overwhelmed, loses his head and finds himself at the foot of the

     stairs.

 

   It is one of the few phrases that has come into English as a translation from

   the French. The original, which even my schoolboy French is up to

   translating, is 'L'esprit de l'escalier'. Most of the French phrases that

   have been adopted into English are used in their original French form, even

   the similar 'Esprit de corps'.

 

- www.phrases.org.uk

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Acutely aware of Esprit de L'escalier, I feel the pain all the time. I am

delighted to learn that its English translation means the same thing, both

literally and figuratively!

 

At the end of a bjj class, Fransisco was chatting with Sunny as I was pushing my

Lectric bike toward the door. Pointing to me, he said: "Look at that triathlete.

He runs, bikes, and swims."

 

It sounded so funny. "Yeah! E-bikes for triathlon!" would've been a nice comeback.