Hej!
Prova Google. Titta vad jag hittade från http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/3/messages/520.html
DON'T SHOOT THE MESSENGER -- From "Random House Dictionary of Popular Proverbs and Sayings" by Gregory Y. Titelman: "Don't shoot the messenger. Don't blame the person who brings bad news. This idea was expressed by Sophocles as far back as 442 B.C. and much later by Shakespeare in 'Henry IV, Part II' (1598) and in 'Antony and Cleopatra' (1606-07) The word kill may be used as a substitute for 'shoot.'" Related saying: "Don't shoot the piano-player; he's doing the best he can. Don't hurt innocent people. Originated in the United States in the Wild West, around 1860. During his 1883 tour of the United States, Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) saw this saying on a notice in a Leadville, Colorado, saloon. It is sometimes attributed to Mark Twain, but neither Wilde nor Twain has ever claimed authority."
Google är ett av bibliotekens moderna verktyg!
Glad midsommar alla Biblistare,
Sue Dodd Uppsala universitetsbibliotek
-----Ursprungligt meddelande----- Från: BIBLIST - Topics in Nordic research library user services [mailto:[log in to unmask]] För Magdalena Sobczyk Skickat: den 21 juni 2006 17:13 Till: [log in to unmask] Ämne: [BIBLIST] Referensfråga
Hej!
Är det någon som vet ursprunget och historien bakom "Don`t kill the messenger" eller "Döda inte budbäraren"?
Sofokles ska tydligen ha pratat om detta och det nämns i någon av Shakespeares pjäser. Men låntagaren vill ha mer information om historien bakom.
Någon som vet?
Vänliga hälsningar
Magdalena Sobczyk Bibliotekarie Nyköpings stadsbibliotek
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