I’ve
been waiting for May 13, Jumping Frog Day, to roll round, so keen am I to
relate a dastardly tale of plagiarism by a renowned teacher of ancient Greek. In
his Introduction to Greek Prose Composition
with Exercises (1876, but still in print), A. Sidgwick, who announced
himself on the title page to be ‘Assistant-master
at Rugby’, included a text for
translation into ancient Greek entitled ‘The Athenian and the Frog’.
One man beats another
in a competition to test whose frog can jump further by secretly feeding the
opponent’s frog small bits of stone or shot to weigh him down.
Sidgwick had taken
every detail of the tale, besides substituting an Athenian and a Boeotian for two
men in California, from Mark Twain’s short story Jim Smiley and His Jumping Frog. The first of many versions was published in the New York
Saturday Press in 1866. Its later incarnations were published under the
title The Celebrated Jumping Frog of
Calaveras County.
When Twain met Sidgwick
in 1899, the pedagogue admitted that exercise XXI on p. 116 of his famous
textbook was borrowed from Twain. He had seen no need to say so
in print.
Twain was disappointed, but not because he hadn't been credited.
When he'd first heard about the exercise in Sidgwick, he had inferred that there was an original Aesopic fable of this kind. Moreover, he
decided it was exciting proof of the universality of frog-jumping competitions across
human history, or at least in both ancient Greece and modern California, and
published this theory in The North
American Review, No. 449 (April 1894).
Sadly, there is no such
ancient Greek fable extant, although maybe one was told on Seriphos, home to a
particularly fine species of Anura Neobatrachia, portrayed on the island’s ancient
coinage. Sidgwick however provided an elegant Greek translation of his own English
text to help teachers. Unfortunately I was unaware of this when I composed my
own version in 1977 at Nottingham Girls' High School, for which I recall Miss Reddish gave me an Alpha
minus bracket minus.
Apparently the world record frog jump was achieved in 1986 by Rosie the Ribeter, who jumped 21 feet, 5 and three quarter inches. But I still don’t know why Frog Jumping Day is celebrated on May 13th. Any suggestions would be gratefully received.
He does say in the preface that many of the stories are not new, especially in Part 1. Quite a few have bizarre titles - I wonder how many more uncredited originals are lurking behind them. I have had the task in my school mastering days of inventing an original prose passage in Latin for translation into English. It was quite a task to find something suitable for the junior CLC classes. I plagiarized quite a few modern anecdotes and bent them to fit the antics of Grumio, Clemens and Caecilius.
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