the brass monkey seemed real --
not like a real monkey,
but like a real supplicant,
making a real offering
i guess its realness
was the realness
of human wishfulness
it looked real
because it looked like
what a human desires in
a monkey --
rather than how an
actual monkey would behave,
hightailing it with the fruit
up to too lofty a height
to have its jackfruit repossessed
i read that the original
"brass monkey"
was a cannonball rack
on an old-timey sailing ship,
then the term came to
refer to cold weather,
because the differential
contraction of cold metal
would cause the cannonballs
to pop off the rack --
hence the saying:
"cold enough to freeze
the balls off a brass monkey!"
and, somewhere along the way,
it also became a low-brow
malt liquor cocktail
seems strange that so many
brass monkeys would exist
that weren't monkey-shaped,
or even made of brass --
but such is the way of words
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I have never heard the origin of that phrase. Interesting 😊
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I can vouch for the origins. You forgot about the Beastie Boys song though. 😛 😀
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