“Are cats strange animals or do they so resemble us that we find them curious as we do monkeys?”
John Steinbeck book The Winter of Our Discontent
Source: The Winter of Our Discontent
The Madonna of the Future http://www.gutenberg.org/files/2460/2460-h/2460-h.htm (1879) <br class="br">The Atlantic Monthly, March 1873 http://books.google.com/books?id=T4cGAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Cats+and+monkeys+monkeys+and+cats+all+human+life+is+there%22&pg=PA293#v=onepage
“Are cats strange animals or do they so resemble us that we find them curious as we do monkeys?”
John Steinbeck book The Winter of Our Discontent
Source: The Winter of Our Discontent
David Brewster (1781–1868) British astronomer and mathematician
The facts and fancies of Mr. Darwin (1862)
Context: Though the large runt pigeon, with its massive beak and its huge feet, differs from its blue and barred progenitor the rock, it is a pigeon still. Though the slender Italian greyhound has a strange contrast with the short-legged bull-dog, they are both dogs in their teeth and in their skull. The mouse, even, has not been transmuted into the cat, nor the hen into the turkey, nor the duck into the goose, nor the hawk into the eagle, and still less the monkey into the man.
“A monkey's transformed body weds the human mind.
Mind is a monkey—this, the truth profound.”
Wú Chéng'ēn (1500–1582) Chinese writer
Commentarial verses in chapter 7
Journey to the West [Xiyouji] (1592)
Harry Harlow (1905–1981) American psychologist
Interview with Pittsburgh Press-Roto, 1974. Quoted in Blum, Deborah. The Monkey Wars. Oxford University Press, 1994, p. 92.
Darby Conley (1970) American cartoonist
Strip October 13, 2004
Daily strip circa 2000
Bucky Katt, Dialogue
Peter Gabriel (1950) English singer-songwriter, record producer and humanitarian
Shock The Monkey
Song lyrics, Peter Gabriel (IV), Security (1982)
Peter Gabriel (1950) English singer-songwriter, record producer and humanitarian
Shock The Monkey
Song lyrics, Peter Gabriel (IV), Security (1982)