120
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
his only friends), Pablo Picasso (who
named a daughter
Paloma, Spanish for pigeon), and Charles Darwin (who was
an active member of a London pigeon club). Speaking of
whom . . .
BARNACLES
Th
e same obsessive powers of observation that led to Charles
Darwin’s great discoveries were for many years focused on,
um, barnacles. After his historic voyage on the
Beagle
but be-
fore he wrote the evolution-introducing
On the Origin of Spe-
cies,
Darwin became fi xated on
barnacles and other marine
invertebrates. Over the course of eight years, he obsessively
studied, drew, and dissected barnacles, eventually publishing
four (
four!
) books on the creatures. He fi nally abandoned bar-
nacles in the mid-1850s and gathered his thoughts on evolu-
tion, publishing in 1859
On the Origin of Species,
which fi nally
won him the fame his barnacle books had not. Which just
goes to show that where there’s a neurotic, intractable will,
there’s a way. And . . .
05
Where There’s a Way, There’s
a Will:
Unusual Wills
When Irish playwright and Nobel
laureate George Bernard
Shaw died in 1950, he left a substantial share of his estate to
creating a new English alphabet. Shaw felt the Latin alphabet
was “hopelessly inadequate,” and wanted to replace it with
one that contained between 40 and 50 characters.
121
✖ ✖ ✖
William
Shakespeare fa-
mously bequeathed his wife
his “second-best bed,” which
seems pretty cruel. But in all
likelihood, the second-best
bed was the one they shared—
and therefore a fi nal romantic
gesture.
✖ ✖ ✖
Th
e
comedian Jack Benny did
even better by his wife. Th
e
day after Benny’s death, his
wife, Mary, received one long-
stemmed rose from a fl orist.
Th
e next day, another came. When Mary called to ask about
the deliveries, she learned that Benny
had stipulated in his
will “one perfect red rose daily for the rest of Mary’s life.”
✖ ✖ ✖
Th
e only heir to the Singer sewing machine fortune, Daisy
Singer Alexander was an eccentric woman who enjoyed drop-
ping bottles with messages inside into the River Th
ames. In
June of 1937,
Alexander wrote a note reading, “To avoid all
confusion, I leave my entire estate to the lucky person who
fi nds this bottle,” sealed it in a bottle,
and threw it into the
river. Singer died in 1940. In 1949, a San Francisco dish-
washer named Jack Wrum was walking along the beach and
happened across a sealed bottle. As a result of the note inside,
he inherited $8 million.
✖ ✖ ✖
John Keats died when he was just 25—had he survived, he
might have become the greatest writer of his era. As it was, he
You’re Like
Sunshine on a
Cloudy Day
German poet Heinrich Heine
was not so kind to his wife.
His last will and testament be-
queathed his entire estate to
his wife, Eugenie—as long as
she remarried.
Why force her
to remarry? So that “there will
be at least one man to regret
my death.”
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