Riddle Help

dougaderly

New member
I already know the answer to this riddle, but I need some help with the backstory, for any of you who have heard this:

\"Five and five and forty five to the first letter add, you\'ll find a thing that killed a king and drove a wise man mad\"

For those of you who may have heard of this before, can you name the wise man and the king?

If need be I\'ll post the answer, but I thought I\'d leaev it blank for those of you who want to try it.
 

MarkusTay

New member
I know what the \'thing\' is, but the first part confuses me; I\'m not sure what it references. As far as who the wiseman and the king were, the king was either Ceaser or King George (both work), but the wiseman could actually be several people.

Or am I way off base here?
 

dougaderly

New member
way off. I\'ll PM you the answer, I just wish I still knew the guy who told me the riddle. I got the answer without understanding the last line of it...
 

Highbulp Billy

New member
Am I right in thinking that the \"thing\" is something that would be considered unpleasant? Or is it just my twisted mind at work here???
 

dougaderly

New member
DON\'T READ IF YOU DON\'T WANT ANSWER

Don\'t read this if you don\'t want the answer










5+5+45=55, Roman numeral for 55 is LV, LV+A, LAVA.

So I can\'t figure out what mythological or story references this is for. A king killed by lava and a wise man who supposedly was tortured with lava until he went mad. It\'s been years since I\'ve seen the guy who told me the riddle, and now that I\'m trying to explain the references, I can\'t for the life of me find references to what these stories could be.

:cussing:
 

Highbulp Billy

New member
Must admit I was struggling to get the numerals to become VD - this has many links with Kings and madness throughout history - no ideas about the lava guys though, sorry.
 

Gilvan Blight

New member
The only referance I could think of is Pompeii and Herculaneum.

Pliny the Elder could be the Wiseman (perhaps even the Younger). I don\'t remember which King would have been involved, but there had to be some form of ruler there.
 

MarkusTay

New member
Okay, was way off (I got the Ceaser/Roman connection, sort of), but the answer to the last part I thought was OPPRESSION.

It\'s an old saying dating to just prior to the American revolution -

\"Oppression will kill a king and drive a wise man mad.\"

I think it was meant to be some sort of covert \'threat\', before the revolution happened.

I have no clue about the lava reference, so obviously the quote and the riddle are unrelated, just coincidence.

Although I do find lava rather oppressive. ;)
 

Tony Manero

New member
Originally posted by Shawn R. L.
Kahmauhmauh?

Catmeowmeow?

big2.jpg



:D for me the only reference is Ercolano and Pompei too
 

dougaderly

New member
OH MY GOD SOMEONE THROUGH THAT POOR KITTEN IN A BOILING LAKE OF LAVA!!!!!!!

wait, those are pink frilly scarves, aren\'t they.


OH MY GOD SOMEONE THROUGH THAT POOR KTTEN IN A BOILING LAKE OF PINK GIRLY FABRICS!!!!!!!!!
 

Duende

New member
Geez, I had to do a quick search of the internet to find anything about this. I found this entry in a \"Classics-L Listserv Archive Navigator: 1997\" which is just a list of emails form riddle lovers back and forth.

Anyways I copied this in the original letter:

\"Here\'s another one which a classical education would help:

To five and five and forty five
The first of letters add
Twill give a thing
That killed a king
And drove a wise man mad

... you should be able to name the king and wise man as well.


And this was given as the answer:

\"And just in case anyone was trying to figure out the other one I had
presented (to five and five and 45, the first of letters add ...), the
answer is LAVA (5+5+45=55 ... in Roman numerals LV, adding the letter a
twice) which is the thing that killed Pyrrhus (supposedly a \'lava\' roof
tile; where they got this, I have no idea) and drove Empedocles mad (when he
took the plunge into Etna).\"

Whew. :D
 

Duende

New member
Originally posted by dougaderly
What terms did you use to find it?

I did a Yahoo search for \"five and five and forty-five\" using the quotemarks as well, so it would search for that phrase rather than the individual words.

Wow! My brain actually works sometimes!! :eek:
 

dougaderly

New member
huh. wonder if it was the hyphen that got me. Or using google rather than yahoo. I\'ve checked so many combinations of wording it\'s ridiculous. But thanks, you just answered a question I\'ve been trying to figure out for waaaay too long.....
 

noneedforaname

New member
wasn\'t pyrhus the greek guy who lead the untimately futile invasion of roman italy resulting in the phrase \"pyrhic victory\"?

that any help?
 
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