Editing Talk:1557: Ozymandias

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:May it be that Ozymandias is chosen because of Smith’s poem, where at last London has vanished, suggesting that Shelley’s poem is the last remains of British civilization? --[[Special:Contributions/162.158.91.193|162.158.91.193]] 10:04, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
 
:May it be that Ozymandias is chosen because of Smith’s poem, where at last London has vanished, suggesting that Shelley’s poem is the last remains of British civilization? --[[Special:Contributions/162.158.91.193|162.158.91.193]] 10:04, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
 
:I think Ozymandias was chosen because its opening is particularly famous.  Even people who don't know much about poetry are often passingly familiar with it, and there's something funny about playing with well-known classics.  And yes, I do believe the joke is that infinite recursion is inherently funny.  There's a long tradition of these recursion-jokes among computer scientists and math people (like the "GNU" acronym, or recursive index references), with precedents in xkcd itself.  [[User:Leoboiko|Leoboiko]] ([[User talk:Leoboiko|talk]])
 
  
 
In Germany, we have a childrens’ song „Ein Mops kam in die Küche“, which translates as follows (there are slightly different versions, though):
 
In Germany, we have a childrens’ song „Ein Mops kam in die Küche“, which translates as follows (there are slightly different versions, though):

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