On Tuesday, June 30, 1992 at 1:12:39 AM UTC-4,
[email protected] wrote:
In "The Perfect Mate," Alexander said "the higher, the fewer" at least twice. What the heck did that mean? Our station routinely chops two minutes
from every episode, so we might have missed something. Please email.
[email protected] no nifty .sig
As another poster said, Alexander was simply repeating another character's line, which Mrs. Troi pronounced "a conversation stopper", in order to actually stop a conversation. As far as the phrase itself, I just came across it not once but twice in
unrelated places (which then referred me to this thread).
First, it is the title of a 1911 film about a poor prizefighter who thinks he's unworthy of the rich girl he loves and after he receives a substantial inheritance, takes pains to hide his past. Second, Stephen King used it in chapter 39 of The Shining.
The voices in little Danny's head pose Lewis Carroll's Hatter's famous riddle from Alice in Wonderland, "Why is a raven like a writing desk?" and then immediately answer it with, "The higher, the fewer, of course! Have another cup of tea!" My guess is
that this is where the script writer found it.
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