Monday, May 12, 2008

Miniature Dogsbody

Page 6 of the Stepan story has a lot of tiny details in it. (It's my own fault. I know.)

Here, for example, is a very, very small image of Kalbi, sitting on the back of the stagecoach.



This is enlarged around 4X for your viewing pleasure.

7 comments:

Mike said...

Aw, he's so cute! Small as it is, this may yet be my favorite drawing of Kalbi. Such an unexpected expression he has.

The adjacent "Mutt" is a nice touch, too...

Shira said...

Speaking of Kalbi, it occurred to me last night that Kalbi's name might just owe something to Hebrew? I suspect that I'm pointing out the obvious and betraying how many light years behind I am in my learning, but I was personally very excited about making the connection.

Isaac said...

I think Mike told me once that "Kalbi" sounds like the words that mean "my dog" in Arabic. Or something like that. He's always the one for the polyglot pun, that Mike...

Mike said...

Yes, "Kalbi" means "my dog" in Arabic. Arabic kalb is cognate with Hebrew kelev, so full marks to Shira for spotting the connection!

I think kalbi might also mean "my dog" in Aramaic, but I don't really known Aramaic so I can't say. I just know that there's a figure mentioned in the Talmud (Rabbi Akiva's father-in-law) known as "Kalba Savua," which means "Satisfied Dog" (in the sense that the man thus nicknamed hospitably made sure his guests were well-fed, apparently). I like to think of him as the spiritual ancestor of Dante's patron, Can Grande della Scala ("The Big Dog of the Ladder").

Shira said...

It was precisely Kalba Savua, whose story was mentioned at a recent talk (on Yerushalayim Shel Zahav), that made think about the Kalbi-kelev connection!

Mike said...

Well, there you go, then! (And yet another eerie coincidence at satisfactorycomics.blogspot.com...)

B.BarNavi said...

Incidentally, "Kalbi" also happens to be a delicious Korean beef dish, but don't tell the doggy that!
Also interesting: "Kalbi" also sounds like "Qalbi", or "my heart", for those who speak a dialect where "Q" is /q/ or /k/.