Wimseycal skellingtons
Vocaboly.com Forum Index Vocaboly.com
Vocabulary builder software for SAT, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT and more
 
 FAQFAQ   MemberlistMemberlist   RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 
 
Google
 
Web www.vocaboly.com
Wimseycal skellingtons

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Vocaboly.com Forum Index -> alt.usage.english
Author Message
Graeme Thomas
Guest





Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 9:44 pm    Post subject: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Someone recently[1] mentioned a couplet rhyming "Wellington" with
"skellington", and attributed it vaguely to Sayers. _Gaudy Night_ was
mentioned.

In _Busman's Honeymoon_ (p72 in my copy) there is a conversation between
Bunter and Wimsey:

# "[...] Will you wear the Lovats or the grey suit?"
#
# "Neither -- find me an open shirt and a pair of flannel bags and --
# did you put in my old blazer?"
#
# "Certainly, my lord."
#
# "Then buzz off and get breakfast before I get like the Duke of
# Wellington, nearly reduced to a skellington. . . . I say, Bunter."
#
# "My lord."

Since it's Sayers writing, and Wimsey speaking, we can be fairly sure
that it's a quotation from somewhere else, but my researches haven't
shown me where.


[1] I've forgotten who it was, and the article has expired from my
server.
--
Graeme Thomas

Back to top
Jerry Friedman
Guest





Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 11:19 pm    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Graeme Thomas wrote:
Quote:
Someone recently[1]

"That was me," he said ungrammatically. (I'm imitating Sayers, not
trolling.)

Quote:
mentioned a couplet rhyming "Wellington" with
"skellington", and attributed it vaguely to Sayers. _Gaudy Night_ was
mentioned.

In _Busman's Honeymoon_ (p72 in my copy) there is a conversation between
Bunter and Wimsey:

# "[...] Will you wear the Lovats or the grey suit?"
#
# "Neither -- find me an open shirt and a pair of flannel bags and --
# did you put in my old blazer?"
#
# "Certainly, my lord."
#
# "Then buzz off and get breakfast before I get like the Duke of
# Wellington, nearly reduced to a skellington. . . . I say, Bunter."
#
# "My lord."

Thanks. I'm glad I didn't dig through _Gaudy Night_, but I'm sorry if
you did.

Quote:
Since it's Sayers writing, and Wimsey speaking, we can be fairly sure
that it's a quotation from somewhere else, but my researches haven't
shown me where.

I'll still bet it was a limerick.

Quote:
[1] I've forgotten who it was, and the article has expired from my
server.

--
Jerry Friedman will now make a noise like a rumba and push off.
Back to top
Graeme Thomas
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 12:04 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

In article <1126631992.906443.223150@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com>,
Jerry Friedman <jerry@totally-official.com> writes
Quote:
Graeme Thomas wrote:

Thanks. I'm glad I didn't dig through _Gaudy Night_, but I'm sorry if
you did.

Rereading Sayers is hardly the worst punishment imaginable.

Quote:
Since it's Sayers writing, and Wimsey speaking, we can be fairly sure
that it's a quotation from somewhere else, but my researches haven't
shown me where.

I'll still bet it was a limerick.

I shouldn't be at all surprised.

I believe that Sayers was not above improving on some of her quotations.
Again in _Busman's Honeymoon_, she has Wimsey saying:

# 'As another Great Mind so happily put it, "However entrancing it is to
# wander though a garden of bright images, are we not enticing your mind
# from another subject of almost equal importance?" '

This is attributed to _The Golden Hours of Kai-Lung", by Ernest
Bramah[1]. It is some decades since I read that book, but it doesn't
rig quite true. I want to put "unchecked" between "wander" and
"through". Someone has stolen my copy of the book, though[2].

[1] Real name Ernest Bramah Smith.

[2] It should be filed under "Smith", but it isn't. Owing to a trifling
domestic catastrophe[3], all my books that should be under A-C are
elsewhere.

[3] That's another quotation from _Busman's Honeymoon_.
--
Graeme Thomas

Back to top
Jess Askin
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 1:48 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Jerry Friedman wrote:
Quote:
Graeme Thomas wrote:
Someone recently[1]

"That was me," he said ungrammatically. (I'm imitating Sayers, not
trolling.)

Gosh, I thought it was me -- maybe we're experiencing thought transference
or something.

Quote:

mentioned a couplet rhyming "Wellington" with
"skellington", and attributed it vaguely to Sayers. _Gaudy Night_
was mentioned.

In _Busman's Honeymoon_ (p72 in my copy) there is a conversation
between Bunter and Wimsey:

# "[...] Will you wear the Lovats or the grey suit?"
#
# "Neither -- find me an open shirt and a pair of flannel bags and --
# did you put in my old blazer?"
#
# "Certainly, my lord."
#
# "Then buzz off and get breakfast before I get like the Duke of
# Wellington, nearly reduced to a skellington. . . . I say,
Bunter." #
# "My lord."

Thanks. I'm glad I didn't dig through _Gaudy Night_, but I'm sorry if
you did.

Since it's Sayers writing, and Wimsey speaking, we can be fairly sure
that it's a quotation from somewhere else, but my researches haven't
shown me where.

I'll still bet it was a limerick.

[1] I've forgotten who it was, and the article has expired from my
server.
Back to top
Jess Askin
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 1:49 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Graeme Thomas wrote:
Quote:
Someone recently[1] mentioned a couplet rhyming "Wellington" with
"skellington", and attributed it vaguely to Sayers. _Gaudy Night_ was
mentioned.

In _Busman's Honeymoon_ (p72 in my copy) there is a conversation
between Bunter and Wimsey:

Ah, good. I thought it was BH but I couldn't find my copy. I also can't seem
to find the web page that lists the sources of (most of) Sayers's
quotations.

Quote:

# "[...] Will you wear the Lovats or the grey suit?"
#
# "Neither -- find me an open shirt and a pair of flannel bags and --
# did you put in my old blazer?"
#
# "Certainly, my lord."
#
# "Then buzz off and get breakfast before I get like the Duke of
# Wellington, nearly reduced to a skellington. . . . I say, Bunter."
#
# "My lord."

Since it's Sayers writing, and Wimsey speaking, we can be fairly sure
that it's a quotation from somewhere else, but my researches haven't
shown me where.


[1] I've forgotten who it was, and the article has expired from my
server.
Back to top
Jerry Friedman
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 1:58 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Jess Askin wrote:
Quote:
Jerry Friedman wrote:
Graeme Thomas wrote:
Someone recently[1]

"That was me," he said ungrammatically. (I'm imitating Sayers, not
trolling.)

Gosh, I thought it was me -- maybe we're experiencing thought transference
or something.
....


It was you. I provided my $0.02 worth on limericks, though. Unless
"Jess Askin" is a pseudonym for "Jerry Friedman".

--
Jerry Friedman, really
Back to top
Chris Waigl
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 4:14 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Graeme Thomas wrote:
Quote:
I believe that Sayers was not above improving on some of her quotations.
Again in _Busman's Honeymoon_, she has Wimsey saying:

# 'As another Great Mind so happily put it, "However entrancing it is to
# wander though a garden of bright images, are we not enticing your mind
# from another subject of almost equal importance?" '

This is attributed to _The Golden Hours of Kai-Lung", by Ernest
Bramah[1]. It is some decades since I read that book, but it doesn't
rig quite true. I want to put "unchecked" between "wander" and
"through". Someone has stolen my copy of the book, though[2].

No, no this one's good. I remember digging up this quote when still in
high school, when I first read _Busman's Honeymoon_. Here's the quote
from the Project Gutenberg e-text:

----
"Your insight is clear and unbiased," said the gracious Sovereign.
"But however entrancing it is to wander unchecked through a garden of
bright images, are we not enticing your mind from another subject of
almost equal importance?"
<http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext98/klsgh10.txt>
----

Chris Waigl
and it was hard to get my hands of an English version of _Kai Lung_ back
in pre-Internet days
Back to top
Graeme Thomas
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 4:39 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

In article <dg7j0p$ojp$1@domitilla.aioe.org>, Chris Waigl
<cwaigl@free.fr> writes
Quote:
Graeme Thomas wrote:
I believe that Sayers was not above improving on some of her quotations.
Again in _Busman's Honeymoon_, she has Wimsey saying:

# 'As another Great Mind so happily put it, "However entrancing it is to
# wander though a garden of bright images, are we not enticing your mind
# from another subject of almost equal importance?" '

This is attributed to _The Golden Hours of Kai-Lung", by Ernest
Bramah[1]. It is some decades since I read that book, but it doesn't
rig quite true. I want to put "unchecked" between "wander" and
"through". Someone has stolen my copy of the book, though[2].

No, no this one's good. I remember digging up this quote when still in
high school, when I first read _Busman's Honeymoon_. Here's the quote
from the Project Gutenberg e-text:

----
"Your insight is clear and unbiased," said the gracious Sovereign.
"But however entrancing it is to wander unchecked through a garden of
bright images, are we not enticing your mind from another subject of
almost equal importance?"
http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext98/klsgh10.txt
----

Chris Waigl
and it was hard to get my hands of an English version of _Kai Lung_ back
in pre-Internet days

Aha! The old memory is starting to let things trickle through.

This was obviously a favourite saying of Sayers, as she uses it in
_Strong Poison_. In that version she gets it right, with "unchecked".
That must be why the _Busman's Honeymoon_ version didn't seem quite
right to me.

But I wonder why Sayers dropped that word from the _BH_ version.
Carelessness? Poor editing?
--
Graeme Thomas
Back to top
Jess Askin
Guest





Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 7:06 am    Post subject: Re: Wimseycal skellingtons Reply with quote

Jerry Friedman wrote:
Quote:
Jess Askin wrote:
Jerry Friedman wrote:
Graeme Thomas wrote:
Someone recently[1]

"That was me," he said ungrammatically. (I'm imitating Sayers, not
trolling.)

Gosh, I thought it was me -- maybe we're experiencing thought
transference or something.
...

It was you. I provided my $0.02 worth on limericks, though. Unless
"Jess Askin" is a pseudonym for "Jerry Friedman".

I only wish -- then I'd be free from the hell that is the SDC.
Back to top
Rainbow



Joined: 29 Mar 2008
Posts: 1

Posted: Sat Mar 29, 2008 8:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON

The great Duke of Wellington
Reduced himself to a skellington.
He reached seven stone two,
And then Waterloo!

Edmund Clerihew Bentley in "Biography for Beginners: being a collection of miscellaneous examples for the use of upper forms", 1905

Available at archive.org:
http://www.archive.org/details/biography00chesuoft
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Vocaboly.com Forum Index -> alt.usage.english All times are GMT + 1 Hour
Page 1 of 1

 
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



Office Forum Access Forum Electronics Windows Server Exchange Server
New Topics Powered by phpBB