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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!noao!arizona!sham
- From: sham@cs.arizona.edu (Shamim Zvonko Mohamed)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.wodehouse
- Subject: Postulates on Wodehouse
- Message-ID: <30294@optima.cs.arizona.edu>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 02:45:04 GMT
- Organization: U of Arizona CS Dept, Tucson
- Lines: 102
-
- Many years ago, I got this from some newsgroup on the net. The name of the
- author seems to be missing; if you recognise this, please let me know!
-
-
- Suspension of Disbelief
-
- 1. It is always hay-harvest weather in England; for 54 holes of golf a
- day, or for a swim before breakfast in the lake, morning in the hammock
- under the cedars, tea on the lawn, coffee on the terrace after dinner.
-
- 2. Money is something you should inherit, get monthly as an allowance from
- an uncle, win at the races or borrow from Oofy Prosser.
-
- 3. All small dogs bite your ankles.
-
- 4. All babies are hideously ugly.
-
- 5. All small boys are fiends.
-
- 6. All aunts are hell, except Bertie's Aunt Dahlia.
-
- 7. All butlers have port in their pantries.
-
- 8. Old nannies are a menace. They know too much.
-
- 9. Drunk men can be very funny.
-
- 10. Almost all middle-aged men, even the most pompous (Lord Tilbury, Sir
- Gregory Parsloe, Bart., Roderick Spode/Lord Sidcup) were tearaways at some
- stage of their youth.
-
- 11. Country pubs are open all day long and their home-brew ale is very
- potent.
-
- 12. All decent-sized country houses have cellars, coal-sheds and potting
- sheds for locking people in.
-
- 13. Watch out for girls with two-syllable masculine-sounding shortenings
- of their Christian names (Bobbie Wickham, Corky Pirbright, Nobby Hopwood,
- Stiffy Byng). They get the good man of their choice in the end, but they
- spread havoc on the way.
-
- 14. Most handsome men have feet of clay.
-
- 15. All young men with wavy, marcelled or corrugated hair have feet of
- clay and worse.
-
- 16. No decent man may cancel, or even refuse, an engagement to a girl.
-
- 17. Men and women in love think only of marriage.
-
- 18. Rose gardens turn a girl on.
-
- 19. If a young man has a single-syllable Christian name, is poor and ugly
- and can stop dog-fights, he is sure to be the hero. He may propose to the
- heroine at their first meeting and try to shower burning kisses on her
- upturned face at their second. She will love this, though she may kick his
- shins at the beginning of such an embrace.
-
- 20. A bedroom scene is when you discover someone's made you an apple-pie
- bed and/or punctured your hot water bottle.
-
- 21. Another bedroom scene is when one or more people came and search your
- room for policemen's helmets, manuscript Memoirs, notebooks, jewels or
- miscreants hiding in cupboards or under the bed.
-
- 22. All married couples have separate bedrooms.
-
- 23. All bedrooms have on their mantelpieces hideous china figures of the
- Infant Samuel at Prayer or dogs. All these figures are dispensable.
-
- 24. Chorus girls are all right and earls (Marshmoreton) and nephews of
- earls (Ronnie Fish) are very lucky to marry them.
-
- 25. Barmaids are all right, and Lords (Yaxley) and Barts (Sir Gregory
- Parsloe) are lucky to marry them.
-
- 26. A country J. P. can call the local policeman and have anybody arrested
- and held in a cell on suspicion of anything. At his whim a J. P. can
- send anybody to prison without the option and without a trial, legal
- representation or redress, for up to thirty days.
-
- 27. If, for a country house, you need a secretary, a Harley Street
- loony-doctor, a butler, a cook, a head-gardener, a detective or a valet,
- you go up to London by the morning train and, without having made any
- appointment by telephone, you find what you want and come back with him or
- her by train the same afternoon.
-
- 28. The night you go to a night-club is the night it gets raided by the
- police.
-
- 29. If you are arrested, on Boat-Race night or at a nightclub, give a
- false name and address and they will be accepted by the magistrate.
-
- 30. On Boat-Race Night in London a young man always gets a bit tight, and
- it is then his duty to try to part a policeman from his helmet.
-
- --
- "Mr. Wodehouse's idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release
- future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own. He
- has made a world for us to live in and delight in." -- Evelyn Waugh
- Shamim Mohamed (shamim@cs.arizona.edu)
-