home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!jvnc.net!netnews.upenn.edu!netnews!mjd
- From: mjd@saul.cis.upenn.edu ("[*] Neuromancer")
- Newsgroups: talk.bizarre
- Subject: Re: The First Letter Of Each Line: Andrew J Solberg
- Message-ID: <MJD.92Aug15145013@saul.cis.upenn.edu>
- Date: 15 Aug 92 18:50:13 GMT
- References: <1992Aug14.182759.82983@ns1.cc.lehigh.edu>
- <1992Aug15.103819.3052@cco.caltech.edu>
- Sender: news@netnews.upenn.edu
- Organization: Eaters of Wisdom
- Lines: 37
- Nntp-Posting-Host: saul.cis.upenn.edu
- In-reply-to: ajm@wag.caltech.edu's message of 15 Aug 92 10:38:19 GMT
-
- In article <1992Aug15.103819.3052@cco.caltech.edu> ajm@wag.caltech.edu (Abner J. Mintz) writes:
- > Mr. Churchill was very drunk at a party. The hostess, outraged, exclaimed:
- > "Mr. Churchill, you are drunk!"
-
- Yes, that was Bessie Braddock. She gave good parties. I remember in
- particular she always served some sort of Dutch gin that everyone was
- ater, but she never would reveal her sources.
-
- Now of course Bessie would never have said such a thing under ordinary
- circumstances, because no matter what you think about the English, it is
- not true that they are so stupid or naive as to be surprised when a
- person becomes drunk at a party, and particularly not when the person is
- a vulgar, sensual man like Winston Churchill. In fact he was drunk,
- and the last time he had been drunk at one of Bessie's parties he had
- behaved very badly. He abused the servants, I think, and had to be
- restrained from striking the Lord Chancellor. (I wasn't at that party,
- so this is second-hand.) In any case, the story he and his friends told
- the following day was that he replied:
-
- > "Yes, Bessie, and you are ugly. But in the morning, I shall be sober."
-
- It does little credit to Winston that this was what he wished he had
- said, because once you get past the idea that it was a clever thing to
- have said on the spur of the moment (which it would have been had he
- said it on the spur of the moment and not made it up the following day
- while hung over) you realize just how devoid of real wit or quality the
- remark is. Beauty is only skin deep, and although Bessie Braddock
- wasn't beautiful, she certainly wasn't deformed either, and she was a
- particularly astute and forceful woman, a clever speaker, and a talented
- politician. If she was ugly (and I do not think she was) then in any
- case it was not her fault. On the other hand it most certainly was
- Winston's fault that he was so drunk at a party that he inconvenienced
- and embarassed his host.
- --
-
- And for to see, and eke for to be seye
- Mark-Jason Dominus mjd@central.cis.upenn.edu
-