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Barmy Britain

Page 10

by Jack Crossley


  A British railway service once famously made this excuse when snow delayed its trains: ‘It was the wrong kind of snow.’

  They matched this in 2007 after a French TGV train clocked up a record 357mph record with: ‘Well, France is three times bigger than Britain.’

  Sunday Telegraph

  Joseph Rowntree (1836-1925), the Quaker philanthropist and cocoa manufacturer, once, by mistake, travelled in a first class rail coach having bought a second class ticket.

  Stricken by his conscience, the next time he travelled he bought a first class ticket and travelled second class.

  (Steven Burkeman, Chair, The Rowntree Society.)

  Guardian

  A service called MayDayCards will use their network of airline staff to carry your handwritten postcards to exotic and exclusive locations.

  So, reports the Independent on Sunday, ‘while you are staying at Mrs McGurgle’s guest house in Bognor Regis, your friends think you are lounging by a pool in the Maldives.’

  Independent on Sunday

  Last week, at Heathrow, I saw a friend off to Nigeria. I then joined the queues of traffic to make my way to south Devon. My friend reached her destination first. Christopher Jolly of Chigwell, Essex.

  Daily Telegraph

  ‘We apologise for the lack of scenery’. Announcement on a train stuck in a tunnel in Sussex.

  The Times

  Excuses for late trains have become a national joke in Britain. They include autumn leaves making the tracks too slippery and trains unable to cope with ‘the wrong kind of snow’. Long suffering commuters enjoyed this one from a London Underground driver: ‘Your delay this evening is caused by the line controller suffering from elbow and backside syndrome – not knowing his elbow from his backside. I’ll let you know any further information as soon as I am given any.’

  Guardian

  In 1909, the 270-mile rail trip from London to Fishguard in North Wales took four hours and 28 minutes and cost £1.75. Now it takes five hours and costs £41.

  Evening Standard

  In a typical city centre almost a third of the traffic consists of people driving around looking for somewhere to park.

  Independent

  Announcement on a railway train’s public address system: ‘If there is a train driver travelling on this train who knows the way to Portsmouth please could he come to the cab.’

  The Times

  Great moments in civil aviation. A Nepal Airlines Boeing 757, due to fly to Hong Kong, developed what appeared to be an electrical fault. Immediately two goats were taken on to the tarmac and sacrificed to appease a Hindu god. In no time at all an airline official announced: ‘The snag in the plane has now been fixed and the aircraft has resumed its flight.’

  Independent on Sunday

  CHAPTER 17

  WHAT’S IN A NAME

  No bluebird has ever been seen over the

  White Cliffs of Dover…

  George Heron, of Middlesbrough, took some clothing to the dry cleaners and was asked for his name. ‘Heron,’ he said. ‘As in bird’.

  On the ticket he was given was ‘Mr Azinbird’.

  Daily Telegraph

  Lucinda Orr, of Charwelton, Northamptonshire, gets numerous variations on her name. Or, Oar, Ore, Ow, Hoare ‘and even the less than flattering Whore.’

  Daily Telegraph

  The word ‘verge’ is French for the male organ and French visitors to Britain are delighted when they see road signs warning of Soft Verges.

  Guardian

  Robert Fitzgerald, of High Kelling, Norfolk, was an articled law clerk in the mid-1960s and remembers that, when his firm was acting for a property vendor called Mr Balls, a letter was written to a purchaser with the heading: ‘Balls to yourself’.

  A reply arrived headed: ‘Balls to you too.’

  The Times

  The Daily Telegraph ran a series of letters from readers who suffer having their names spelt wrongly. No one is likely to beat the one from Tony Gyselynck, of Henley-on-Thames.

  For 49 years he has been collecting the number of ways his name has been misspelt, including those on formal or official documentation.

  Current score (in May 2007): 479.

  Daily Telegraph

  There is a firm of lawyers in Leeds called Godloves Solicitors.

  Guardian

  The Times diary claimed a scoop when it revealed that no bluebird has ever been seen over the white cliffs of Dover. It reveals that Vera Lynn’s famous World War II song was written by an American and suggests that, perhaps, ‘seagulls’ simply did not scan.

  The Times

  Paul Surtees, of London SE25, tells The Times how a man barged in front of him to pay at a bookshop. The book the man was buying was entitled Etiquette.

  The Times

  There is a firm of solicitors in Leamington Spa called Wright Hassle.

  Sue Holroyd, Guildford, Surrey. Guardian

  Seen on the side of a cesspit emptiers’ truck in Northamptonshire: The Motion is Carried.

  Nigel Kay, Bishops Stortford, Hertfordshire.

  Guardian.

  Sign on a glazing repairs van in Glasgow: ‘Gis a break’.

  Colin Rostron, Glasgow.Guardian

  Bosses are giving workers fancy titles rather than a pay rise. The Daily Mail reported that ‘Uptitling’ has become a successful way to motivate staff when budgets are tight. It suggested some examples:

  Stock Replenishment Executives (supermarket shelf stackers)

  In-Home Infant Protection Executive (baby sitter)

  Platform/Carriage Movement Facilitator (station porter)

  Technical Sanitation Assistant (lavatory cleaner)

  Daily Mail

  Times reader David Williams, of Leigh on Sea, Essex, spotted a Safeways’ job vacancy ad for ‘Ambient Replenishment’.

  ‘I checked with a member of the staff. In plain English it means shelf stacking.’

  The Times

  A friend who has an evening shelf-stacking job at a supermarket tells me that, according to her contract, she is a ‘Twilight Merchandiser’.

  John Welford, Nuneaton, Warwickshire.

  The Times

  Radio 4 has a producer called Jo King and another called Will Ing.

  Guardian

  Children aged five are more likely to recognise Coca Cola and McDonald’s logos than their own names.

  Daily Telegraph

  Sir Michael Caine is quoted as saying that he refuses to open any mail that is not addressed to him as ‘Sir Michael’. ‘I just feel that if they don’t put ‘Sir’ on the envelope, they don’t know anything about me, so why should I open the letter?’

  Independent

  A switchboard operator had difficulty catching my name when I wanted to leave a message for a colleague. Eventually, I said ‘Noah, as in ark.’ When my colleague called back he gleefully noted that the message read: ‘Dr Noah Asinarc rang.’

  Professor Norman Noah, The Times

  An index of the world’s most expensive signatures revealed the following prices:

  The Beatles £12,500, Adolf Hitler £6,000, Winston Churchill and Marilyn Monroe £4,950.

  The Times

  There is a baker’s shop in Glastonbury called ‘Burns the Bread’.

  Guardian

  Beer Makers Coors discovered that its slogan ‘Turn it Loose’ translates into Spanish as ‘Suffer from Diarrhoea’.

  Reebok named a new women’s tennis shoe ‘Incubus’. According to medieval mythology, Incubus was a demon who ravished women in their sleep.

  Coca-Cola’s slogan, ‘Coke Adds Life’, was reportedly translated into Thai as ‘Coke brings your ancestors back from the dead’.

  Ford launched its Pinto in Brazil, but had to rebrand the range after it was pointed out that pinto is slang for tiny male genitals.

  Guardian

  Jack was the most popular boy’s name in 2006. Mohammed was next (when you count up all the ones which use different spellings) and it co
uld soon become No.1.

  Daily Telegraph

  Bedfordshire police have a spokesman called Lawless, Waitrose has a top executive called Mark Price, and the chief executive of the Carbon Trust is Tom Delay.

  Guardian

  A BBC2 current affairs programme carried an interview with a Welshman wearing a T-shirt bearing the slogan ‘Twll tyn i bob Sais’, which loosely translates as ‘A***holes to the English’.

  Daily Telegraph

  The Ephraim Hardcastle column in the Daily Mail reports that Ed Balls, the secretary of state for schools, said that he had been teased at school about his surname, but added ‘It was much worse for my sister Ophelia’.

  Balls has no such sister – but Ophelia Balls flourishes up North. ‘She’ is a drag artist performing in the Newcastle area.

  Daily Mail

  All these names have been registered somewhere in the English speaking world in recent times:

  Allison Wunderland

  Dwain Pipe

  Ella Fant

  Pepperanne Salt

  Mary Chris-Smith

  Pepsi Kohler

  Polly Filler

  Russell Sprout

  Clay Potts

  From Buttering Parsnips, Twocking Chavs: The Secret

  Life of the English Language, by Martin H. Manser

  (Orion £9.99).

  Some examples from a 2007 book called Bertha Venation and Hundreds of Other Funny Names of Real People, by Larry Ashmead:

  Hedda Lettuce

  Stan Dupp

  Shanda Lear

  Harley Quinn

  And Dwayne Dwopp must be rather tired of hearing ‘Dwayne Dwopps keep falling on my head’ every time he enters a room.

  Daily Telegraph

  Sir – Concerning funny names, David Housdon, of Elton, Cambridgeshire, recalls that when he was a lad the Rural Dean of Bedford was Canon Balls.

  Daily Telegraph

  The Wallasey News reports: ‘A man from Love Lane pleaded guilty to a six month campaign of hate against his next-door neighbours’.

  Wallasey News

  A book called Rude UK by Rob Bailey and Ed Hurst lists ‘naughty’ place names and includes:

  Titup Hall Drive in Headington, Oxfordshire

  Slutshole Lane, Besthorpe, Norfolk

  Hardon Road, Wolverhampton

  Busty View, Chester-le-Street

  Slack Bottom, Heptonstall, West Yorkshire

  Bonks Hill, Sawbridgeworth, Hertfordshire

  Golden Balls Roundabout, Oxfordshire

  Husseys Lane, Hampshire

  The Sun says these names ‘are sure to raise a smile –

  unless you happen to live there’.

  2007 World’s Worst Book Title: a children’s book called Cooking with Pooh.

  Guardian

  Roger Pratt, of London EC1, says his understanding of the difference between a mechanic and an engineer is that when confronted by the same malfunction in a machine…

  A mechanic would simply hit the machine with a hammer.

  The engineer would think deeply on the problem, bring his expertise and experience to bear, assess the possible corrective procedures available – and then hit it with a hammer.

  The Times

  The BBC apologised after a radio show mentioned a plant called Black Man’s Willy.

  But the bloom is not alone in having a naughty name. The Sun exposed its readers to Knobweed, Stiffcock, Shagbark, Virgin Thistle, Nipplewort, Cockhold, Shaggy Soldier and Sticky Willy.

  Sun under the headline: HARDEN OFF

  YOUR KNOBWEED

  In its search for the Oddest Book Title of the Year the Bookseller magazine came across Tiles of the Unexpected: A Study of Six Miles of Geometric Tile Patterns on the London Underground.

  Sun

  CHAPTER 18

  RAISE YOUR GLASSES

  Barmaid fined for crushing beer cans

  between her breasts…

  Duncan Campbell’s diary in the Guardian commented on all the chortling about the drinking habits of Boris Yeltsin, who died in April 2007. But, he asks, how much do our own politicians put away?

  It is revealed that the House of Commons refreshment department disposed of 40,000 litres of beer, 57,300 litres of wine, and 5,700 litres of aperitifs.

  ‘That was the consumption over 11 months,’ reports Campbell. ‘Pretty impressive.’

  Guardian

  The Sun pointed out that boozy Boris was merely following an age-old tradition among world leaders and gave these examples:

  William Pitt the Younger, twice British PM, was born in 1759 with gout. When he was 14 his doctor described a bottle a day of port as a cure. He took his ‘medicine’ throughout his life, upping the dose to three bottles a day.

  Lord George Brown, Harold Wilson’s Foreign Secretary, was the man for whom the phrase ‘tired and emotional’ was coined. The Times once said: ‘George Brown drunk is a better man than the Prime Minister sober.

  Sun

  Aileen Ashby, of London, writes: “So the government is to focus on plans to curb middleclass drinking. May I suggest alcohol-free bars at the Palace of Westminster?”

  The Times

  There are some 460 words for ‘drunk’ in Bob Holder’s dictionary How Not To Say What You Mean. They include: blotto, boiled, half-stewed, legless, loaded, plastered, wired, zonked, Brahms, half-foxed, chemically inconvenienced and p****d.

  Sun

  George Melly, described in The Times as a louche, lecherous and lovable jazzman and the British equivalent of a Turkish belly dancer, died in July 2007 aged 80. He wore florid zoot suits and fedora hats and was once an 80-a-day smoker. He also claimed to have drunk a bottle of brandy every night, on top of wine and gin during the day. In later life he claimed to have cut down to ‘almost teetotalism’ – consuming in a day only a dry sherry, several gins, a couple of brandies and an unspecified amount of wine – a degree of moderation that would fell an ox.

  Melly’s wit was legendary. He once asked Mick Jagger why his face was so wrinkled. Jagger said the wrinkles were laughter lines.

  Melly quipped: ‘Nothing’s that funny.’

  The Times / Guardian

  Hertfordshire student Jack Kirby drank the contents of 4,000 Budweiser cans and built a life-sized model of a 1965 Ford Mustang with the empties.

  Independent on Sunday

  Scotland tops the world UFO league with 300 sightings a year – but drink is not to blame, say experts.

  Independent on Sunday

  When it’s closing time on Friday nights in the pubs of Kensington, the landlord shouts: ‘Come on, haven’t you got second homes to go to?’

  John O’Farrell, Guardian

  Scientists have discovered that people look more attractive after a couple of drinks. Experiments show that what is known in the trade as the ‘beer goggle effect’ actually does exist.

  Sunday Times

  When the ban on smoking in public places began in 2007 a pub in Pickering in North Yorkshire put up this notice:

  A WARM WELCOME TO ALL WARNING: STAFF MAY BECOME STROPPY OR VIOLENT DUE TO LACK OF PASSIVE SMOKING.

  Daily Mail

  Always carry a large flagon of whisky in case of snakebite, and furthermore always carry a small snake.

  W. C. Fields quoted in The Little Book of

  Whisky Tips

  Bawdy limericks were common forms of entertainment in the English taverns of the 15th and 16th centuries. Paul Vallely enjoyed a two-page romp on them in the Independent, and among the gems he came up with was ‘a rather rude one’:

  There was a young woman from Leeds

  Who swallowed a packet of seeds

  Within half an hour

  Her tits were in flower

  And her fanny was covered in weeds

  Another one came from former Prime Minister Clement Attlee who wrote about himself:

  Few thought he was even a starter

  There were many in life who were smarter

  But he
finished PM

  A CH and OM

  An earl and Knight of the Garter

  Independent

  An Australian barmaid was fined for crushing beer cans between her breasts – in breach of hotel licensing laws.

  Sunday Times

  Peter Dolan left his carthorse Peggy outside the Alexandra hotel in Jarrow, South Tyneside. But the rope was too long and Peggy followed him into the bar and was given a pint of John Smiths. She is now a regular – and is also partial to pickled onion crisps.

  The Times

  The Queen Mother’s longevity has been put down to ‘industrial quantities of gin, champagne and claret. They appear to have been her recipe for long life’, says a Guardian review of Behind Closed Doors by former equerry Colin Burgess (published by John Blake).

  At dinner parties, ‘if she felt the ice needed to be broken, she would lob a cork or a roll at someone and shout ‘Catch that’. In the last ten years of her life (she died aged 101) ‘you got the impression that she felt, ‘Wow, I’m still here, let’s enjoy it’.

  Guardian

  Oddd pub sign in Carlton village, East Yorkshire, spotted by Mrs S. Walmsley, of Rochdale, Lancashire:

  THE ODDDFELLOWS ARMS

  Had the signwriter had one too many? asks Mrs Walmsley.

  Daily Mail

  I was recently stopped while driving at 39mph in a 40mph zone. ‘Nobody does that at 2.00am unless he has been drinking’, said the policeman. After a negative breath test I was asked why I had been travelling below the speed limit. ‘Because,’ I said, ‘there was a police car behind me’.

  Alan Calvered, Bishop’s Stortford. Independent

 

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