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All Things Conan Doyle & Holmes

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  • Zodiac
    replied
    Originally posted by Robert View Post
    Holmes never pays Mrs Hudson any rent. That's why he comes and goes in a variety of disguises.
    Hi Robert,

    He was paying her, just in another "kind" of way. They had, shall we say, "an arrangement". What they allowed the good Dr. Watson to believe were "disguises" were in fact Mrs Hudsons own idea, a sort of Victorian "Role Play" to spice things up a bit!!!

    Best Wishes,

    Zodiac.

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  • Robert
    replied
    Holmes never pays Mrs Hudson any rent. That's why he comes and goes in a variety of disguises.

    Leave a comment:


  • c.d.
    replied
    She did keep a dwarf but only for a short time.

    c.d.

    Leave a comment:


  • belinda
    replied
    Originally posted by Zodiac View Post
    Hi Belinda,

    Indeed!!! In fact, it was whispered abroad that our own dear sweet Mrs Hudson did, in fact, keep a dwarf Laskar with odd shoes and unpleasant hair, who had recently been discharged from the Welsh Fusiliers and had since fallen on hard times, but who was said to be "Blessed" in another department, chained up in her pantry for, as my old friend Mr Sherlock Holmes used to put it, "Her own purposes"!!!

    Best Wishes,

    Zodiac.
    The woman deserves a Medal!After all that running around she has to do for Holmes and Watson she still has the energy to keep a dwarf in the Pantry. Outstanding

    Leave a comment:


  • Zodiac
    replied
    Originally posted by belinda View Post
    One must indeed ejaculate where Mrs Hudson is concerned. Mrs Hudson does not like to be kept waiting
    Hi Belinda,

    Indeed!!! In fact, it was whispered abroad that our own dear sweet Mrs Hudson did, in fact, keep a dwarf Laskar with odd shoes and unpleasant hair, who had recently been discharged from the Welsh Fusiliers and had since fallen on hard times, but who was said to be "Blessed" in another department, chained up in her pantry for, as my old friend Mr Sherlock Holmes used to put it, "Her own purposes"!!!

    Best Wishes,

    Zodiac.
    Last edited by Zodiac; 07-29-2010, 06:29 AM.

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  • belinda
    replied
    Originally posted by Zodiac View Post
    "Coming Mrs Hudson!" I ejaculated!

    Best wishes,

    Zodiac.
    One must indeed ejaculate where Mrs Hudson is concerned. Mrs Hudson does not like to be kept waiting

    Leave a comment:


  • Zodiac
    replied
    Originally posted by Chris View Post
    I remember being told as a child to "play the white man". Wikipedia comments that "the term is losing popularity in common parlance."
    Hi Chris,

    Yes, I remember the use of "Play the white man" being common back in the 70's. Also, "Don't Jew me" or "Don't Jew me down" and "Don't Jew out on me" etc. In England the use of the term "Paki" got used for anyone descended from anywhere at all in the Indian Sub-Continent!!! Almost everyone, myself included, would say "I'm just off to the Paki shop", usually meaning the corner shop, without a second thought! Nowadays if I hear the term "Paki" used, it just sounds so out of place/out of time. I don't know when this change happened, there was no "Light on the road to Damascus" moment, but everyone I know says, and has for years, "I'm just off to the shop". Or, in our native Yorkshire dialect, "Just off t'shop"!!!

    Best Wishes,

    Zodiac.

    Leave a comment:


  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Robert View Post
    They also used to say "You're a white man" as a sign of approval.
    I remember being told as a child to "play the white man". Wikipedia comments that "the term is losing popularity in common parlance."

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert
    replied
    They also used to say "You're a white man" as a sign of approval. Plus there were some strange last words e.g. "The professor - it was she." Good grammar at all times! And "You've done me" I think was Milverton's bid for immortality. Then there was that bit in The Crooked Man where a wife whose husband sold his love rival into the hands of the enemy, reproaches him with being another King David. At the height of a blazing row, the first parallel that springs to mind is Biblical.

    Leave a comment:


  • Adam Went
    replied
    It's also interesting to note some of the other changes in wording things that were acceptable back then but which would get you in quite a bit of strife now....for instance, a few times i've seen the "N" word mentioned when describing a person of colour....

    Cheers,
    Adam.

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert
    replied
    Oh Mr Holmes, why do I always have to clear up your mess?

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  • Zodiac
    replied
    Originally posted by Robert View Post
    In "The Empty House" Mrs Hudson says something like "I went to it on my hands and knees just like you told me, Mr Holmes."
    "Coming Mrs Hudson!" I ejaculated!

    Best wishes,

    Zodiac.
    Last edited by Zodiac; 07-28-2010, 03:39 PM.

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  • Robert
    replied
    In "The Empty House" Mrs Hudson says something like "I went to it on my hands and knees just like you told me, Mr Holmes."

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  • caz
    replied
    I don't know about Sir ACD, Adam. But I'm pretty sure that applies to Gilbert & Sullivan. Some of Gilbert's lyrics are more like single entendres than double ones.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

    PS I fell asleep during Sherlock so will have to catch up on iplayer - unless some kind soul would fill me in about the suicides mystery.

    Leave a comment:


  • Adam Went
    replied
    Zodiac:

    I know what you mean - in the last Rathbone/Bruce movie, "Dressed To Kill", there is a place called the Gaylord....

    Maybe Sir ACD knew exactly what he was saying and there was an intentional "blue" layer in the Holmes stories....

    Cheers,
    Adam.

    Leave a comment:

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