Oh, Weave a Circle ‘Round Me Thrice

By bigolly

I’m not so sure about this one, trusted and kindly reader, but it swam into my ken and so here ‘tis (to quote novelty lavatory indicator).

We got free milk when I was at primary school.

Not because we were poor. At least not as far as I know. I am pretty sure everyone got it. I mean to say, if we were getting free milk because of poverty, surely we would have got lots of other great poverty type of stuff too, like blankets and maybe flour and tea. But we didn’t. No canned goods, secondhand clothing or expired medicine either.

No, I am pretty sure that all primary school students here used to get a small bottle of milk each day. I don’t think it happens any more.

As I recall there was usually an assembly after morning recess. A couple of the lucky grade 7’s from the two unit would get to play a march of some sort on a couple of drums and we would all gather in forms on the asphalt part of the schoolyard.

The headmaster would take the microphone and after the usual carry on with feedback and the cord getting caught ‘round his ankle, he would make announcements. You know the sort of thing;

“Owing to an outbreak of chiggers, the top oval and the area behind the bike sheds will be out of bounds until further notice.”

It didn’t really matter what was said ‘cos you couldn’t hear him anyway but he would rabbit on for a few minutes while we all pushed each other or threw uneaten fruit around.

After the Headmaster had finished, we got the milk. It could be a mixed bag.

You see, it was delivered at some point during the morning, and left stacked in wire crates against a tall red brick wall on the asphalt. From there it was distributed to the milk monitors from each class who went up and collected it then brought it back to us to drink.

Winter was fine but outdoors, on asphalt and next to a wall was not a good place to keep small containers of milk during an Australian summer. Not all of it survived the experience intact.

I should add that this was a gentler time. The primary school children of that era were not haunted by global warming. No lingering and uncomfortably warm deaths for us, just the relatively quick vaporisation of the Hydrogen Bomb or at worst a couple of weeks of radiation sickness followed by some festering sores, some coughing and a quiet demise.

So we didn’t dwell on rising sea levels during those blistering summer mornings, we just wondered what would await us when we prised off the foil cap and peered in.

Sometimes it was just a small bottle of tepid milk, sometimes a little cream on top if the Homogenisation had started to break down.

Sometimes you got a solid plug of greenish curd floating on watery whey. You had to push it in with your finger to unclog the mouth of the bottle.

For some reason that I cannot now fathom, you still had to drink it.

It would, however, be fair to say that not all of it was drunk.

I can remember that someone discovered that if you make a tiny hole in the lid with a compass (an item of stationery used for everything except drawing circles) you could sort of blow into the hole then lift the bottle up at arm’s length and direct an extremely thin stream of milk into your mouth like someone drinking from a tiny wineskin.

Of course, a lot of milk would go all over your uniform and many a silver fleece was never quite the same again, but by gum it was diverting and diversion was what we needed.

I never made it to the heady heights of Milk Monitor.

Sure, I got to play the assembly drums once and was occasionally allowed to tend the school incinerator. Naturally I, like any of the others, was happy to clean the blackboard or brandish the “Stop” sign at the school crossing, but of all the thinly disguised child labour that was part of school life back then, the lugging ‘round of those wire crates and deciding who got the cooler milk in the middle of the rack was a joy I was never to know.

A pity, I am sure that that would have been a power I would have enjoyed abusing.

614 Responses to “Oh, Weave a Circle ‘Round Me Thrice”

  1. Vince Sorrenti Says:

    I see it, but I don’t believe it.

  2. A Non Stereotypical Irishman Says:

    Begorrah, may the Saints preserve us!
    And Olly’s milk, to be sure.

  3. Rex Ona Says:

    Well, what a delightful return to childhood Big has wrought for us there. The stinking povo.

  4. Sigismund Says:

    Made a hole in the top with a compass, did you Big Olly? I don’t think that can be done… PAIR OF COMPASSES boy!

  5. Some Bloke Says:

    I tried to make a hole in the lid with my compass, but it was the compass in the heel of my Bata Scout shoes, so I copped 6 of the best for the resultant mess from that stunt.

  6. bigolly Says:

    OK, a predictably slow start, but with the possilbe exception of Rex, some interesting thoughts.

    Sigismund, my Shorter Oxford will allow me the singular or the plural, although I appreciate that the plural would avoid the confusion to which Some Bloke refers.

    On consideration, I have heard “a scissors” referred to but would always say “a pair of scissors” myself. It doesn’t mean that I am right but, well, I am. I would also insist on “a pair of trousers” although I don’t think that is controversial.

    On the other hand, I would not accept “a pair of bras” for what must be simply “a bra”, it being a contraction (I assume) of “a brassiere”. As opposed to “a brasserie” or indeed “a brazier”but that is another issue.

    Love
    Big Olly

  7. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Freezing cold was the best way to have the milk. Such memories. I only have to see a plastic crate now and I go all funny.

  8. Petra Fide Says:

    Margaret Thatcher karate-kicked the door from it’s hinges, flounced gibbering into our classroom, whisked the brimming crate from beneath the very noses of the bewildered tots & sprinted away as fast as her bestockinged legs would carry her, shrieking a piercing banshee wail of malevolent glee over the mournful clinking dopler effect chimed by the bottles.

    To this day, my eyes well with tears at the sight of a stubby duck-egg blue straw.

  9. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Yes! I likewise recall a point at which lactic beneficence ceased for political reasons. I don’t know whether it was conservatives undoing an expensive left-wing experiment in socialised health or the free-traders undoing the subsidised inefficiencies of the dairy industry or all of them cravenly surrendering to the terrorist demand of the Lactose Intolerant Liberation Organisation but off it went (so to speak).

  10. Petra Fide Says:

    … & yet we subsequently ended up with a so-called Milk Mountain*. Apparently it was all down to the EU. After a few weeks in the Spanish sun, it was considered down to EW

    *& a Butter Lake. I checked on Wikipedia.

  11. Petra Fide Says:

    Incidentally, the EU solved the problem by carting it all to Switzerland. The government conscripted in precision watchmakers, & soon they developed a product that was to revolutionise the redistribution of the Curds Escarpment forever: fondue.

  12. bigolly Says:

    OK, I don’t want to seem weak and divert matters so predictably and so early, but Petra has made a good observation on “Imagine Nation” but I don’t want to reply fully there as it hurts my finger to scroll all the way down. And don’t tell me about feeds etc as I am not interested.

    What I would add to her observations about the inordinate number of fifth Beatles is that whoever played Paul after 1966 would presumably be a fifth Beatle too.

    Now, I see that Lady Heather has complained that Sir Paul understated his personal fortune by half in their recent litigation, but none of the forensic accountants could locate the rest.

    The answer? Clearly it is because the man we now know as Paul McCartney was only entitled to half the earnings ‘cos he was only Paul for half the time – after the real one died.

    So, as if we needed further proof, there it is. Undeniable evidence.

    Love
    Big Olly

  13. Petra Fide Says:

    Zounds Big Olly! You’ve cracked it again. Watson, the needle!

  14. Mbutu Batanga (still a ghost, mind) Says:

    Alternatively, Mr Big, Ms Mills may have recovered on the basis of only half Mr McCartney’s fortune, because she is only half a person. A bit harch, perhaps, but she certainly couldn’t be classed as a whole person.

    I wonder if they got a discount on the marriage licence.

  15. Sir Paul McCartney Says:

    ‘Suddenly, I’m not half the man I used to be…’
    Bugger! That’s another quid for Hateher

  16. The mildly disappointed ghost of Mike Smith Says:

    Cats, I was the fifth Beatle, till we saw the error of our ways, and a potential law suit, and changed our name to the Dave Clark 5. Phew!!! At least we could count.

    We were originally called the Quarrytwats. Now that’s spooky.

    Woooo-oooo.

    Of course, Aspinall didn’t play an instument, or sing. I think he drove them round in a kombi. On that basis, every 2nd cab driver in the UK could qualify.

    See you in the afterlife, cats. Woo-woo-WOO

  17. A Cat Says:

    What makes you think we would care?

  18. Cab Driver Says:

    (or rather, exhorts)
    ‘Lor luv a duck! What a stroke hov blinkin’ luk fer me awld Dad. ‘Ee were arand der rank hon der nite ov der selly-braytid Parladyyum perfawrmance. Twinkle! Ger hon da blawa ter me brief…’

  19. Some Bloke Says:

    Criminy, I think this is a record for the earliest raising of The Beatles in a post, probably even maybe beating the last post, which WAS about The Beatles. I’m expecting we hear from Alpha Centauri soon!

  20. Petra Fide Says:

    … & there was I thinking you’d persuaded Big Olly to write about milk.

  21. Professor John Robinson Says:

    We’re picking up some faint signals…
    “Magneto and….. Titanium man…. and.. and.. the Crimson Dynamo! Cant cut it no more…”
    Don! Quick! Get the guns! Force field on full pressure!”

  22. smallredbox Says:

    “Owing to an outbreak of chiggers, the top oval and the area behind the bike sheds will be out of bounds until further notice.”

    Apologies for my ignorance, but what is chiggers?

  23. bigolly Says:

    Welcome aboard, smallredbox. A pleasure to have you.

    Chiggers are some sort of insect or something and they melt your flesh a bit and drink it and stuff causing all welts and that.

    I don’t think they occur here, they need a humid climate, so unless the others were all emptying their milk behind the bike sheds I don’t know that chiggers could have been the explanation for all of those welts. I think that is why that sinister announcement stayed with me.

    Love
    Big Olly

  24. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Hey! How come the kid got a picture and I’ve been waiting for ages?

  25. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    The kid stays in the picture.

  26. J. D. Ponsinby-Molyneux Villliers-Smythe Says:

    Now, my dear and most worthy fellow, I hate to be a pedant amongst pedants – amongst the slovenly and semi-literate, it’s a gas, but amongst fellow nitpickers, one’s sense of rectitude tends to become rather ultramontane.

    Still, I couldn’t help but notice that the apostrophe preceding the word “Round” at the heading of this post has the downward teardrop of the quotation mark rather than the upward teardrop of the true apostrophe.

    I blame it as always on these fukkin’ machines!

    Yours ever

    Jesu Domine P-M V-S

  27. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    TO MILK

    Milk! I think thy whiteness hath but passed away
    From your asphalt yards and red-embricken’d towers;
    Thy gorgeous pus-clog in yon bottle’s neck
    Seems spun now into naught but air and whey,
    And this age changed unto a mimic play
    Wherein the children waste their else too-crowded hours:
    In vile electric games that sap their joyous powers
    They are but fit to delve the common clay,
    On that great isle on which the brothers stand,
    This Holland New, that brown land girt by sea,
    By ignorant demagogues is held in fee,
    Who love her not: Dear God! Yours is the land
    Of Zwier, Ash, of Heath and even Sam
    Who, when burned fierce your young Democracy
    All had their daily chug of milk for free!

  28. bigolly Says:

    Jay; I think you need to provide your own pictue if you want one. Just how one arranges these things I do not know. As youth representative on this forum I thought you might have been across these issues.

    Possibly Johnny can help.

    As for you, JD, I do blush with shame but again, it is a technical problem. I can’t make the proper apostrophe come out, except in this font. It is driving me to distraction.

    Oh, weave a circle ’round me thrice
    And close your eyes in holy dread
    For he on honey-sandwiches hath fed
    And drunk the Quik of Paradise!

    Love
    Big Olly

  29. bigolly Says:

    Oscar, my apologies. You snuck in while I was bewaring my hair. So much nicer than dreading it, don’t you agree?

    A lovely bit of poesy there old bean. Rhymes and everything.

    Love
    Big Olly

  30. Major Don West Says:

    John! Is that you? I can’t see you but I can hear you faintly on my transmitter. I think I’ve slipped into another dimension…it looks like St. Louis but the cowboys sure aren’t the way I remember ‘em…

  31. Bosie Douglas Says:

    A sonnet to milk!! To MILK! I told you Olly, dear friend, Oscar clothes the trivial in raiment of gold. Look at that verse! Look at the clever variation of the rhyme – A B C A A B A D E E D D E. It is masterful!

    He could always find beauty in the most commonplace of things… the way, I guess, he found it in me.

    PS: No rhyme for “neck” but…

  32. Sebastian B Says:

    Zounds and Yoiks, Olly, it sounds like you had a dreadfully underpriviliged childhood, and yet in a strange way it mirrors mine…… We also used to squirt warm milk onto our youthful bodies from a distance but in my case it was provided by my voluptuous wetnurse, Tarantella, as she pirouetted above me. And yes, like you I found it got on my cape, matting the ermine in a way that vexed mummy so, and in fact was the only thing that would tear her away from Anstruther the under-gardener as he toiled adjusting the Villiers engine on his mower. Who was this Two Unit you speak of, was she one of those spacey new-world student teachers that so proliferated in Australia in the nineteen seventies (or so I am told) and did she ever lactate for you?

  33. sPam Ayres Says:

    Whilst gettin’ free milk dohwn me neck,
    I spilt it! Not one tiny fleck,
    Nor yet a micro-scawpic speck,
    A sno-white rivulet, cascade, then beck.

    If scientific-types did check,
    Wiv measurin’ dee-vices all hoi tech,
    (invented in those Republics Czech)
    There were enuff to drown Quebec!

    Diluvian quantities to wreck
    Me trousers, (or as we call ‘em keck
    s), the empty bottle hit the deck.
    (Somebody pass the triple sec)

  34. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    Olly mon chou,

    Ah, yes – how prettily the children write; how they flatter! I must admit that I perhaps did have a purpose in my cunning abandonment of a rhyme for neck, that it may have crossed my mind to attract the attention of a certain self proclaimed sonneteer. And perhaps there was a time when my head would have been turned; but no more.
    No – I shall remain within my métier; the one thing that sustains me.

    Now, Olly – here’s an interesting rhyming scheme for a sonnet;

    C A L A I S

    Oh, and one could, as a momentary diversion, make of it an acrostic. Acrostics are much loved by children – who play untroubled by the concerns of men, before they have learned about words such as honour and commitment, who are not bound by the pledges they take.

    Let me see…

    C A L A I S

    Callous
    Alone
    Left
    Abandoned
    Inhuman
    Stricken

  35. sPam Ayres Says:

    A double acrostic was slightly beyond me…
    Calmly
    Alone,
    Layabouts
    Await
    Insights
    Surreptitiously

    Will a mesostic do instead?
    corusCating
    wAves
    spLash
    becAlmed
    vIsitant
    aShore

  36. Bosie Douglas Says:

    CALAIS! Ah, Bloody Mary’s is not the only heart on which that fateful word is etched.

    Charlie
    Alfred
    Lapdog
    Alby
    Impossible
    Sorrow

  37. Some Bloke Says:

    I too wasn’t ever a milk monitor, nor the only kid with a watch who’d accordingly be the bell ringerer, and the enderer of recess and lunch time. I used to hate the bell ringer with the same venom as that one guy on the bus who’d tell the new driver that he’d taken the wrong turn and we’d have to back track. Hey, on the way home, I’d be the first bloke up to the bus driver, but going to school was another matter entirely.

    We had our own CALAIS for that bloke:

    Cockhead
    Arselicker
    Launch
    Attack
    Indisposed
    Satisfaction

    Mind you, I always thought a Calais was a Holden model, and I wouldn’t know this type from Adam West.

  38. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Some – Mate!

    Too bloody right! I had a Calais a while back:

    Calais
    A bit of a wog chariot for mine, but
    Lighten it up by stripping the interior
    And do a bit of work on the donk, like
    Injectors, nitrous, headers, balance the crank and it’ll fly until you
    Stack it because it still handles like shit.

  39. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    I was milk monitor once, but never the bell ringer. I didn’t have a watch until I was 35 years old. Before that my skills were like Rain Man in the movie of the same name. Someone would ask the time and I could tell them, “12:34″, “2:17″, “8:02″.
    I wasn’t always right.

  40. Some Bloke Says:

    Funnily enough, TwoHats, we knew a bloke in the olden days who could do a real time replay of all the great Melbourne horse races in the 1980’s, so accurate that we felt we were wearing silks and aboard the powerful beasts. He’d time the run 300 out from the judge to perfection, and we’d whip all the way to the line and salute the judge, such was his masterful and accurate rendition.

    Much later I happened – dont ask me how or why – to find out that Shooma Lacky had finished 14th in the Doncaster Cup of 1984, and not 15th, as this other bloke had described. There were no protests for 15th against 14th that day, so this bloke was actually a fraud a cheat and a charlatan.

    Sadly I turned to the bottle around this time and I blame the lying “historical-race-caller-from-memory” for that.

  41. Quasimodo Says:

    …wish I’d been a milk monitor…

  42. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Or the blackboard monitor, who got to go outside and whack the dusters with a proper wooden ruler a foot long with imperial inches calibrated by eights and thirds and a small section given over to the new-fangled decimetre and used to stand in the sunlight in clouds of chalk like Elijah coming in glory.

  43. Petra Fide Says:

    In these times of new-fangled electronic presentation instead of honest-to-goodness chalk & slate, does the classroom of today require a monitor monitor?

  44. Heath Ledger Says:

    Coops! I said it before. You’re a minda, mate.

  45. Some Bloke Says:

    Jay

    That “small section given over to the new-fangled decimetre” was actually on a ‘yard’ ruler, I think you’ll find, and moreover the peak spot on the ruler to inflict maximum damage on a 9yo calf. The ’sweet-spot’ as a Richie Benaud might describe it.

    A good ruse to subsequently pay the teacher back would be to wedge a new yellow chalk into the gap of the duster. How we laughed when he tried to removed that particular Venn Diagram ~ the milk went up me nose.

  46. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey! Heathey mate!

    Yeah, glad it’s you; I was a bit worried you were shitty after I took you for that fang in the HQ Historic. Yeah, all good eh? Until I got a bit sideways in the essees and I should a made sure your harness was tighter, but mate, you know, when you put your hand out to grab something for support in the spin and “thonk” you’ve grabbed me old fella, well, I thought the old luck had changed.

    Total misunderstanding on my part – I thought, “Shit, I’m a ghost now, and Heath’s better looking than that bush pig from the Largs tavern when I won the supercarts in ‘78, so why not?”

    Totally my fault mate – I’m a man of the world and whatever happens with you and that other cowboy fella is ace with me. Good luck to youse both.

    You want limmos for the big day? Matching XU1s? Just ask, mate.

  47. Heath Ledger Says:

    Ash, mate. The way I figure it is, if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. If folks want me to be gay icon, well I’m proud to be a gay icon. And if they want you to be a minda legend, well fill you boots, boyfriend.

    Y’see, when you spend you life (and death) in the public eye, you really can’t afford to be too choosey about what the public makes of you. Make the best of it, I say. As the song goes: “It’s not a test but a lesson learned in time.”

    And you know – I don’t even feel tired anymore.

    So, whaddayasay mate – no hard feelings, eh? (phnarr, phnarr). Carn. get over here and gissa snog….

  48. Sigismund Says:

    Goodness Olly; this talk of childhood and rulers has sent the memories flooding back!

    I remember as if it were yesterday the time I asked my rather strict kindergarten teacher Mr Symes, “Sir, if it’s called a yard ruler because it is one yard long, and you can also use it to measure the schoolyard, and you can also sweep the yard with a yard broom, why is the yard broom not a yard long too?”

    And Mr Symes looked at me fiercely and said, “Now Arbuthnot – what does Wittgenstein have to say on the matter?”

    And I said, “That we can neither say that the ruler nor the object being measured is one yard in length?”

    And he said, “And don’t ever forget it! Now bend over boy – here’s why you can also call it a metre rule!”

    Then he gave me six of the best – da thwack, da thwack da thwack, etc – beaten out in iambic hexameter on my bum. He was a great teacher; I’ve not forgotten my Wittgenstein, nor the metre of a hexameter to this day!

  49. bigolly Says:

    Well, a delightful insight into the early years of some of our contributors there and nice to see that heaven is becoming a place in heaven for some of those who are no longer actually with us.

    I must admit, I thought that a hexameter was an instrument for measuring witches’ curses and that.

    Perhaps that would be a Hexometer.

    Love
    Big Olly

  50. Some Bloke Says:

    Big’s just running up the number comments to try and claim a new record

  51. Some Bloke Says:

    Big’s just running up the number OF comments to try and claim a new record.

  52. bigolly Says:

    That is a bit harsh, Some, although I do appreciate the attention to detail.

    Love
    Big Olly

  53. Petra Fide Says:

    Big hasn’t got time to sit here typing for the sake of it… he’s been off to see his stylist!

  54. A Cat Says:

    Miaow

  55. Olly's Stylist Says:

    Tres chic! Viking helmets are soooooo ‘07

  56. Petra Fide Says:

    Who decided that cats like milk? Obviously they do, but I’m sure feral cats don’t go raiding dairy farms of an evening. Well, relatively sure…

  57. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Heath, mate.

    Guess what? There’s a couple of grid girls from the San Remo GP up here. Dunno what knocked em off, something to do with drugs or something like that; I didn’t ask, I was too busy looking at their tits mate… anyway these birds are seriously HOT.

    So – I’m doing a bit of spade work, you know, blah blah blah… and said I knew you mate, (hope you don’t mind) asked if they liked cowboys etc, and guess what?

    They want to meet you!

    Grid girls often aren’t the brightest lights on the Christmas tree, mate – they didn’t even know you were a cowboy; they said you were an actor! Like, you only PRETENDED to be a cowboy so you could get to be in a film about cowboys.

    I said, yeah, whatever. But the thing is; they want to get together with us – like a double date – would you mind? I tried to get you out of it, but they really insisted that you had to be there. So – whad’ya reckon? I’d be really grateful, but I probably wouldn’t snog you though.

  58. bigolly Says:

    Thank you, my stylist. As you can see your efforts to show my public a bit of the real me seem to have been well received. I can’t believe that I lacked faith in you and apologise for the big tantrum in the salon. Particularly the vase with the branches with all rubber gloves on them.

    Generally I would not encourage this forum as a vehicle for promotion of romantic entanglements but on reviewing comments of the last few months I can see that it has been used for little else. You know who youse are.

    On that basis, bring it on.

    And with luck Petra can solve the burning milk issue and get some closure.

    Or do I mean “and get Some closure”?

    Love
    Olly

  59. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly, what burning milk issue?? Blinking heck you’re right! That’s the cocoa ruined…

    As to the ‘who discovered cats like milk?’ question, I bet it was the Egyptians. If the ungrateful furry feline bastards turned their noses up at a saucerful, they’d find their brains removed via those very same noses & then their mummified corpses encased in clay pots & entombed (or do I mean enpyramided?). If only our Milk Marketing board had taken such a hard line against Thatcher…

  60. Some Bloke Says:

    Big

    That last delivery to Petra Fide went straight through to keeper, as they say. A masterful delivery to a bats(wo)man completely unaware she’s played and missed. (Not sure of the political correctness of putting brackets in a noun.)

    Mind you, I disagree with Olly’s Stylist. For mine, the Allan O’Dale look is never out of vogue, except for that brief patch during the heady Summer of 68 and associated political uprising of the time. I have it on fairly good authority that the Robin Hood tights look went underground for a brief period there, but bounced back with a vengeance during the Summer of Love in 1969, and has never been out of vogue since, till Big dump the look just recently.

  61. Heath Ledger Says:

    Ashie, mate. I’m there! San Remo chics eh! Better dress to impress – That’ll mean m’good black jeans – the ones with only one knee out, a clean-ish, blue singlet, nicely worked back with a black ‘n’ red flanny.

    Hang about, ya don’t reckon it’ll harm m’gay icon image, do yas? Maybe I should take the ski-mask and goggles, just in case. Now, listen, mate, I’m sorry but you gotta pretend to my date, at least for the first four drinks – don’t worry, you’ll get the hang of it. Believe me, poofs get easier access to tits mate – it’s like a bloody nork-express gold card, mate!

    Then, we just let ‘em “turn us” mate. Tweezy!

  62. bigolly Says:

    Oh, goodness me, it’s getting hot in here. But let’s leave our clothes on, what?

    This steamy talk has given me an attack of the Vapors. That being the case perhaps I should lay down some rules;

    1. No Sex
    2. No Drugs
    3. No Wine
    4. No Women
    5. No Fun
    6. No Sin
    7. No You
    8. No Wonder

    There. In the unlikely event that anyone obeys them, that should keep things nice.

    Love
    Big Olly

  63. Carey, Wayne Says:

    Well………that certainly leaves me out. Not Turning Japanese are you Big?

  64. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Don’t tell me Wayne Carey is dead! I didn’t even know he was sick.
    Oh wait, I did.

  65. Heath Ledger Says:

    He started it! He said “tits” first.

    And, anyway, I seem to recall that you, Olly old mate, said “tits” ages ago in a poem about Malcolm Douglas.

  66. Heath Ledger Says:

    PS: Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits.Tits….

    Oh, f#$%! There goes my gay icon image! Thanks a bunch! Just when I was getting really well-adjusted.

    Feeling a bit oomy, now. Where’s the phenobarbatol?

  67. bigolly Says:

    Ok Heath, keep your open to the navel skin tight cowboy shirt on. Maybe I did, although I don’t remember it. Perhaps you are getting confused with my perfectly innocent reference to Ben Cropp “Aboard the Beva”.

    Oh, and Wayne, I do welcome you aboard but warn you I have ample supplies of capsicum spray on hand should you decide to engage in any harmless, light hearted high jinks.

    Love
    Big Olly

  68. C C Rock Says:

    Now that Wayne is here, and on the issue of physical abuse of females, I recall once sharing a house on Cross Road, Hawthorn, with two other fellows and a store dummy (who went on to be one of the country’s leading journalists).

    At any rate, my two more active housemates – let’s call one “O” and the other “Chiuso” – and I were awoken from our slumber one evening by the shrill noise of an argument outside our house on Cross Road. More a domestic than a cultured argument – lot’s of “fuck off Bevan” and “you fucking ….” etc – for the benefit of those of the fairer sex I shall not elaborate.

    Anyway, it was clear the disagreement was between a male and a female voice. After some continued obscenities, the female voice continued, shrilly, and there was silence from the male. In the middle of the next “you’re a fucking…” from the female came a thud, and the sound of the female going “ouuugh”. That made her even more shrill, and seemed to confirm her theory that he was a fucking arsehole, because she kept screaming that he was, interrupted by further “thud” sounds, and grunting explusions of air from her

    By now the three of us in the house had gathered at our front door, wondering whether we should venture outside to tell them to take their disagreement elsewhere. But on hearing the violence we clung together in fear, not daring set foot outside in case a Wayne Carey sized individual took umbrance with our interference and starting assailing us.

    We did the brave thing – called the cops.

    The voices trailed off, so we thought that the coast was clear enough to venture outside.

    The police arrived at about the time we got out there. We, together with the two officers looked at the shape of the fearsome individual who had been engaging in this violence as he teetered off down Cross Road in the opposite direction to the limping female he had been laying into. He was probably 5 foot 2 and built like Harry Potter.

    I will never forget the look that the policeman then gave the three of us, as he looked us up and down knowing that we had thought it prudent not to intervene – a mixture of disdain, pity, horror and utter contempt.

    We scuttled back inside, to console each other that we would have made little difference if we had interevened earlier, and that she was still walking so she must be OK etc

    to quote Sylvester the Cat – “oh, the Shame!”

    I wonder what Mbutu Btanga would make of it, were he alive?

  69. Some Bloke Says:

    Oh, so that’s you three blokes who walk around town with the paper bag on your heads. I just thought you were some wanker, tree-hugging lefties who were making a statement about the horrors of plastic bags, as it applies to the northern dugong off the coast of Coral Bay, WA. Mind you, you don’t hear from the northern dugong while he’s hoeing into the Chicken Crimpys and tabasco sauce, but you do hear from him when he’s dead from strangulation from the plastic bag.

  70. Northern Dugong (spectral variety) Says:

    wooooo…..oooooooo

  71. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly, please can I have a special exception from rule 4?
    Or is my time up (along with my stumps, or whatever it was Some Bl(o)ke was on about)?

  72. Petra Fide Says:

    … I meant ‘exemption’ not ‘exception’. Lor my vocabullairy is getting as bad as my gramma.

  73. Il Chiuso Says:

    Hey, sometimes the bravest thing to do is to walk away from an argument. Granted, on the occasion described it was not the bravest thing to do, but I’m just saying that sometimes it is.

    I also have it on good authority that one of the three in question, having been out on the pull on the evening in question but with no luck, had harboured thoughts of going out to console the poor female, in the hope of some, errr… “quid pro quo”, shall we say. That was before she got her punctured lung.

    Shouldn’t we be talking about milk?

  74. A Cat Says:

    Miaow*

    (* “yes” in cattese)

  75. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Heath Mate – talk about milk! Jesus – I went over to pick up the birds from their flat; all nice, bit of aftershave on, clean jeans, box of Cadbury Roses; you know- the whole deal.

    Anyway, I knock on the door; no answer. So, I have a peek through the window, and bugger me – they’re in the bath! Together! I tell you what mate it was SPECTACULAR.

    So, I figure I might as well have a quick one off the wrist while I’m waiting. Get set up, off I go – but then I notice – now get this – the bath is full of milk! Jesus mate; that just about did it for me then and there. Christ! I’m thinking Heathy boy and Coops are in for it tonight. Those two would have made a wet piece of string stand up and take notice.

    But I hear a man’s voice; ultra poofy (no offence) and I look in and there’s an ugly old fag in a velvet jacket with a green carnation in the button hole, reading them a poem; get this – about milk! “Oh milk, thou art so pure, Oh milk, how dost thou endure” etc etc or some other shit. I mean Fark me – now I’ve seen it all. This guy was so poofy he made you look like Charles Bronson (no offense) and yet the girls are lapping up, giggling etc. “Oh Oscar, you’re so witty” etc. Jesus; how pissed was I. Then the poof stops reading and starts crying “Oh Bosie! where are you?”(Sob Sob) so the girls jump out of the bath and start trying to comfort him…

    Oh sweet Jesus; that was it for me. I tell you mate; you’re on to it when you say chicks dig poofs; where do I sign up? But this other bloke – he was the poof de la poof; I don’t know if I could fake that.

  76. bigolly Says:

    Dearie dearie me, to quote a great man.

    The laying down of rules has made things even worse than they were before. I blush to see what has become of the commentary. Youse are all a lot of sweary Marys.

    Welcome aboard, CC Rock. What a charming “histoire” as the French would have it. How I wish I had been there (pauses, reddens slightly, runs finger round now unaccountably tight collar, clears throat ).

    Now, what was that about milk again?

    Love
    Big Olly

  77. Petra Fide Says:

    (putting on baritone voice & false beard). I’ve run out of milk.
    Is this ironic, or just poor planning?

  78. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Rules! That reminds me of an interesting encounter I once had in the Central Market carpark with an old Nazi. Well, I was in my car queuing for the ticket booth and inching (or really footing) forward in periodic stages, when I saw this old Mitteleuropean gentlemen in an alpine hat (and some other nondescript civilian clothing obviously obtained for him by the local Odessa Kontakt) walking in front of my moving vehicle in a manner which, but for my lack of velocity, could only have been described as suicidal.

    Now, I have never fully grasped the relative priorities of pedestrian and vehicular traffic but I assumed that he would stop for me. Boy was I wrong! This mad obersturmbahnfuhrer stepped right in front of my car and, slamming down on the bonnet the withered hand that had consigned countless Jews, gypsies and traffic-code-violators to the Camps, said in a voice of pitiless command: “THE ROOLSS! YOU MUST OBEY ZE ROOLSS!”.

    Then, pausing to fix his eye on mine and plant his message in my brain with Lugerlike despatch, he then resumed his annonymity and shuffled off to lose himself in the crowd of shoppers, to all the world a harmless Bavarian pensioner. But I’ll wager, if Simon Wiesenthal had been with me when the old bastard barked his order, he would have instantly recognised some monster from the Camps with a nickname like the “Angel of Death” or the “Black Beast”.

    Of course, unknown to me, the old fellow was actually on a zebra crossing at the time I seem determined to run him down. Still, a chilling encounter nonetheless!

  79. bigolly Says:

    Run out of milk!

    Where I come from a sheila risks a chest kicking if she lets that happen.

    Love
    Big Olly

  80. bigolly Says:

    Jay, I missed your excellent story while I composing my own witty rejoinder to Petra (see above, precautionary side holding is advised).

    I can see it now.

    Chilling.

    Love
    Big Olly

  81. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly, similar rules apply here. I can’t give you them exactly as they aren’t written down & are subject to change at any time.

    PS Jay, did you know all our car parks are run by ex-Nazis? At least I think that’s what NCP stands for.

  82. Some Bloke Says:

    I have it on good authority that old Fruity-Stokes etc was involved in a plot to kill Hitler, one that would of worked, but for Polly Waffle giving him a glass of off milk from a Nazi-sympathizing cow, and accordingly the plot was foiled.

    I didn’t want to remind the old boiler that Polly died in the Great War, I just ignored him and said “oh” and “mm hmmm” at the appropriate intervals. Now that I think about it, maybe he divined that the 4yo Hitler of the Great War was evil ~ you know, sort of a Damian meets Rosemary’s Baby meets Terminator 2, with a cameo from Heath Ledger.

  83. bigolly Says:

    Oooh, I know. I bet Heath plays the goat what allegedly bit the young Schiklegruber on the privates.

    Love
    Big Olly

  84. C C Rock Says:

    Rules, rules, rules….

    I have not been able to find a version of “Trivial Pursuit” which contains the rules for “Take a slug or show us your slug Trivial Pursuit”.

    Perhaps you, Big Olly, or one of your correspondents from the afterlife (?….Heath, Mr Wilde) can tell me where the transposed rules to this merriment can be found

  85. Odessa/Süd/Treffpunkt-Barossa Says:

    Weblog Abfangenreports……Identität des Oberst Beckers ist aufgedeckt worden!……Dringlichkeitsverschiebung wird angefordert!……

  86. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Some, my dear boy. It’s only for the sake of your father’s memory that I tolerate such fiddle-faddling nonsense! Well, I’m not a braggart, particularly since the mission so obviously failed, but yes, as a matter of fact, if you must know, I WAS involved in an attempt on the life of the late German Chancellor, but it had nothing to do with National Socialist dairy products… although you may be surprised to learn that dear Polly did indeed have something of a hand in it…

    Yes I know she’s dead and I know she died in the Great War…I’m not a blithering idiot and I do manage to recollect on occasion the fact that the for me the only beautiful thing in this weary world left it long ago, the only person whose life was worth dying for, the only person whose memory is worth living for…Yes I recollect it well enough on occasion – the occasion being every, single, day of my long, lonely life……

    But you’re a sweet boy not to remind me of it. Your dear father would be proud of you! One day I may even let you hear the story.

  87. Hanna Glawari Says:

    Bigolly,
    Do you remember drinking your milk on the asphalt after a downpour before recess, and noticing all those worms of various girth and states of squishedness littering the schoolyard? Where did they come from; and why don’t we see them anymore?
    And didn’t you hate those kids whose parents owned delis, and who brought to school with them sachets of Quik or the equivalent; and even flavoured straws through which to drink and mask the taste?

  88. Heath Ledger Says:

    The milkworms! You’ve seen ‘em too… Were the little ones cobalt blue and weeping? And the big ones hepatitis yellow and humming? Right, well, girlfriend, that wasn’t Quik you were mixing into your milk.

  89. Heath Ledger Says:

    PS: Ash mate, it may come as a surprise to you but I wouldn’t want to look like Charles Bronson in a blue fit – and I’ve had blue fits – it comes of mixing phenytoin and carbamazopine in a manhattan – so I know all about it.

  90. Heath Ledger Says:

    PS: C.C., my friend – “Take a slug or show us your slug?” Can’t ya do both? In my experience of male exhibitionism, it seems pretty essential for the exponents to be completely loaded.

  91. Heath Ledger Says:

    PS: Jeez Olly – I doze off for a bit and all of a sudden I’m a shew-in for the protodictator-testicle-biting-GOAT!!?? What the…????

  92. Heath Ledger Says:

    PS: That’s it now, everyone just leave me alone. I don’t need yas. I don’t need anybody. Quite content just to lie here with a shot of a Bourbon and a headful of happy memories -suppressants.

  93. Maud Lin Says:

    Pass the bottle!

  94. Shortly to be Curried Remains of The 1904 Goat Says:

    Look, it wasn’t like that, it didn’t happen, it was all a misunderstanding, & I’m not like that! I’ve nothin’ agin them, I’m just not. Heath, shave the beard, mate ’cause I’m not co-operatin’ with this travesty of… oh hang on, in Austria??

    Well ok, so there was this particular pair of lederhosen that I remember, but I’d had a few… now I feel sheepish.

  95. Star of India Menu Says:

    1904 ……………….. Curried Goat $10.90 (pilau rice complementary)

  96. Friedrich von Trapp Says:

    No, you fool, that was the goatherd, remember. He was high on a hill and lonely.

  97. Liesl Says:

    Are you incorrigible or is that Hans?

  98. Friedrich von Trapp Says:

    That was Kurt. There is no Hans. Unless you’ve got another telegraph boy writing on your empty page….

  99. Liesl Says:

    Just testing.

    You passed.

  100. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    The Star of India! “Heaven’s Light Our Guide”

    I’ve outlived the last Knight Grand Commander of the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India – wasisname? Ah, yes Raja Ramarajakopalan, Maharaja of Travancore – mediocre fella – but a winning smile, a kind heart, and an open cellar. They were the days, pink gin on the verandah as the palm trees turned black against the blood-red sunset. In the distance, through crisp the haze the periodic crack of horsewhip on a truculent native.

    The Raja was simply dazzling in his kit – the cloak of light blue silk-satin, trimmed in white, the collar of the order – roses and lotus flowers entwined like the embrace or our two countries, fateful embrace…

    All gone now, the jewel in the crown…the Indian Empire; what a dream, what a mesmerising dream. Did we do the right thing, after all…?

    Such an enchantment..Rajamaja, Meggawatti, Cheeky Chesterman..bloody heat..heat and dust..where are they now? Far, far away…

    Am I the only one…the only one that woke from the dream?….ZZZZZZZZ ZZZ

  101. Some Bloke Says:

    Could be the 100th comment if I play cards right, not that I’m one for the milestones, you plug away, play each comment on its merits and the results will come.

    I was just remembering that one time when it was freezing and we had to drink our cold milk. It was so cold I considered pulling a jumper on over my spartan short sleeved khaki shirt. In the end I just shivered once and all was well.

    But, By God, Big, it was cold!

  102. Some Bloke Says:

    Oh, Trumped by Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington “Fruity” Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret), of all people.

    No, fair enough, he deserved it, and as I said, I’m not into milestones..

    ($&%#ing stupid old fart, probably started his post 4 $&%#ing days ago and couldn’t even stay awake, the old fo-)

    No, well done, Sir Lamington, etc, you deserved it…..

  103. Petra Fide Says:

    I’m just going to put Charlton Heston’s gun on eBay, unless anyone here wants it?
    (Took a bit of prising, but I don’t give up easily)

  104. bigolly Says:

    Well my pretty chicks, what work you have done in my (unnoticed) absence.

    Yes, I have been unable to tend this garden of mine due to an unseasonal bout of full body sniffles which have rendered me inert.

    I will retire to my bed again soon but you should know that I have aches in places where I didn’t even know I had places (thank you George Burns or someone).

    Should it be that another day in bed and a hot lemon drink are not adequate to cure me, I hope that this forum continues in my absence. Though on second thought, most of the contributors do so from beyond the veil so perhaps it won’t be as bad as all that.

    Presumably in Heaven one is not susceptible to the sniffles. Unless you inflict them on yourself while you are up there, hey Heathy boy?

    Love
    Big Olly

  105. Heath Ledger Says:

    You mean this is HEAVEN? I figured I was in some sort bogan purgatory doing time for my more rash life-choices. But this is it? Dear God. Where’s my drink?

  106. Jay Dedewth Says:

    I didn’t know the Spartans wore khaki. What did the Athenians wear – grey melange?

  107. Liesl Says:

    Sad to hear of your ill-health, Big Olly. I do hope that you recover speedily.

    In the event that you do not, I feel obliged to tell you that in Grade One as I was sitting crosslegged drinking my curdled milk I was informed most reliably and confidentially that rain is angel snot, usually sneezes.

    Take tissues with you.

  108. Some Bloke Says:

    Now hold your horses and dont get too picky.

    I had spartan down there as a lower case adjective, not a noun, so the meaning here is frugal, yet you’ve decided to upper case it and change the dynamics dynamically.

    So, my advice to you is not to be too professional, or else you just might get your head smacked in, in the Spartan sense of the word.

  109. Jay Dedewth Says:

    I didn’t mean to pick. Sheesh! Some people! As a matter of fact, I was treating the whole thing as a non-visual, verbal joke; it was a play on the spoken word, which makes my capitalisation of Spartan neither here nor there. But I confess, in retrospect, it does sound a little bit sneery. I should have added “Boom! Boom!” at the end to give proper tone to the thing.

    So hold the headsmacking please.

  110. Some Bloke Says:

    Well I cant go anywhere, anyway, until I finish my bottle of milk for lunch, so you might be safe on the head-smacking-in score.

    Otherwise, “Top Oval, 3.30pm. If I’m not there on time, start without me.”

    Boom-Tiss!

  111. Samuel Taylor Coleridge Says:

    In Manresa did Fatcracker
    The stately cycle-sheds decree
    Off limits to the prying eyes
    And easy, Spartan-smocked surprise
    Of boys grades 1 to 3.
    So, on the cantilever wall
    In colours bright and letters tall
    Warned all who clutched their milk and trembling read
    “Eschew the cursed spot, with holy dread,
    Where grows not any incense-bearing tree
    Beyond the lawn-press-subterranean ramp
    That hurtles to the caverns dank and damp
    Of the senior boys’ cream-brick lavat’ry.”
    (But, oh that deep romantic cavern which slanted
    Below the cell where Sr. Romanus chanted
    Down to changing-rooms where I did bless
    The sight of many sinous rills – but I digress)
    “Tred not upon those pestilential grounds
    Lest thou contract the rigours
    Of the outbreak there of chiggers
    And suppurate with red and welted wounds”

  112. Petra Fide Says:

    Tea & sympathy, Big Olly.

  113. W "Bill" Gates Says:

    Olly:

    Q. What was the previously starving ancient roman cannibal when he finished the amazon?

    A. galdiator (glad-he-ate-her)

  114. Nicky Dovstoyestsky from 'The Deer Hunter' Says:

    Q. Did you hear about the Happy Roman?
    A. He was gladiator.

    “I don’t know… I guess I think about the deer… Being out, maybe.
    I don’t know. I think about it all. Hell, I like the trees, you know? I
    like the ways the trees are, all the different ways the trees are too.”

    “I’ll tell you something, Nick. I wouldn’t hunt with anyone but you. I won’t hunt with a yo-yo.”

    “Well you’re a fucking nut! Olly is a yo-yo! A Fanta yo-yo. No worse, a Leed lemonade yo-yo.”

  115. Mme Stanley Says:

    You stupid boy! As if you would ever make a milk monitor! All you were good for was walking clockwise in the pool to mix the chlorine.

  116. The Prisoner M33427 WHEATLY, G Says:

    Dear Big Olly,
    I haven’t seen the ‘blog for some time due to -ahem- business commitments, but I would like to comment on a change.
    The correspondent Some Bloke was just that. A typical aussie knockabout, not real good about expressing himself, but honest and blunt.
    We watched his painfully faultering romance with Miss Fide a few months back.
    well after making 2017 number plates, I see that Some never mentions her at all now.
    Rather, he has this disturbingly reminiscent* hero worship of the old english General/Admiral, going on about him all the time and saying how good he is. And doesn’t the old serviceman lap it up. “The love that dursent speak its name” if you ask me.
    I expect “Some Bloke” is actually a false name and he is a 26 year old police woman. Watch out general! But the food isn’t bad in prison.

    See you when I’m off home detention for Whispering Jack’s antipenultimate last tour, II.

    Glenn

    *for someone from the inside

  117. Robbie Burns Says:

    Aye, Sammy me bonny laddie; grounds does rhyme with wounds, and let no mon tell ye it dis nae!

  118. Petra Fide Says:

    Maybe I need that gender realignment after all…

  119. Lizzy Says:

    That Wheatly is a no good lag to the screws and Bea’s gonna steam his head, you wait and see.

  120. Some Bloke Says:

    Well, you respect your elders and this is the end result.

    I think that The Prisoner M33427 WHEATLY, G should go and try to eat 50 eggs in an hour, for the hell of it, or re-tar the road so quick that he earns a few hours precious spare time for his jailbird mates.

    As for his comments about the lovely Petra Fide, stop beating it into the ground. STOP LEANING ON ME. GET OUT THERE YOURSELF. *

    * If you’re allowed weekend passes or periodic home detention, that is.

  121. Samuel Taylor Coleridge Says:

    Look, I’m terribly sorry, I was interrupted midstream by an insurance salesman from Porlock at the door. Here’s the whole thing:

    In Manresa did Fatcracker
    The stately cycle-sheds decree
    Off limits to the prying eyes
    And easy, Spartan-smocked surprise
    Of boys grades 1 to 3.
    So, on the cantilever wall
    In colours bright and letters tall
    Warned all who clutched their milk and trembling read
    “Eschew the cursèd spot, with holy dread,
    Where grows not any incense-bearing tree
    Beyond the lawn-press-subterranean ramp
    That hurtles to the caverns dank and damp
    Of the senior boys’ cream-brick lavat’ry.”
    (But, oh that deep romantic cavern which slanted
    Below the cell where Sr. Romanus chanted
    Down to changing-rooms where I did bless
    The sight of many sinuous rills – but I digress)
    “Tred not upon those pestilential grounds
    Lest ye contract the rigours
    Of the outbreak there of chiggers
    And suppurate with red and welted wounds”
    Lo! Mindful that the awful ban
    Included not grades 4 to 7
    And scorning yet the ire of Heaven,
    Bold Olly to the bike-sheds ran;
    Agog with milk-inducèd heresy,
    He reason’d ’gainst the prophecy
    Of taunting schoolboy sniggers
    ’Round loins bedeck’d with chiggers:
    “What seeks this Fatcracker to hide from me?!”
    So, on he ran, when from afar,
    Like Nino on his mowing-car,
    A garbled sound oppress’d his fever’d mind.
    Beyond the Paddock (strewn with rocks)!
    Beyond the cavern’s boist’rous jocks!
    (Amid whose swift half intermitted burst
    Huge fragments vaulted, as by dæmons curs’d,
    Of soft, testosteronèd football socks).
    And he began to fear what he might find.
    A damsel with a dulcimer
    In a vision once I saw
    Could I revive within me
    Her song and symphony,
    I’d tell you straight these moans came not from her.
    Yet drawn he was to trace the hellish sounds
    Which issu’d from behind the bike-shed wall
    Then sank in tumult by the massy Hall
    Like cries from cricketbat-belabour’d hounds.
    Down to the sunless sea he grimly ran
    Past changing-rooms odiferous of man
    And clear’d the stupid, pointless ramps
    As if this earth in fast, thick pants
    Were breathing with one concentrated will,
    Then, ’round the wall whose looming dread
    O’ershades the space behind the shed,
    Beheld the gorgèd sinews of the rill
    With which Manresa’s Master found his thrill!

  122. bigolly Says:

    Coo. Sam.

    Hast knocked me into a relapse. Peel me a lotus. Sorry, Lotos.

    It is almost like being there. Not the movie with Peter Sellers, the real being there with lower case letters.

    I am pleased to see that you have not been wasting your time up there along the Heath Ledger lines that so preoccupied you when you were with us, so to speak. Or have you? Never mind, a masterwork though likely to discourage the rest of us whose powers are along more modest lines.

    Love
    Big Olly

  123. Samuel Taylor Coleridge Says:

    You are most kind dear boy… Bugger! I’ve just been told what a sinuous rill actually is. I’m afraid I had in mind that it was quite another thing altogether. That’s the last time I ask advice from Kenneth Williams!

  124. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    Indeed Olly, Mr Coleridge has presented us with a masterwork; surely the most chilling cautionary tale against the use of opium a poet has ever given us.

  125. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Sammy – Mate! You’re a ledge – dead set.

    You’ve inspired me mate. I’m gunna write a poem too.

    Here I go…

    In Adelaide did Mikey Rann
    The V8 Super Cars decree
    Because the Vics
    those freak’n pricks
    had stolen our Grand Prix

    Oh shit, one of the grid girls just walked past an I lost me train of thought.
    Well, best to keep it short & sweet eh?

    Anyhoo – like my rhyme? I thought it was a bit clever how I made it ambiguous; like you can rhyme decree with Prix or Vics with Prix depending on how you say it.

  126. Samuel Taylor Coleridge Says:

    [Sigh]

    Dear oh dear! Well, what can I say, Mister – ah – Cooper, yes, well the metre is certainly masterful, but the subject hopelessly tawdry and the narrative abjectly vulgar it speaks not to the soul but assails the intellect, undeniablly, if paradoxically, telling us nothing yet telling us enough for us to be glad not to have been told more.

    “Prix” I think would have to be be pronounced in the French manner (a) to avoid confusion as to potential genitalia theft and (b) so as not to leave “decree” hanging without its proper counterpoint, rather like Wilde’s celebrated “neck” blunder…the bitch.

  127. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Thanks Mate!

    I guess that means you liked it? I know yours was better and everything, but I’m kind of new to poems. In fact it’s only my second. The first was about cars. (the Calais – maybe you saw it?)

    Gee – two poems about cars. I guess I’m kind of specialising in car poems.

    Maybe I’ll do one about the Torana next – but the only word I can think of that rhymes with Torana is banana. No; hang on – nirvana too.

  128. Brent Staker Says:

    Jeez! What was that? One minute I’m standing behind big bad bustling Bazza, next minute I’m standing with Ashley Cooper oglin’ the grid girls and writing pomes, then a minute later I’m on the bench. That was some hit Bazza, better than the shit Benny used to give us.

  129. Bram Stoker Says:

    Moor ha ha! Good evening Olly, I have come to suck zyour blood.

    (door knocks)

    Oh no, it is Frankenstien zee monster.

    (enter frankenstien’s monster)

    Monster: Raaa! Everyone calls me that

  130. Samuel Taylor Coleridge Says:

    Oh, goodness. Is that the time? Must dash. Getting utterly spazoid this afternoon, y’see and if I don’t rush, Mr Heath is liable to start without me.

  131. Henry Irving (Sir, decd.) Says:

    Stoker, this really is the final ignominy!
    I will not countenance this ridiculous “wolf-man” costume, & as for the script…
    Take those porcelain fangs out while I’m addressing you, man! Listen, I don’t give a toss what Ken Russell thinks of ‘Lair of the White Wyrm”, I don’t rate your odious phantasmagoria… Don’t flap your cape at me, you jumped-up little clerk!

  132. 1920s Dance Heston Says:

    Well here I am
    In the hell of Big Olly’s damn nether world.

    Don’t worry about Heath ledger or those other undead, I machine gunned them as they flung themselves at my security garage door.
    I got back in time to get damn Julius Ceasar into check, but deuce it he gets out of it when I’m on my day trips. How does he do it?

    I find in the future past hell of heavan that apes run everything! But worse than that, the soilent fruity lamington on which we feed every wednesday is people.

    I brought two damn tablets from the Arrarat pharmacy for the children of Israel, but on realizing that for children it was one tablet, I smashed them*.

    Oh yes, something about gun lobby, that’s what you damn want you insatiable Egyptian pyramid builders. Good get Michael Moore, you damn pig, I worked a lot harder for my Oscar in Ben Hur, and more people died making it than at damn dirty stinkin’ Columbine.

    Anyways, I am damn tired now, my mother is a leper and can’t think of any other damn films so get damned out of here Olly, you dirty stinkin poster.

    Yours,
    1920’s Dance Heston

    *Writers Guild demands I damn well mention those dirty stinking apes at “You Can’t Say That On [damn] Television”

  133. R. M. S. Titanic Says:

    … — …
    … — …
    … — …
    … — …

  134. R. M. S. Titanic Says:

    . . . – - – . . . . . . – - – . . . . . . – - – . . .

    That’s better, you idiot. You’ve just spent the last hour signaling: “Shsshssh!”

  135. Iceberg Says:

    ?
    !!!!!

  136. Goldberg Says:

    Oi-vey!

  137. Heath Ledger Says:

    I’m not undead, am I STC?

  138. Vey Says:

    …yes?

  139. Arte Johnson Says:

    Verrrrrry interesting ……. but stupid!!

  140. Kenneth Horne Says:

    (rapidly afixing blonde wig) Sock it to me!

  141. Henry Gibson Says:

    My name is Henry Gibson

  142. Jake Blues Says:

    I hate Illinois Nazis.

  143. Odessa/West/Treffpunkt-Chicago Says:

    Weblog Abfangenreports……Identität des Obersturmbahnführer Gottfried ist aufgedeckt worden!……Dringlichkeitsverschiebung wird angefordert!……

  144. Obergrupenfhurererer Says:

    Mein Luftkissenfahrzeug ist von den Aalen voll

  145. Odessa/West/Treffpunkt-Chicago Says:

    Ich verstehe nicht, was Aalen ist. Aber, wenn es Engländer ist, die dies zu Ihrem hydrofoil getan haben, dann regnet Bestrafung auf ihnen von den Himmeln.

  146. Obergrupenfhurererer Says:

    Entschuldigen sie. Ich bin sehr traurig. “Aalen”, ist typo fur “Aale”. Jedoch regnet es alles auf den Kopf Englisch, für die Majorität der Zeit.

  147. Sigismund Says:

    Big Olly

    I understand you’ve been unwell; may I use this forum to wish you a speedy recovery?

    Now – back to song lyrics. The subject of hearts and tattoos has been much on my mind of late.

    A young lady named Jordin (I know!) Sparks tells us that:-

    “You’re on my heart just like a tattoo,”

    Well – I hope not. That a perfectly healthy young woman should have her chest opened up and her heart tattooed seems absurd. A tattoo on the chest, while unpleasant to think of, is at least feasible – but a tattoo on the heart? I’m sure you take my point, Big Olly.

    Perhaps we may allow the young lady some license – perhaps we have a simile, and by heart she is really referring to a place in her affections. And by “like a tattoo” she means that it seemed like a good idea (while drunk perhaps) to offer this person a permanent place in her affections, not realising how silly it would look as she aged.

    yours

    Sigismund

  148. Petra Fide Says:

    Get better soon Big Olly.

    PS Sigismund, I surmise that if Jordin’s heart doesn’t have a tattoo (a regular, pulsating beat) she’s equally in trouble? The Edinburgh Military example would be an entirely different problem.

  149. Jay Dedewth Says:

    I don’t care where she keeps it, a chic with tats is still a tramp with a stamp.

  150. Lydia Says:

    That’s a bit harsh.

  151. Sigismund Says:

    Big Olly

    It troubles me also that Mr Terence Trent D’Arby (where do they find these names?) makes a similarly misguided, although perhaps less permanent request to his intended when he invites her to, “sign your name across my heart”.

    Across his chest, perhaps, Big Olly, as part of some kind of immature but harmless love-game, but across his heart? I suspect that Mr D’Arby has not thought through the full implications of such action.

  152. Jacques-Louis-Raymonde de Pommes-Frites Says:

    Ah sink you will fahnd that M. D’Arby got ‘is namm from ‘is fahzer, 14th Marquis d’Arby, whose family for generrasshuns fed off ze back of the working class.

    Why I cannot say…some of those backs are varry dirty and they keep moving around and upsetting the crockery!

  153. Richard Sarkey Says:

    I may only be the second bestest drummer in popular beat combo The Beatles, but at least I nevuh sang “Two hearts, beatin in just one mind”.
    Catastrophical anatomical failure there Phil Collins! hu huh huh.

  154. Pepe Lopez Says:

    Hullo segnior Muchos Grande Olle
    Zee internet, it dissapoints, no?
    Pepe reads the -ahem- grandees interst pages of the hoochie girls and he thinks “carrumba! it never ends” then he sees the same picture again. “You see”, he says to him-self, “it is finite, no?” “Si”, he answers.
    So it is with Mochos Grande Olle. It is only the matter of times, but always Milli Vanilli benefit only faux drummer segnior the Ringo kid apears,
    I theenk.

  155. Glenn A Baker Says:

    Well on songs,what about thre one what goes:
    “I wanna make you my lady,
    make you my baby
    Love is so hard to find girl…etc”

    Now surely (outside South Australia) it is one or the other?
    What do you think Olly, if you read this anymore?

  156. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey Ollster, Mate!

    I reckon the two best songs about cars are:

    1: My Little Deuce Coupe by The Beach Boys.
    2: My Corona by The Knack

    Ash

  157. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Make you my baby lady. I dare say this can be done in certain States south of the Mason-Dixon line with their notoriously lax infant marriage laws!

    What you can’t do, however, is to:

    (a) go to the Isle of Greece (which is not an isle but a peninsula surrounded by archipelagoes [oi?]); or

    (b) go to oneself.

  158. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Make you my baby lady. I dare say this can be done in certain States south of the Mason-Dixon line with their notoriously lax infant marriage laws!

    What you can’t do, however, is to:

    (a) go to the Isle of Greece (which is not an isle but a peninsula surrounded by archipelagoes [oi?]); or

    (b) go to oneself.

  159. Freddie Quince-Jellie Says:

    Something very peculiar is happening in “Imagine Nation”. The blog entries has been peppered with emotikons which weren’t there when they were originally posted. As I presume only Olly has this power it is from him that I demand the explanantion.

  160. C C Rock Says:

    Olly’s fallen over, and he can’t get up….

  161. Some Bloke Says:

    “I’ve been to Paradise, but I’ve never been to ME.”

    So sang Charlene (not the mechanic from Neighbours who married Scott). I hear her. I’m in the same boat. I’ve caught the 171 bus out to Paradise, SA, quite a few times, but I’ve never been to ME: Maine, Maryland, USA.

    I’m just as poignant about that fact as she is….

  162. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Speakin’ of Neighbours, what’s going on with Paul? First he’s good, then he’s evil, now he’s good (sort of) again. There was that sleazey lawyer to hate, but now he’s moved to that other show, Dystopia. So that leaves Toadey to become the bad one. But I think he will morph into the new Harold, now that he’s gone (boo hoo). :(

  163. Some Bloke Says:

    “Hooray,” shouts the excited new talent, script in hand, “I’ve just landed a role on Neighbours!”
    Reads on.
    “Oh, as Toady’s love interest….” :(

  164. StabiloBOSS Says:

    I think Lizzy will be back as someone’s love interest (maybe Toady). Her music career is crap. And, by the way her eyes roll around in her head during that dance show, it looks like she’s too much on the wacky tabbacky. She needs the strict discipline of the Neighbors set. They are a lot stricter on the drugs et al since Candy Man Dougy had everyone doped up 24×7 (series 14 I think it was).

  165. The Ghost of Bouncer Says:

    “Woof.”

  166. Some Bloke Says:

    I never recovered from that Neighbours episode where Scott, I think, wanted to get a tatt, so everyone donned fake tattoos to discourage him. He was relieved to see Helen Robinson didn’t have one, but she says, “oh but I do” and pulls up her dress to reveal a tatt on the inner thigh. Oh, the humanity.

    Mind you, that episode was lifted straight out of Happy Days that one time that the new American-Beauty-retired-general-type-cop wanted to run Fonzie out of town because of his leather jacket. Thereupon the entire Days gang donned leather jackets, either Mr C and Marion.

    You could imagine the “Hoo-woooos” that the last 2 generated from the live ordience when they sauntered in. :)

  167. bigolly Says:

    Hey. Hey. Hey.

    Enough.

    I hate to bring down the heavy gauntlet of censorship but I will not tolerate discussion of Neighbours here.

    Ah, who am I kidding. I will, as well you all know, tolerate pretty much anything. Of course I am more than a little disappointed that we have not heard from Harold, but nice to see that Bouncer made the effort.

    I am not fully recovered. Still coughing up wheelbarrow loads of grey phlegm and all aching down my generous flanks, but I should be well soon and may even throw you clamouring masses some sort of bone.

    Love
    Big Olly

  168. Glenn A Baker Says:

    > <
    L
    _

  169. The Ghost of a Flea (from behind the left ear of The Ghost of Bouncer) Says:

    “The Reader must expect to Read in all my Remarks on Neighbours Nothing but Indignation and Resentment.”

  170. The Very Rev. Monsignor Felchey Says:

    Now, look, I really must protest. Animals don’t have souls – so, no Bouncer in heaven – but even if they did, and, even allowing, by extraordinarily generous extrapolation, that did insects did as well – notwithstanding that humans would thus be astronomically outnumbered by millennias’ worth of defunct fleas, tics, gnats and flies – what sort of Paradise would it be if the latter were permitted to continued to feast parasitically on their former hosts?

    And, anyway, I thought Satan was the Lord of the Flies.

  171. William Blake's Patented Incorporeal Flea & Tic Remover Says:

    Guaranteed! 100%! Successful!

  172. The Ghost of Another Flea Says:

    Will you get on with it? There’s ten to the power two hundred & thirty six thousand nine hundred & eighty five of us waiting for our say… & that’s just the morphs in my taxon.

  173. Dr. Seuss Says:

    If fleas bite on fleecy hides,
    do bees fight on leaky hives?

  174. StabiloBOSS Says:

    In an alternate, parallel universe the readers of “Oh man! It’s Small Stan” are discussing the telepathic channel 11 story about the underbelly (they were allowed to show it in alternate Melbourne).

  175. Some Bloke Says:

    They were supposed to be allarda screen Underbelly where I come from, but all I got in that time slot was some soppy soft-porn love story involving a gentle, kind-hearted and loving tattoed hired killer and the foul-mouthed wife of his best mate. ‘Benji & Roberta’, i think it is called.

  176. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Oh yea, that’s the one. The poor bloke. How elz is he s’posed to earn a livin’? Benji, the two of us need look no more. We both found what we were looking for.

  177. Micahel Jackson Says:

    (ow!) I’m shippin’ Neverland over to Austria.
    My family life will seem perfectly normal there (ow!)

  178. StabiloBOSS Says:

    StabilloBOSS thinks Olly’s readers should compose a haiku, or limerick, or talk about a song that has badly grammarized words and spelling, or reminisce about primary school, or exploits on the sporting field, or….anything.

  179. bigolly Says:

    Well thanks for the concern, Stabby. I was starting to wonder many things. Has anyone even noticed I was gone? Has the readertcontiki set sail never to return? Why have I started to grow hairs here?

    Anyway, I have thrown off the illness thanks to various homeopathic remedies that I have employed, involving no small amount of walking widdershins around stuff in cemeteries at midnight and similar times.

    I hope to be able to lure the readerjunk back to the rocky shores of this intoxicating exchange of views, mainly by dressing up in all filmy clothes then letting them get wet and stick to me so that you can see everything. And I do mean practically EVERYTHING.

    Having said that I can imagine that there will be a fair bit of stopping of the crews’ ears with wax and tying of other persons to masts and stuff so possibly it won’t work.

    Wish me luck, you Wombles!

    Love
    Big Olly

  180. A Womble from Wimbledon Common Says:

    Good Luck, Big Olly!

  181. StabiloBOSS Says:

    So Big Olly? How’re they hangin’? Looks like it’s just you and me, and the Womble (but I already know how his are hangin’).

  182. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Oh, and I never did believe in Michael Jackson anyway. That was just a story our parents used to tell us to scare us away from the bad neighbourhood.

  183. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Wombles, on the other hand, ARE real.
    One crawled through a hole in the fence at home. It was good company for a while, but when it ate one of our dogs we decided to ask it to leave.

  184. StabiloBOSS Says:

    …aaaannnyway, as I was saying, who’s looking forward to the Olympics? It’s a leap year so they must be on this year. Although 1900 wasn’t a leap year but they were held in Paris that year. Strange.
    Save that one up for a quiz night. (Refer to Olly’s first ever post which was on the subject of quiz nights, ahh the memories).

  185. Petra Fide Says:

    I noticed, Big Olly & indeed parcelled up a frog in the skin of a womble for you to afix around your neck. I can’t guarantee it’s efficacy as a remedy, but as a fashion item it should complement your new ensemble perfectly.

  186. A Womble from Wimbledon Common Says:

    how can people be so unkind??

  187. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Cripes!, when are we gonna get to 400 posts at this rate?
    Wasn’t there a girl in the Wombles movie that looked like Jenny Agutter?

  188. BasilsBoots Says:

    Did anyone see the actor Shawl MacCauley on the Oscars awards last night? That bloke’s been on every station except C31.
    I’d like to see him on C31, but I think that’s what you do at the start of your career (apart from Graham Kerr).

  189. Some Bloke Says:

    There’s a bloke who looks like the actor Shane McConnikal on SBS, cant quite recall the night, maybe it’s the wierdo sex shows on Fridays.

    I fancy he’ll pop up on a Nescafe ad, one of those serial types, but updated to the noughties, you know, bloke on a computer chats to bird from England on blog, etc.

  190. Petra Fide Says:

    I’m unconvinced at the likelihood of the above.

    Anyroadup, former Nescafe ‘idol’ Tony Head is now appearing in BBC drama ‘The Invisibles’ as the husband of Big Olly favourite Jenny Agutter. How’s that for a spooky coincidence?

  191. The Ghost of Henry Matisse Says:

    Ah ‘ope yeu lairk ze neur Decor, Mssr. Olly

  192. David Bowie Says:

    Coorrr! Reminds me of when I used to do drugs. Is’ bew-iful.

  193. David Bowie Says:

    Did you enjoy my album, “The Lodger”?
    Maybe I was ahead of my time again.
    P.S. I’m not dead, just resting.

  194. Some Bloke Says:

    You have to hand it to Big for going back and colouring in all of those lovely patterns. No wonder he has no time for a contribution….
    Still, he’s putting his textas to good use, and should be made the mil monitor accordingly, providing he (a) has a watch, and (b) disowns those woeful ‘The Beatles’.

  195. stabiloBOSS Says:

    I’m surprised at how little verbal abuse Olly is copping for his non-blogging. It shows that he has more important things to do, which depresses me since I have only less important things to do.

  196. Some Bloke Says:

    Stability
    He’s done on a top job on your picture, but-

  197. Petra Fide Says:

    Two mentions of Ms Agutter, & still no sign of Big? Unprecedented.

    PS Mr Bowie, glad you’re not dead & wonder if you’ll take the opportunity to duet with Bing again via Big Olly’s afterlife connection blog?

  198. Rex Ona Says:

    Hey, enough of the bagging of Big. His scintillating insight has given meaning to my life at a time when everything was at a low ebb.

    Love
    Big Olly.

    I mean Rex Ona. Curses.

  199. Petra Fide Says:

    Is it really you Big Olly, or am I dreaming?

  200. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Big Olly has so lost lost interest, he’s there like “Blog, whatever”, as a nod to the new, but a few years ago he’d have said, “Blog schmog”.

    i, howvere care, as post 200!!! LOL !-)

  201. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    I meaned to say,

    I, however, care as post 200!!! :-) but it seems pointless now, otiose, if you will.

  202. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    :-(

  203. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    I’ll make my comment as soon as I’ve crossed the schoolyard.

    See you then.

  204. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    (Let’s see if this works).
    Olly, a man being interviewed on the news said he “would leave no stones unturned” until something something. Surely, he should have used the singular?

  205. Petra Fide Says:

    How is it that within these hallowed pages sometimes a colon-dash-closing parenthesis turns into an ‘emoticon’, & sometimes remains in pure text format? (confused: which is nowadays represented by squinty-face-with-question-mark-emerging-from-forehead. Which when you think about it is a bit of a cop-out, using a symbol to represent itself! Although if you don’t think about it & actually get on with thinking about a relevant topic, you could do something useful, such as write a blog, or an application or whatnot. When I say ‘you’ I of course refer to myself, & when I say ’say’ in this case I don’t, I type it.)

  206. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Just seeing what will happen

    :-)
    ?;)

  207. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    What the devil is that on the starboard bow of my post? Not bloody cubism is it, ‘cos you needn’t think I’m a fan of those degenerate daubists!

  208. Bosie Douglas Says:

    I’ve been wondering the very same thing, Sir Lamington, and with the same sense of dismay, I can assure you.

  209. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    What was that? Who’s there?… Settle now, Fruity – just the wind. You’ll be seeing ghosts next.

  210. Heath Ledger Says:

    I’ve been seeing it for days. Thought it was just a side-effect.

  211. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Dear God. There it goes again. Show yourself, I say!

  212. Heath Ledger Says:

    Can’t you see us? Over here, old man…

  213. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    What the devil are you playing at, Olly? You’ve rigged up some phonographic contraption behind the wainscoting, I’ll be bound.

  214. bigolly Says:

    Well, all sorts of fun and games in my sort of absence. I will confess that Rex Ona was an enormously witty pseudonym, or “Nom de plume de ma tante” as they say in France.

    As for you, Vice Admiral, perhaps your hearing aid is picking up radio transmissions? I certainly haven’t been fiddling ’round with the dado.

    As for “Leaving no stones unturned”, I don’t know. I am still grappling with a lotto advertisement I saw today which bore the slogan “Multi’s made every week.” The position of that apostrophe troubles me deeply.

    Love
    Big Olly

  215. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    There now, where was I? That’s right, I need to hoe, in a spectral way, that bit of the main oval that has sprouted a sour sob. Did I tell you about the main oval, Big Olly? It’s a perfect ellipse, I did it myself.

    Oops, there’s the dinner gong, I’d better get back to the residence.

    More banter tomorrow, chaps.

  216. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Look, it’s changed colour!

  217. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Ha-ha! I’ve cracked your little code you sourkraut-eating loons. Just like at Beltchley Park! Now I can make you change into any shape I please. Here we go!

  218. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Now for a blue one please!

    Dash it all! Back to the drawing board.

  219. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Well what have we come to? Olly has to get his sister’s children (correct use) to fiddle up a coloured square gimmick on the page to keep the readerHMASAustralia happy, and buy him more indolence time. Let them be distracted by that, so they keep posting and worry not about his lack of input.
    Re the coloured boxes, they are magnificent, but they are not war.

    Whatever,
    ADO

  220. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Hey! It’s the same blue one like before! Woo hoo ;-)

  221. Juror 12 played by bloke who played Arbogast in Psycho Says:

    Olly’s innovations remind me of something novel that Big Brother did once, ooohhhh, let me see, days ago. They had a fairly unattractive opinionated midget, but were faced with the problem of people turning off in droves until they could evict her. :-)
    She “broke a leg” in the never tiresome Friday Night Games.

    “Well, if it doesn’t gel it’s not aspic, and this isn’t gelling.” :-O)

  222. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    How the blazes did you manage a blue one? We need you up at the Park, old man, right away!

  223. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Not that I watch it, but if BB thinks we will turn on in droves to see annoying freaks complaining (above their station to, I might add) about not getting the respect they deserve – when they do – he should have looked at SBS’s ratings outside of the World Cup.

    It is pleasing, not that I care because I don’t watch it, to see the demise of that fat turd Kyle, and I’m talking like a hard to pass stool in that analogy.

    BB is heaps weaker than “So you think you can Dance – Australia” and “Ramsey’s Kitchen Nightmares” and…….Sh#t, it’s nearly 7.00……..

    [ends

  224. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Just trying something here:
    :-0

  225. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly might not have written much, but his revamp has inspired me to find a Spiragraph! (Assuming you know what they are?) :-~

  226. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    I now advance my theorem that the intensity of the complaints of Big Olly’s indolence are proportional to the square of the disance from the last Beatles blog, plus “e” to the power of the base 10 logarithm of the distance to the last allegation of Heath Ledger’s sexuality.

    Plus or minus 10.

  227. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    My mistake, it should have read “is proportional”.

    Hey, give me a break, I’m (or was anyway) a maths teacher.

  228. Petra Fide Says:

    I thought you had it right the first time, the complaints are multiple but the indolence is singular. The sentence I mean. I don’t have the foggiest about maths, unless it’s some variety of diagram, graph or statistics.

  229. bigolly Says:

    Deary me, a controversy. How delicious!

    Surely Chuck should have used “is” ‘cos he referrs to “the intensity” which is singular. I think it is called the subjunct or something. So, like when Dean Martin in “Sway” says he can hear “the sound of violins long before it begins” that is right cos he means the sound not the violins. They are the objective. Probably.

    I hate to take the group out of its lyrical comfort zone, but when it is a matter of grammar, there should be no fear nor favour.

    Love
    Big Olly

  230. bigolly Says:

    PS: to put it in terms that you may find easier to follow, dearest Petra, imagine a Venn Diagram where the universe is grammar and there are 2 circles, one is “fear” and the other is “favour” and they have a complementary set which is….

    No, I am going to have to think about this a bit more.

    By the way, is it “complementary” or “complimentary”?

    I am almost sorry I started this.

    Love
    Big Olly

  231. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly, don’t be sorry! You know how I appreciate a Venn Diagram. I find the overlap between “fear” & “favour” to be a particularly interesting area for contemplation.

    Complementary is matching, complimentary is for free. So in theory, you might be presented with a set of complimentary complementary napkins. I think that’s right. Or did I make a complement slip?

  232. Petra Fide Says:

    …& how exactly does Dean Martin manage to hear a sound before it begins? Is it an auditory hallucination, a hitherto unexplored problem with space time relating to stringed instruments (string theory?) a metaphor or what?

    The awkward subjunct subject reminds me of this bit of quality advertising copy “…restores your teeth’s whiteness”. Mine were gritted.

  233. Petra Fide Says:

    : & , were missing from the above post. I’m heading for an F.

  234. Not Some Bloke Says:

    But that deuced pattern gives me away :-( ….

    What I’d like to know is how the dickens big transferred the images from that contraption in the first place. You know, it looks like a telescope and you put it to your eye and turn the column and behold!

    Whatever they’re called, I know that they came in Show Bags, so maybe that show bag that Big was complaining 7 or so blogs ago wasn’t as bad as first thought. Mind you, 7 blogs ago, Paul McCartney was stilled married, to one or the other. I got a feeling Harrison, G. was still alive back then, too. Certainly Ringo had no talent, but that wont narrow the time frame down.

  235. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    I see that mention of my theorem has produced a reference to remaining live Beatles members and the only good dead one.

    Now to await Ledger.

    Zounds, an outbreak of Salvation Jane! Excuse me, but I must attack.

  236. Dean Martin Says:

    Listen, sister, when you drink as much scotch as I did every day, the violins are playing non-stop in your head…

    where’s my glass, Sammy?! No, not your eye, you knucklehead

  237. Joseph Levitch Says:

    Dean, Dean, there you are Dean.
    I forgot you were dead.
    I am still alive, but I am like a bloated 80 year old Novak Dokic.
    And the only violins I hear are the lonely ones that play in my heart for our lost friendship.
    Woe is me.

  238. Some Bloke Says:

    This is me :-) , I do not know Not Some Bloke from Adam. ;-)
    Father, I was working on a quadratic occasion, namely:
    y=(x2-x-2)/(x2-1), a faily simple quadratic I’m sure you’d agree, whatnots on +1 and -1, etc, when lo and behold, something made me look at that devilish shape and think of the “The Beatles”.

    For penance, Father, may I line the oval with a think rope to prove your supposition that the oval is a perfect ellipse:
    x2 + y2 = 1

  239. Petra Fide Says:

    Whichever ‘Bloke’ wanted to know: the ‘telescope with bits in it’ is a Kaleidoscope. As in ‘the girl with kaleidoscope eyes’ (‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’).

    That’s The Beatles reference out of the way with. Or was it ‘Star Trek’?? (However, still no Ledger reference)

  240. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    BLOKE!!!! How many times do I have to repeat that what you have given me is the equation for a circle. You’ll be the death of me, which is pretty devatating for someone who is already dead.

    It’s x2/a2 + y2/b2 = 1.

    Write it out 20 times, here on the blog so I can see it.

    Never in all my days…..

    Would you like to see them play the AFL grand final on a circle, Boy??!! Of course not. Lord, give me strength.

    Woops, I missed a dandelion.

  241. Petra Fide Says:

    … & ‘an’ h, but I expect to be pounced on for my next misstake ;)

  242. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Just a couple of points, Elton John, then unknighted, sang Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds*, and don’t tell me that didn’t equate LSD, a drug in them days apparently.
    Olly is right of course re Dean.
    I was one who thought:”I can hear the sound of violins long before they begin(z)”
    I thought he could hear the sound long before they (being the violins) begin to play, but that would make for the difficult rhyme as above, but Dino could get away with it a a drunken slur (which that actually was).
    :^)

    *The Beatles may have hummed it as well

  243. Petra Fide Says:

    So The Beatles chorused nasally on Elt’s recording? Or perhaps you meant that they made a version of similar quality without exercising their vocal cords?

    I’ve a theory as to why Dean was prone to hallucinatory violins. Surely when the moon hit his eye (like a big pizza pie) it gave him concussion?

  244. bigolly Says:

    Interesting theory, Petra. That would explain why (returning to “Sway”), that “Other dancers may be on the floor, dear but my eyes can see only you..”

    Clearly his vision was being obscured by bits of pepperoni and that.

    Love
    Big Olly

  245. Petra Fide Says:

    Quite so, Big Olly. Also getting a frequent Kick in the Head can’t have helped matters.

    Although as one of the more myopic amongst the readeroilrigwhicisn’tonstrike , I sympathise all too readily with his limited visual depth problem.

  246. Petra Fide Says:

    Karma! I missed out ‘an’ h this time. Verily, I Have reaped the wHirlwind…

  247. Dean Martin Says:

    eh, what would you bums know about me?

    It seems to me as if this is all a bit of a flirtation for Ms Fide – as far as Mr Bloke is concerned “no my friends he’s not her brother…” and I am sure Olly will “miss the way she walks”…

    Pour the wine!

  248. Some Bloke Says:

    Did anyone else notice that the increasingly reticent Big mentioned “Sway” in the the same sentence as “dancing”. If this was not an intentional reference to the film classic ‘Dirty Dancing’, then it was an unintentional one.
    If it’s latter, it proves conclusively that ‘Dirty Dancing’ is Big’s favourite film, starring the excellent Patrick Swayze and Tracey (?) Mynosehasdisappearedthroughfrequentbotchedplasticsurgery. (She changed her name over a period of time.)

    And Father, no wonder I failed Maths 1. now walk to the residence, but stop half way and come back once you realize that you wont make the return tip by the end of lunch.

  249. Dino Says:

    You know nuthin’ of me you bums, like the time I was palming money when a croopier and I went on the whirly gig and all the coins fell out of my pocket. I was in more trouble than Jerry and I during the filming of Partners with my boss, as you can fancy.
    I had Skinny Domarto kill him years later.

  250. Dean Martin Says:

    Hey! Who is this “Dino” guy, and what’s his gig?

  251. Dino Says:

    I meant when I was a croopier, I should say, and as for “Dean Martin” and his question, Gerry is getting on fine and doing well and I am proud of him [round of heatfelt applause] so how do you feel now you bum?

  252. Petra Fide Says:

    Mr Martin, I would’ve got into a state of high dudgeon about your attack on me, but I’m afraid of heights. Just because you’re Matt Helm, doesn’t make you an expert on chicks.

    As for Dino, I thought you were really animated when you played alongside Fred & Wilma.

  253. bigolly Says:

    OK Some, got me.

    Such is my devotion to Dirty Dancing that I refuse to actually watch it for fear that I will be disappointed. I take the same view of “Ghost” for that matter.

    Now forgive me if I am mistaken but isn’t Dino both the nickname given to Dean Martin and the name of his son?

    Didn’t his son die young by crashing either a helicopter or a Ferrari? In which case are we dealing with Dino or the Ghost of Dino? In fact, are we not dealing with the ghost of Dino in either case or did I invent something?

    Love
    Big Olly

  254. Jay Dedewth Says:

    In the words of Sister Margaretta, I hate to have to say but I very firmly feel, that Michael Bublé does a better version of “Sway” than Dean Martin – and Julie London’s is better than ‘em both.

  255. Jay Dedewth Says:

    PS: I am with you, Petra, re violin clairaudience. Even more mind-bending is the idea espoused in “Fernando” that “every hour, every minute seemed to last eternal years”.

    Well, (a) if the first minute lasted an eternity, you’d never get on to the next to see how long it went, let alone onto the first hour, and (b) what is an eternal year – it’s a contradiction in terms. What they really needed was something to fill out the scansion, like “seemed to last a longish year” or perhaps “a whole leap year” or even “siderial years” although I grant in the latter case, you’d have to allide the “ial” to a consonantial “yal” to reduce it to one beat – as Madonna so deftly achieved in “Materyal Girl” – but I digress.

    The really annoying part is, even supposing that what ABBA are struggling to tells us is that every minute seemed to last a year, then surely every hour would have seemed to last not a year but 60 years, n’est-ce pas?

    I don’t know – Come back Hotel California, all is forgiven.

  256. Jennifer Grey Says:

    Excuse me, Mr Dedewth, I don’t want to seem all special-subject-ABBA-lyrics but isn’t it “every minute seemed to last eternally”?

    Anyhow, I could never understand how “since many years I haven’t seen a rifle in your hand” got through the translator.

  257. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Well, Jen, maybe my auditiory faculties were suborned by the Scandinavian accents, but that still doesn’t answer para (a) above.

  258. Some Bloke Says:

    (Sound of a doubtful fingersnap)

    Was it Jennifer Grey in ‘Dirty Dancing’ (or ‘Dance’ as hip reviewers call it)?

    I was thinking Traci Gold, but I may have failed to carry the 1, Fr Dennet, and accordingly all further lines of integration were doomed. That would explain my failing Maths 2, as well. I should of knowned that the teapot temperature wouldn’t of gone from 55C to 2,038C in 40 minutes, and that has doomed my tea-making ability ever since).

    Hark, is that the sounds of pan pipes that I dont hear.

    “There comes a time
    When lost for reason
    I need a guiding hand….

    etc…

  259. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    I fear that the ethereal potential romance that we had wistfully nurtured in this blog seems to have reached an asymptotic (if that’s the word – I’ve been dead some time now and the old noggin is rather decayed) level.

    Meaning of course that all the while, though Ms Fide and Mr Bloke seemed to be destined to have their paths cross, the plot of the curve has failed to reach its destination, although it gets ever closer, ad infinitum.

    Like the train tracks approaching the horizon – close but never crossing.

    At least an elliptical function, though not particularly exciting, would eventually close the loop.

    Rather E=mc2-ish, don’t you think?

  260. Jay Dedewth Says:

    You can’t approach the horizon – that’s paralax ain’t it?

  261. Dean Martin Says:

    hey, you – Dedewth!

    What would you know about music? Present your credentials – now!

    Buble is a caricature of a mockery of a metaphor of a simile….or somethink like that

    Harry Connick Jr started these attempts to relive what Frankie, Sammy, and others (modesty forbids I suggest “I”) presented years ago, but then realised that it was just cheap imitation, and the original is always the best.
    Buble says he is reinventing things, but he is doing so just as much as, say, Shannon Noll, has reinvented the song “What about Me?” of late.

    And Big Olly, I oughta……you leave Dino boy out of this……

    and in terms of not stating my deceased status, I am merely responding to the entreaties of the “spirit world” – this Ashley Cooper bum seems to not want “airs and graces” about being a stiff (if you’ll excuse the term, Miss Fide), and I just digging what he said about 1,000 posts ago

    where’s my hip flask?

  262. Some Bloke Says:

    Jay

    Give Fr Dennett some respect.

    The old goat was borned in the days of the Galileo furore (as put to song so well by Queen) and accordingly he COULD approach the horizon because the world was flat and that’s where you fell off if your rowing skills weren’t strong enough.

  263. Heath Ledger Says:

    Train tracks over the horizon. Freight trains rattle past a rusting trailer on the great, mid-western plain, wipping up dust and diesel smoke as the wail of the exhaust brakes and the desolate trump of its lonely whistle dopplerate into the distant black. Inside, as the dim lights flicker and slatted marionettes of moving shadow bolt across the peeling walls beckoning him to follow, a cowboy sits alone, head in hand, haunted by the past, by what he had and what he lost, irretievable like dew-drops on sagebush before the wind is up, and…wonders whether the neighbours have made any adverse reflexions on his sexuality.

    Nah – doesn’t work as a film script. But it certainly proves the Dennet theorem. Hey, can anyone spare a couple a dosylenol…Can’t sleep with all these bloody trains.

  264. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Modulation, Mr Martin, that’s the key (so to speak).

    Right when you think the song has nothing more to do, Bublé lifts it into a new key and, let me say, a whole new zone of refreshing audio excitement. It makes the song. Why couldn’t you do that? Oh, and he also does that wavy, “dance with me-ee-e-e-ee” bit, which is cool – I believe people with musical credentials? -is that it- yeah, well, they call it an arpeggio, but you don’t have to worry about that ‘cos you never did one.

  265. Heath Ledger Says:

    Hey, that’s my icon.

  266. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Sorry..that’s better.

  267. Tom Cruise Says:

    Mr. Bloke. I see you are a clear in the bold ellipsis. Welcome, friend and brother. You will now start receiving coded scientological messages through the medium of this blog that will assist you to the next level.

    Enjoy your time.

  268. bigolly Says:

    Hey!

    I like to think I am open minded and am prepared to tolerate a lot here, but you, Mr Cruise, can rack off and take your ludicrous claptrap with you.

    Of course, if John Travolta comes and says exactly the same thing, I would find it strangely compelling. But he hasn’t so get lost. We don’t want your type here. And if you are wondering what I mean when I say “your type” I mean stumpy zealots, whoresons, eaters of broken meats.

    Love
    Big Olly

  269. Dino Says:

    Olly you bum sonofabitch, Paully Lewis, that walking dollar sign monkey on sh#t, and I have previously posted on ABBA lyrics, but your bum X gen auduence, whatever that means, you bum, can’t remeber what cocktail they had 3 drinks ago.
    I damn well remind the bum readerStraatMalaccas:

    “One night
    at wart er loo
    Napoleon did surrender”

    No he didn’t, he surrendered to the Royal Navy about 3 months after Waterloo, having escaped the English and Prussian forces after trhe bum sent in the old guard on the evening of the battle, but too late, the bum, to sway the outcome. Yessir, the marimba rythems of defeat started to play for old Boney, you betcha.
    No amount of scat from even Sammy could strech that out for 3 months. Bums.

    All this talk about scat and bums, I’m feeling hungry.
    Oh well, here goes:

    you’re no
    body ’til
    some
    bod-dee loves youuuuu…..

  270. Tom Cruise Says:

    You’re very glib Mr. Glibolly.

    I’ll go now but you needn’t think I won’t be back. In the meantime, Some, wouvn-66768fh^%9gjfm”">>?.//

    Later, OK.

    PS: Those meats weren’t broken when I ate them.

  271. Earl Ronald Hubbard (with a girl on each knee) Says:

    Now see here Mr so called Olly, you cannot run down the beleifs of others like that. What if Tom is right, how stupid will you look when the spaceship picks you up when they come to make some more Easter Island statues.

    If you took a personality test (free if you give us all your money – YOU keep the tithe – how good’s that) I bet you would be low self esteem bully because you can’t read properly, or something.

    Got to run; Kate Cebrano wants to be a monitor, milk at that!

    Good sailing

    Earl R Hubbard (son of Mother)

  272. bigolly Says:

    Sure, Tom, that’s what all the eaters of broken meats say.

    As for you, L Ron, I am not as concerned about Tom’s beliefs as about his odious and unwelcome presence here. How quickly they forget how he treated our Nic. Then someone else’s, oh what was her name, Juanita or something.

    That’s what sets me fizzing at the bunghole.

    Love
    Big Olly

  273. Earl Ronald Hubbard (with a girl on each knee) Says:

    And whilst we’re at it, everyone knows that Marshall Ney was in communication with bad space men what teld him to send the Cavalry into the battle by fooling him that the British were retreating when they were really all going to do a presonality test and then 5th Grade (that’s not a yank word for school but a space word for cool) monitors in a spaceship that looked like a carrige powered by space angels that looked like horses pulled the Emporer to safety.
    He was mad, Napoleon. He kept dressing like Napoleon.
    I asked him in to do a personality test. He came in completely nude, a piece of bacon on his left ear and a banana in his hand and he said to my “earl, it eez about my bruzzer”.
    He passed the test with flying colours.

  274. Bill Collins Says:

    Olly, how could you! What tom did to Nicole, what about what she did to us in Eyes Wide Shut. Or Golden Compass for that matter, and don’t start me on the Days of Thunder much less Far and Away. Not far and away enough.

    Much worse that depriving the mentally ill of their medicines.

  275. CC Rock Says:

    that reminds me of the time that I was persuaded by a young lass who accosted me on King William Street, Adelaide, South Australia, with a clipboard and some innocuous (at the time) questions. I agreed to go with her to partake in the free “personality test”.

    It may have occurred to some in the readermodifiedbeercaninabeercanregatta that this may have been a naive move on my part, and I must plead guilty on that score.

    However, by the time I had gotten to question 73 of the test (some 20 minutes in), and had fully taken in the surrounding praetorian guard of Scientologists that seemed eager to make my acquaintance, I could smell a ruse……

    So I did a bunk, but not before completing the “personal details” section of the test with those of not myself, but one of my buddies – let’s call him “Brown” – and then exited the venue, with much querying of “what’s wrong?”, “it’s OK, take your time” and “stay, stay…” etc

    the scars and the guilt of enabling that “secret service” to get their claws into my friend – and yay, verily, they have – remain prevalent to this day

  276. Petra Fide Says:

    Bloody Nora! I behave myself for once & go to bed before the bewitching hour & look what happens. The entire ReaderD-Daylandingslittleships turn up & I don’t get to stick my oar in (as t’were). So I’m sticking them in now (in a trireme type arrangement):

    Jay: thanks for agreeing with me. It’s been many eternal minutes since that last happened!

    Dean Martin: I’ll excuse it, you’re a gentleman

    Dino: I remember that ABBA post, & I remember correcting it at the time: it’s ‘My My!’ not ‘One night’. Less contentious, & even less interesting.

    That’s enough oars for now. Although if I’ve to row to the horizon…

  277. Dino Says:

    Well it’s still wrong Toots, and when is the last time I got the lyrics right anyway?

  278. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Olly,
    When did sanshoes/sneakers become tainers? I thought mankind had defeated evolution, but see, things keep changing.
    That might be an interesting topic for one of your next blogs, although not much changes there [alt: if we can wait that long];-)!
    Haw:-) haw:-) haw:-)!

  279. Petra Fide Says:

    Toots?! (I’ve been called worse, I’ll cut my loses). I think we can agree, pop music is an accurate source of historical fact & even more reliable in matters of health & safety. I submit this recently heard example from Silverchair:
    “Set me on fire in the evening, everything will be fine”. Where did I put the matches?

    From similar sources, the answer to A.D.O.’s question appears to be circa 1990. I’m still baffled as to what ‘high-heeled sneakers’ look like. The trainers mentioned seem to mostly have sick on them. Eurgh.

  280. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Does Petra live in Enger Land or Frikken Iceland? I presume it’s some place with the 24 hour daylight because she never sleeps. (That might explain the dark eyes).

  281. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Parallax… parallax!

    Ye Gods, Olly, what Oriental demon conjured up that word of barbarous fiendishness from amongst the happy memories of an old man’s fireside? I must take you back to Cathay, dear friend, to understand. Exotic Cathay! But who remembers her now? The old China, of the Eastern Approaches, the China of stinking ports and fragrant opium dens, of the Forbidden City and the Foreign Concessions – not the modern wasteland of little red books and stiff grey tunics, red, red banners and the grim Victory of the People – no, long before the great stupor of demotic tyranny, there was, there, another place and time perched, lost and brooding, on the fringes of the world. I never saw it for real, but heard a story about it, once, when the old Intemperate – young in those days she was, I suppose – lay at anchor on the East China Sea off the great sweep of the Shanghai Bund.

    Shore leave had been cancelled due to some diplomatic indelicacy. I seem to recall there had been a State Banquet at which the then French Chargé d’Affaires, the Marquis de Pommes-Frites, had had the temerity to scoff at a high functionary of the Celestial Empress who had seen fit to let his napkin discharge the office of a handkerchief – well, of course, in those days, none of your Chinese was quite much used to Western ways, let alone the Diplomatic Corps’ own peculiar brand of fanaticism for all things unimportant, and I imagine it didn’t occur to the poor fellows that 3,000 years of civilisation wasn’t quite enough to excuse the choice of one square of linen over another. Still, that’s what the Chinese were like in those days, Olly old brick, and that, I’m sorry to say, is what we were like in those days. Anyway, fortunately no-one went to war over it, tho’ it did develop into a bit of a close run thing – but the Imperial Palace cancelled our shore-leave, all the same, and the West was barred from the East until further notice!

    I was a midshipman then and aching for adventure. Know better nowadays, ever since the adventure of someone I later knew came to its end in a dressing-station at Mons. But, then, you see, I was young and bold and cared only for the trivial ephemera of life. Yes, like the diplomats, I thought not a jot for what was important. (“Ephemera”, by the way, is a Greek word dear Always-Fartin’ taught me at Templestowe – never forgotten it – very handy.) Anyway, you can imagine how disconsolate I was at bein’ holed up aboard while the strangely beckoning hurly-burly of that Oriental port came and went in its ancient way without young Lamington Stokes ashore to savour and write home about it. Well, the Commander himself must have seen me and a brace of other middies moping about, ‘cos he came down to the Gunroom one night after dinner with a flagon of port and a story to tell that had us enrapt.

    A flagon of port, I should say, was a good thing in those days – a decanter of fine Georgian crystal filled with a pint of fine Portuguese ruby – but times have changed, I fear…Now, where was I? Ah, yes. The Commander, Captain Larkins – he sailed in those days – his desk-commission, as Admiral Sir Rosbite Larkins, GCB, DSC (without bar), Second Junior Sea Lord, came later, just in time for him to watch all our ships explode at Jutland… but I’m away from myself. As I say, Old Frostbite came to regale us with a thrilling tale of the Orient that would make us feel better for not having one of our own, and it went like this….

    Frostbite was there, years earlier, for the Boxer Rebellion! He was, at the time, First Lieutenant on HMS Incontinent, a ship whose memory, sadly, no-one lives to honour, and he recalled for us in graphic detail his 55 days at Nanking! The rebellion, of course, actually broke out at Peking, as we all now know, but for some reason Frosty got stuck at Nanking. A bit of a balls-up really ‘cos he was actually caught on a mission to recover a brush and comb which he left behind at a certain bordello. They were very dear to him – Oh! Don’t ask me why, Olly; that’s a whole other story – I think they were given to him by his late Commander, who served as adjutant to Captain Maitland when Bonaparte surrendered in 1815. Oh, yes, I saw Boney’s brush-set! Rather lavish, I’d say. Made of the finest cherrywood engraved with gold-wreathed “N”s. They’d fallen, so the story goes, from the Emperor’s portmanteau when he dropped it coming aboard the Belerophon at La Rochelle. Well, apparently, as Napoleon hesitated then stooped awkwardly to pick up his things, the sight of fallen greatness was too much for this adjutant, who immediately broke rank and stepped in front of him, exclaiming, in French : “No!… Permit me, Majesty” and gathered them up for him. Whereat, the emperor fixed him with that lucid eye, the grey eye that had seen the eagles parade through Vienna and Rome and Berlin… and Moscow… the eye that now quietly beheld the only English officer ever to address him by his proper rank. Well, the adjutant blushingly handed him the portmanteau then, as he proffered the brush and comb, Napoleon stopped him and said: “Keep them, Monsieur…and remember this day.” And he replied: “Your Majesty honours me.” To which the great man rejoined: “Ah, non, Monsieur, it is your gallantry that honours you. And if I could produce for you from my portmanteau the Star of the Legion of Honour instead of these poor objects, then perhaps you would know just how much.”

    Well! There we all were, as you can imagine, just hanging off the Captain’s words, as he poured another round. How, precisely, Napoleon’s hairbrush found its way to a whorehouse in Nanking, we never really got to the bottom of, but it was rollicking stuff all the same. But it gets better – or at least different. Turns out young Frosty was full bottle on all the top secret stuff about international espionage and the silver-for-opium racket and all that, except that secret agents in the Imperial Palace had pierced his cover or whatever, so they track him down to Nanking and made sure he was detained there on some pretext or another. Then they got the daughter of a high-ranking civil-servant to ply him for information at an embassy ball, only Frosty’s not biting, as they say, so her masters tell her to use parallax. Now, parallax, as you may well have heard is a sort of truth serum and a ruddy diabolical one at that, ‘cos it’s lethal. It’ll tell you the truth alright, but only once. Developed by the Austrians to extract the secrets from the Turk, it was against all the bloody rules to use it against people like us – but, then, Olly, I guess, to the Chinese, we weren’t people like us. You see, this, as I’ve always said, is where napkin-diplomats fail us and our foreign policy tends to come unstuck!

    Anyway, where was I? Ah, so, the little silver vial containing the evil potion is poured into Frosty’s champagne-glass, sometime between the polka and the military twostep, but in the meantime our almond-eyed Mata Hari has rather fallen for her dashing victim. They dance, they laugh, they steal a kiss in an alcove of alabaster and jade, and hold each other for one balmy evening full of the fragrance of jasmine and sandalwood – they talk of fortune and chance and luck and try to understand the difference, while the waltzes reel and the world goes mad around them. And then… then, returning to the table, Lieutenant Larkins, the gold braid of his court uniform catching the sparkle from a hundred lamps, shows Madam Wei-Xu-Lin to her brocaded chair, a vision in pale-blue silk, translucent skin glowing above a mandarin collar –all bright eyes and infectious laughter from behind her painted fan – then he swings his arm elegantly to lift the glass – the fateful glass. The secret agents approach silently through the throng. As he draws it to his lips, she holds his gaze and says with sudden urgency: “Now tell me quickly, why you have come to China?” He looks at her quizzically, then pauses and says: “Why, to find you, Wei-Xu-Lin…to find you” and raises the glass in a toast to her undying beauty. A look of horror fills her countenance. The agents bear down. Wei-Xu-Lin casts around her and, in an agonising moment, grabs the glass from her lover’s hand. The agents are running now, but too late. She drinks …then smiles and falls into his hapless arms.

    “I love you”, she says, and closes her eyes on a solitary tear.

    Well, you might have heard the proverbial pin! “Golly!” we said to break the silence as old Captain Frosty drained the last of the port. “Is that a true story, Sir?”

    He said nothing but gave us look, as he turned to go, which told me it was true. For I was to see that look again, many years later, in a shaving-mirror… hair-brush in hand.

    Ah, dear me! So there you go. And that, essentially, dear Olly, is the evil of parallax.

  282. Dean Martin Says:

    Everybody, loves somebody
    Sometime…

  283. Petra Fide Says:

    A Observer, I don’t want to Dis you, but Yarkshire isn’t quite in the arctic circle. Despite the lack of aurora borealis, we do however have an invention that enables me to stay up in the darkness. It’s known as ‘the lightbulb’.

    I’m glad I had switched it off & gone to bed before reading Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington “Fruity” Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret)’s stirring tale, else my pillow would have been wet with tears. Again.

  284. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Oh! Cheer up, my dear lass. It wasn’t all that bad in the end. Frosty married some-else.

  285. Dr Julius Sumner-Miller Says:

    I wonder if that is an incandescent lightbulb, Ms Fide, and on this topic, given the pending ban in parts of Australia of the incandescent lightbulb, what then is the status of the quartz halogen globe now so often utilised in light fittings – ie is a quartz halogen globe incandescent or is it “OK” in the new regime?

    Why is it so?

  286. Petra Fide Says:

    Dear Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington “Fruity” Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) (pause for breath): that’s a relief. I might cry again though. I’m no good with happy endings either.

    Dr Julius Sumner-Miller: Quartz halogen bulbs are incandescent, but will be ok under the new regime, as long as they meet efficiency standards. Over here, “Research” has shown that the new bulbs are dangerous to dispose of & not bright enough either. The government haven’t been able to do anything about this. Step in Royal Mail, who have admirably succeeded in stock-piling them instead of delivering them to their rightful owners. With the excuse that they can’t find the addresses. Thanks to our typical Blitz spirit, people are instead huddling round their plasma screens…

  287. StabilloBOSS Says:

    My reading habits are poor. And I did not want to miss Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington “Fruity” Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret)’s stirring tale. So I asked my good friend Sir Ian McKlellan to speak the words to an audio tape. I heard the first installment last night.
    Don’t tell me how it ends!!!

  288. StitchHearbeatahEMPLOYEE Says:

    If I pretend to be someone else does the pretty shape change?

  289. Christofer Lee Says:

    I’d have made a much better job of it, given the chance.
    (Re the pretty shape, apparently not)

  290. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Remind me to tell you chaps one day how the pretty shape changes…

  291. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Haha! A blue one at last!
    I think he’s got it… By George, he’s got it!

  292. Some Bloke Says:

    StabilloBOSS
    I’m waiting for the film version, starring Tom Cruise as “Fruity”, in the role that reprised his flagging career and made more money for L Ron Hubbard.
    As Midnight Oil sang:
    “L Ron Hubbard can save your life,
    Superboy takes a plutonium wife
    In the shadow of ‘Ban-the-Bomb’ we live!”

    I, for one, agree! :-)

  293. Tom Cruise Says:

    Nice goin’, Brother Some, you’re learning fast. You’ll be a megarich denizen of the planet of your choice when the rest of these scoffing, psychiatricized, drug pumpers are consumed in the Great Rotanic Conflagration.

    But I can’t do the film – don’t do fag roles, buddy. I do fags, just not fag-roles, OK?

    Why not get that psychoholic ex of mine and her drug-pummelled boyfriend to round up some their haughty, stuck-up, fake, frickin’ hollywood’s favorite golden-arsed nobodies for a film test? – just perfect for the cast of your degenerate, opium-ridden, collapsing-empire, we-all-really finished this time – type, film!

    Later, dood!

  294. (Sir) Larry Olivier (decd) Says:

    Nonsense Mr Cruise! It calls for the oratory talents & inherent gravitas only achievable by a great actor such as oneself. Pin back yer lugs & cop for this: ‘WOOOO!’. Was that alright love?

  295. The Prisoner M33427 WHEATLY, G Says:

    Life aint so bad on the outside you know Olly. I must confess that I am appalled at the quality of number plates and postal bags, but on a unit cost, how can one compete with the third world? And who cares for craftsmanship. Outside the ATO, nobody tries at work anymore. They just clock on, eat their lunch and go home to their same house in the same suburb of same city.
    Me?
    I’ve been pumping iron on the kid’s play-gym, until my 3 year old stuck me with a knife he carved out of soap. You should have seen the detail of the faux scrimshaw! And now, for reasons niether of us can fathom, I’m getting my wife to push the shot of steam iron onto my head.
    I’ll write you next open home day,
    Yours,

    Glen (20) Wheatly

  296. Lil' Lenny Says:

    Cooorrr, Mr Wheatley, I never thought of bein’ a record producer job. We had a career night at my school, you know it’s one of those places founded on Dickensian principles, Mutes, Chimney Sweeps, Pick-Pockets but no record producers. Will you come to the next one Mr Glen? I think some of the lads would like knives and pushing irons into people’s heads.

  297. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Wheatly a role model? Ha! Lil’ you should chase up the late R (I P) Rivken. He had weekend gaol, which would be like weekend penals, or detention for the younger readerironclads.
    He would have to go to the empty gaol, and clean dusters and re-fill inkwells, and clean off the slates and that.
    The weekend milk monitors would make him drink the left o’er milk as a form of hazing, but which by then was yogurt and that’s why he died.

  298. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Yeah, right, that’s how he died. Like he hangs out with a yacht-full of drug-dealing, street-trash, muscle-boys he calls friends, garlands them with 24ct Rolices and 12 cylinder Jags in return for god-only-knows what unsavoury favours then fails to stump up the readies to defend one of them on a charge of accidentally brutally launching his ex-girlfriend into the sea from the top of a 50 metre cliff – and you think it was the yoghurt got to him!

    How much d’ya reckon the coroner got to bring in THAT verdict!

  299. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    By the way Olly, if you read the ‘blog, what I doubt , you’d see some other posters have flogged Miss Fide’s creepy eyes. Maybe they are mummys, who have torn the eyes out of her head to re-form their own deathless bodies. With the cloning of extint animals, anything is scientifically possible these days, I ’spose.

  300. Tom Cruise Says:

    By the way, Bill Collins, thanks for the support! Both in your recent post and in your old job – especially for not panning “Risky Business” and “Days of Thunder” and for raving madly about “Top Gun” – well at least the beach-volley ball scene.

    I knew you were on my side, but then I could tell from your icon – oh and your glasses.

  301. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Fag?!

    I haven’t been a fag since Templestowe! Fagged for old Bonky Roscommon in the Upper 5th.

  302. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    I rest my case.

    By the way, folks. Like I was so totally number 300 back there! But don’t all applaud at once, OK?

    And another thing, Mr. Glib Big Olly. I’m great with kids. Didn’t you see “War of the Worlds” – like I stopped the aliens from swiping the whiny little bitch in the cellar when she blew everyone’s cover from behind the mirror – and I stopped them from juicing her in the giant tripod and squirting her entrails all over parts of Maine – OK I let her dopey brother get liquidated with the army – but he was a drugged up sociopath and was never gonna amount to much anyway.

  303. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    That’s not me – or my icon! What the devils going on here, Olly?

  304. Tom Cruise Says:

    Sorry, old man. Wrong letterhead.

  305. Petra Fide Says:

    Nothing sinister A.D.O. I got eyestrain from staring down the webcam, so I decided to go back to the test pattern (even though maroon isn’t my colour). Having fended them off, the mummy contingent are off to panda kindergarten to source for their optical requirements.

  306. Some Bloke Says:

    Big,

    I’m looking forward to The Ghost of Ted Kennedysetting the record straight at his earliest convenience, ie JFK and Marilyn Monroe, proving my theory that it was Jackie O who shot JFK so she could marry an attractive Greek not for his money, the whole Chappaquidick fiasco, his rapist nephews, et al. The entire gamut of America’s first family’s wholesome doings.

    He’ll have some stories to tell, if only he’d get on with the job of deading.

    SB
    PS I was gonna do an alias, but the pattern gives me away and unlike Frooty, I haven’t yet cracked the code.
    PPS Nothing further to add.
    PPPS No, wait a minu-
    PPPPS No, nothing further to add.
    PPPPPS I was right the first time.

  307. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    White and one for me.

    And hats off to that chap for describing multiple Rolex watches as “rolices”, using the latin plural.

    Now where are my hyperbolae?

  308. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Mr Bloke,
    Does that mean Frooty is Tom Cruise is Lawrence Olivier? Yikes! I haven’t seen so many personalities in the same body(!?) since I saw that movie where the lady had a lot of personalities.
    Is Dino really Olly?
    Is Fr Dennett SJ really Jay Dedewth?

  309. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Here’s one for the scholars then, what is the plural of echidna?

  310. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    and whilst I am there, Olly, why would anyone call a ship “Wagon Mound”?
    That just don’t add up.

  311. Some Bloke Says:

    The Ghost of Fr Dennett sounds to me like our African friend Mbutu who we haven’t heard from for yonks, to use the 80’s expression. The lady with a lot of personalities is anybodies wife.
    And no, upon reflection, I think that Leonard Teale would be better suited as F Rooty, with Alwyn Kurts as George Mallaby, and Norm Yemm as VK1.

  312. itbeganasamistake Says:

    The internet reveals to us the date of Olly’s next blog.

  313. itbeganasamistake Says:

    And here it is.

  314. Some Bloke Says:

    But how could this be me, given the pattern.

  315. Some Bloke Says:

    It isn’t.

  316. The Ghost of Tania Zaetta's Bollywood Career Says:

    Boy, did I fu#k up!

  317. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Tom Cruise, Larry Olivier – never heard of ‘em. But I tell you this Cruise blackguard has used my name not suspecting that his icon would give away the imposture.

    And Larry’s got Petra’s icon, if memory serves…

  318. Some Bloke Says:

    Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington “Fruity” Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret),

    This is me. ***STOP***
    Dont be fooled by these imposters, it’s just like what happened in ‘Lost in Space’ that time. ***CONTINUE***
    I’m giving the order – shoot to kill if you see me, or any other of the me’s out there. ***STOP***

  319. Jennifer Grey Says:

    So was it the Real Some Bloke or an imposter who thought my nose job was substandard?

  320. Some Bloke Says:

    It was me, the Real Some Bloke!
    Or was it!
    HA HA HA!
    How could it be, in the land that never was!
    Kabbbooooobey!
    SHAZ-ZAMMMM!

  321. Some Bloke Says:

    No, that was ME! I’m the real alter ego Some Bloke! Look at my ikon (howzat, father D?).

    Fruity, now look at him – he doesn’t blink! He’s the replicant!

  322. Bosie Douglas Says:

    The plural of Echidna?

    Well, the little prickly beast is named for the monster of Greek myth known as the “Mother of All Monsters” – like haven’t I met her!?

    So, as Greek, feminine noun of the first declension, the plural would have to be “echidnai”….. I guess….

    But what do I know. Can’t write decent sonnets, can’t feel, can’t love… can’t bowl… can’t throw…

  323. Tom Cruise Says:

    You might not be able to throw, Bosie, but, dammit, you’ve cracked the secret of the of the DOUBLE bold ellipsis!

    My God, this must be like the End of Days or something like really scien- tologically huge!

  324. The Ghost of Tania Zaetta's Bollywood Career Says:

    A girl’s gots needs too you know. Out there in the Torra Boorra mountains and the turra lurra plains, it gets lonely.
    How did I know the black SAS man(s) would blab to his (their) mates.
    Now I’ll dance no more the Ganges by.

    :-(

  325. The Very Rev. Monsignor Felchey Says:

    Now, look, much as I am concerned, Olly my son, at a pastoral level, with the fate of any fallen Catholic girl, I really do rather draw the line at even the hint of a suggestion that I might be thought to have so much as winked at, tolerated, indulged or otherwise passively acquiesced in, the merest idea, nay the shadow of a notion, that a career could have a soul.

    Let alone a career that hadn’t even started.

    In…BOLLYWOOD!

    Jeeeesuss!!!!

  326. StabiloBoss Says:

    Tanya, you and your fellow performer are all-right by me. Keep up the good work. Hubba, hubba!!!!

  327. Petra Fide Says:

    Don’t know about the echidna, but according to Circulo4 this very evening*, the plural of platypus is platypoed (sorry J. D. Ponsinby-Molyneux Villliers-Smythe, I couldn’t manage to dig the correct sigil out of my keyboard). Excuse me, I’ve got to wrestle my Russian antiquity from the skeletal grasp of Sir Larry’s zombie…
    *time-zone dependent, see local listings for details

  328. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Thanks Bossman for the visual link.
    The SAS were doing it tough if they were wasting their lovin’ on the old ropey Tanya when the big natural plumper babe was there in the green zone.
    Rau Rau! A-roooogha! [thumps table whilst loosening collar to rush of steam] Yee Har etc

  329. StabiloBOSS Says:

    Ropey! Ooooh, aaaah (snorts coffee out through nose and doubles over), I haven’t heard use of that adjective since a bloke I new used to chase birds ’round the Feathers (maybe that’s how it got the name) carpark. I reckon Miss “The other one” used to be on the Australian Idol. Someone who watches that show will be able to verify.
    P.S. Sorry Olly, we may be putting your ANZ sponsorship at risk.

  330. Bill Henson Says:

    Olly’s ANZ Sponsorship?????

    What about my photographic exhibition? The girl’s parents were all in the know – I mean…the puritanical censorship in this country

    If only Krudd had the same sense of perspective and taste as Messrs Boss and Observer – art is always “in the eye of the beholder” (and Ms Zaetta is certainly an artist(e))

    Anyway, better go back to making Muppets

  331. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    On Tanya’s side (the good one) I am not sure of a regulation that prohibits rumpy pumpy in the Australian Defence Force. It is not prohibited by virtue of the Defence Force Discipline Act.
    It’s not as if she’s 12, like Mr Henson – formerly of Australia now moving to Thailand – ’s tastes. Yoiks, I am of the opinion she hasn’t been 12 for about 36 years.
    If she consented, what was Angry Anderson on about? Like he’s Mr “No Sex Outside Of Marriage” or something. No wonder he’s angry.

    It would be like abseiling down a ravine for those hardened SAS men, in all respects. I hope they had a safety harness on.

  332. Jay Dedewth Says:

    There’s something fishy about the whole scandal. Angry Anderson doesn’t deny it but keeps saying (a) I don’t moralise and but (b) I doubt it very, very, very much because she is very, very professional. I’m no lawyer but isn’t that what they call “prevaricating testimony”: What it means is – look, there might have been a moment of behavioral lapse from very, very professional to only very professional when she could have had sex with these troops, but so what, stop moralising. Hardly a ringing endorsement of her denial.
    So too, the other fellow, who in the time-honoured technique of “evasive testimony” says not that it didn’t happen but that there was preciously little time.”

    Well, if so, then maybe our Tanya is very, very, very professional.

  333. Another Bogus Some Bloke Says:

    From the Jaws of Jay:

    “So too, the other fellow, who in the time-honoured technique of “evasive testimony” says not that it didn’t happen but that there was preciously little time.””

    What? He didn’t have a spare 33 seconds? How precious is preciously little time? If only Martin Shlemmshaw Brown was here to guide us.

  334. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Yes, I’d have to agree with ABSB. I was allowing 57 seconds including undressing/dressing, and 1/2 that for her friend.

    Oh let’s be honest, just the thought of it re the friend will be enow to get the old love fire extinguisher going, Brown style :-)

  335. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Dear oh dear. You smut-pedlars have missed the point (I think).

    The answer is evasive – “There wasn’t enough time!” is a bolstery – self-serving sort of resistance to the question. The instinctively innocent response would be to deny a charge, not to demonstrate argumentatively why you must be telling the truth – like “I coulna grabbed Miss Mayella with my withered left arm, Misser Finch.” (Yeah, well your withered arm didn’t trouble ya none to bust up a chifferobe when an as a white woman done asked ya… but I digress.)

    The fact that the evasive reasoning – not enough time for sex – may well be of itself implausible and feeble (“You felt sorry for a white woman…”) only adds to the apparent guilt (or complicity) of the interlocutor.

  336. Jay Dedewth Says:

    That wretched emoticon was supposed to be a parenthesis; as it is it’s just bloody bizarre!

  337. Some Bloke Says:

    Yes, but that’s not the point my cloned friend is making, because I know his brain. (Ya’ got to watch tricking lawyers like Jay Dedewth!”:-(

    I ask you this: where did “I DID NOT SIR!” get Tom Robinson. “A trip home.. IN A BODY BAG!!” ;-(

    The Ghost of Tania Zaetta’s Bollywood Career should of heeded Barnes’ advice that “out here you keep your shit wired shut, AT ALL TIMES.”

    She didn’t, and now Tom Ewell lies over that tree yonder with a kitchen knife sticking out his stomach.

    “He aint gonna bother these children any more, Mister Finch.” :-)

  338. Some Bloke Says:

    That wretched semicolon-dash-parenthesis was supposed to be a emoticon; as it is it’s just bloody bizarre!

  339. StabiloBoss Says:

    Stabby here, with another groovy link to all you Mockingbirdophiles.

  340. StabiloBoss Says:

    Not enough for you? Why not try this one?

  341. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    Now see her Bossy, I don’t want to curtail your internet adventures, it would be hypocrytical in the extreme, but don’t just serve up anything.
    The Scout myspace entry is a bit of a stretch. JL would be heaps too old to work a computer these days, and she only knows of them from the time when they had half the power of my laptop yet they fill a whole floor of the Pentagon.
    Secondly, the myspace had some sh#t musical backing that had, inter alia the line:

    Some day
    things will be fair-er
    and meat will be rare-er

    Now what’s that about? In the perfect world meat will be cooked a certain way? What if one’s idea of perfect was well done?
    Or is it that we’ll eat less meat? JL loved her meat, and it was the desercration of meat by Walter what got her into all that trouble with Cal.
    I hardly think she’d have raised an eyebrow had he put syrup on a tofu burger.

  342. An Disinterested Observer Says:

    What have I done? You was my company…

  343. The ghost of Mbutu Batanga Says:

    I bain’t no priest, Mr Bloke, sah, Ize just an ole niggra, mindin’ my own ways.

    I’m off now. There’s a mad dog down the road a piece, I swear to god. It’s comin’ this way….

  344. Sherrif Heck Tate Says:

    “Take him, Mr Finch, before he starts running!”

  345. Jay Dedewth Says:

    The rabid dog – innocent but dangerous has to be sacrificed, sure. But what about Boo Radley? He was mad and he did kill, but no-one lynches him! No. Not so much as a tisk, tisk, Mr Radley. No, when he done finished knifing Tom Ewell, he jess sets thar on his porch a spell and pays no-one no nevermind, plain as day, and the townsfolk pass up and down and touch their hats as if he weren’t never no messed-up twisted loner in the first place!

    Some thangs in life jess won’t bear figurin’.

  346. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Why the Corleoni ever hired him as the consigliere I’ll never know.

  347. Some Bloke Says:

    I’ll bet you two Grey Ghosts to a Tom Mix that Mrs Tate is baking an angel cake to take to Mr Arthur right now. For mine, taking that man and his shy ways and draggin’ him into the limelight is a sin! It’s a sin, Mr Big, and I’m not about to have it on my head.

    Accordingly I’ll have to be the one to break it up. I’ve changed my mind, I vote not guilty. I’ve had enough…

  348. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    I’ll be dashed if I’ve seen that icon before. You’re not the real Some Bloke! Where is here? What have you done with the poor boy, you fiendish blackguard!

    I give you fair warning, there was no grated nutmeg on my flummery last night and I’m in no mood to be trifled with.

  349. The Ghost of Jimmy Blacksmith Says:

    Tha’ bloody Olly ‘e’s a bloody lucky buggar or’right! Him on’y put in two bloody pos’ dis year, he’s a bloody lazy white man. I put in los’sa los’sa posts all bloody day long, out in the ‘ot bloody sun, straight as a bloody spear shot outa woomera, but the boss man ‘e says no straight, bloody short short change me, so I bloody murder tha’ lot of ‘em, take a bloody ax’ to ‘em, so we be equal. But they bloody ‘ang me form tha’ bloody rope.

    You people all watch out, ya hear. Olly so bloody lazy they short change ‘im an’ ‘e bloody take an axe to the bloody lot of yer.

  350. Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward Says:

    Boys, boys – I’m as partial to a cocktail as is anyone; quite often at around five I’ll have Parker bring me out a tequila mockingbird (never hurt anyone, has it?) but perhaps you chaps have been hitting the sauce a little too freely?

    Mr Dedewth, you tell us that, ‘“There wasn’t enough time!” is a bolstery – self-serving sort of resistance to the question. The instinctively innocent response would be to deny a charge, not to demonstrate argumentatively why you must be telling the truth – like “I coulna grabbed Miss Mayella with my withered left arm, Misser Finch.’”

    But you are undoubtedly familiar with the testimony of the genuinely innocent Albertus Zwier; “…came out with a story that I’d supposedly thrown my dog out the car window as a film stunt. It was crap. Didn’t happen. – couldn’t have – because I had been driving at the time.”

    You take my point, I’m sure.

    Penny

  351. HRH The Pettit Nior Pranccos Says:

    You plurry damn right that Olly pella is plurry lazy man you know. He in no hurry scurry to do any work, the cheeky bugger. Mine tinket somptime he dead pinnis, and his mob are in sorry time.

    If Olly dont blog soon, you know, there’ll be no pizza for us.

    But if you plurry ghosts could give us a warning, you know, before your altime talking, like them mob do on the ABC, otherwise we be big mobs pissing ourselves, and our grass bilong het* will stand him up like plurry qills on the fretful echidae

    *as our plurry northern cousins would say

  352. Bill Henson Says:

    back to me, me, me

    Hasn’t anyone ever heard of naive art?

  353. Bosie Douglas Says:

    [We wish to advise that the following post emanates from the spectral manifestation of a dead whitey and may scare the shite out of our indigenous bloggers.]

    Innocent! Mangels innocent! It were to laugh, were it not so sad! How could that monster not be capable of doing to a mere beast what he so wretchedly accomplished with the finest man that ever drew breath?

  354. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    [insert usual warning re presence of spectres HERE]

    My theorem that the acceleration in the frequency of blogs is directly proportional to the square of the mention of “To Kill a Mockingbird” , and inversely proportional to “e to the power of the frequency of Olly’s entries” proves true.

  355. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    TO BILL:

    Bill, dost thou live indeed? or do thy bones
    Lie straightened in our Roslyn’s gallery?
    Or in thy Rising has she set you free
    Whose love of Art for all her sin atones?
    For here the air is thick with coppers’ calls,
    The priests who call upon thy name are slain,
    Dost thou not hear the bitter wail of pain
    From those whose children hang upon the walls?
    Come down, O Son of Jim! a sickly gloom
    Curtains the land, and through the starless night
    And in thy lens the downy pubes I see!
    If thou in very truth didst burst the womb
    Come down, O Son of Jim! and show thy might,
    Lest David Hamilton be crowned instead of Thee!

  356. HRH The Pettit Nior Pranccos Says:

    Plurry hell, the gates of which must be plurry open gibben all you ghosts commin here like cheeky men, and allsame talking. Spirit people ebbrywhere!

    So many of my dead aunties around, there’s some big mobs dreamin going on, you know.

    Mine tinkit my auntie Big Olly has turned into a natural feature somewhere, like a rock or a headland, maybe a star.

    You plurry white pellas should never have opened Kingston’s grave.

  357. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Mr Donnelly says Olly’s enties are more akin to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.

  358. Bill Henson Says:

    Why, Mr Wilde

    How it gladdens my heart to see you coming to the defence of fine art in such a spirited fashion

    There’s a few of my autographed pictures of male subjects aged 12-14 on the way to you in the spirit world

    Regards

    Your colleague & fellow artiste

    Bill

  359. BigWatch.com.org Says:

    Days since Big Olly sighted on his blog: 12.

    This time last week it was: 5.

    The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett: That last equation is y = x-7, you’ll be pleased to see.

    Do I win the Maths prize on Speech Day?

  360. Big Olly Says:

    Well, it doesn’t seem like that long ago, does it? I don’t know what I’ve been doing, what with the siring and the ma’aming and the Miss Mayellaing.

    Love
    Big Olly

  361. Big Olly Says:

    And where has my picture gone?

  362. Some Bloke Says:

    “That aint Olly. Ya’ not gonna take his word agin’ iron. What’s a matter with you, ya’ got chillun’ of your own…”

  363. Some Bloke Says:

    “My Lord Aunt Stephanie! You almost gave me a heart attack!”

    It’s the real me for once, though I must admit that I did quite enjoy being un-me there for a time or two – I didn’t dream of P Fide all day long for once.

    Tyoot, too-toooooooo, etc

  364. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Ye Gods! It really is you, dear boy! And to think I very nearly blasted you to smithereens back there.

    I blame Olly of course. These ruudy little patterns are fiendish diabolical things. The whole damned readerconvoy’s taken a turn for the worse while you’ve been away, and that’s no lie.

    What, for bloody instance, is bloody “plurry” s’posed to bloody mean?

  365. Petra Fide Says:

    I thought a ‘Plurry’ TM was one of those cups of ‘Is it a drink? Is it an ice-cream? No, it’s a pureed lump of pig fat with sugar on it’ things that are foist on customers of fast-(so called)food retailers.

    I assumed HRH The Pettit Nior Pranccos was working on the ‘Drive-thru’ (where, curiously enough, people don’t. I would, at high speed)

  366. Big Olly Says:

    Thank you, dear and beautiful reader, for your forbearance. I have been out in Blog land, seeing if, frankly, I could sell this franchise. Who would, my dearest viewer ponders, would (again) vochsafe such an utterance? Has Olly of his senses a riperian venture assuaged?
    Yet, verily yea it be true!
    Vide the following, reagrding mine trips to yonder E sales:

    Well, Big they said, Big, first you’d have to ditch that picture, and get a patch-work emblem.

    Well, I done that, aint I, beloved peruser.

    Second, you better stop talking all flowery, or folks wont wants yas. They wont pur-chase a poof franchise, not in South Africa, where you live.

    Well if you [effort] plurry say so

    Thricely (and they didn’t mean speedily) you better never go on the blog yourseln, or theysll think ee too familiar.

    Well, I says to them, we Joads is fambly.

    They belted me and didn’t buy the blog – frikken scab Gates – but I will follow their dianetic ways and never post no more.

    And THAT’S OFFICIAL

    May your God, whoever it might be, bless you all, or those that rquire it.

  367. Big Olly Says:

    Please, Readers, that wasn’t me, just some drunkard pretending to be me*
    This is the real Olly, and the Blog will go on, as usual.

    [reader] What about you picture?

    [Olly] Shut up mate, this is me. My picture is…er…is at the cleaners, yeah that’s it, the cleaners. Anyway this one’s different. I could only know that if I was the real Olly.

    *but not as a drunkard

  368. Big Olly Says:

    I’m Spartacus!

  369. Small Stan Says:

    Another fine mess you’ve got us into.

  370. The very holy ghost of Fr Charles Dennett Says:

    That’s it – it appears that mention of Tom Robinson et al has allowed the time/space continuum to collapse, such that Big Olly has now been joined by his clones from the 5th, 6th and 7th dimensions, and I predict that this website will shortly implode.

    (*reader thinks: “What a relief!”)

  371. The mildly disappointed ghost of Mike Smith Says:

    Quick, someone say “Myzstklflyk” backwards!!!

  372. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly, I followed the link wherein your name is, & found myself back here. Yet ‘here’ is strangely reversed. Is looking-glass milk any good to blog about, do you think?

  373. Big Olly Says:

    Ah yes caro Petra, I am big Olly, the flowery speaking fellow of mirth and imagination to be sure. I write blogs and that, and I am not really dead, as you can see I am writing this blog and also cashing my centerlink cheques so I cannot be dead can I? Oh was that not flourery enough?

    Your humble correspondent could not have from this mortal coil shuffled off of.

  374. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Ah, ha!!!!
    Proof that it is not the real Big Olly that posts.
    Firstly, Olly is fluent in many languages.
    Yet, when referring to Petra as “dear” in Italian he should have used “cara” (mio cugino GianniDueCappelli told me).
    Secondly, the real Big would his sentence not have ended a preposition by.
    And C, he claims to write blogs…………that’s not Olly.

  375. Petra Fide Says:

    Flawless argument & I agree wholeheartedly Mr Twohats, but it’s a bit harsh to call the imposter a C…

  376. Pig Olly Says:

    Curses!
    Foiled by Johnny two thinking caps.
    Well, you haven’t heard the last of me, post boxes.

  377. Bosie Douglas Says:

    ON READING: “TO BILL”

    Was I not young? Did not the hale heart
    Of youth imbue this less-than-manly frame
    With some allure? Or was it just a game
    Of which he tired before I knew my part?
    Who took the boy now holds the man apart;
    Each bored reproof, a swift, envenom’d dart,
    Arrests my heart and renders passion tame.
    To bruise against his monolithic fame,
    To stifle in the shadow of his name,
    Discarded like an ill-used high-street tart
    Who cannot tell if it be pride or shame
    That strangled love ‘ere love could make a start.

    Tell me, is that pornography…or art?

  378. Big Olly Says:

    This is really I, and I can prove it:

    “I DREAMT I MET A GALILEAN….”

  379. KJ Ward, Esq Says:

    Oh it’s that bloody Olly imposter and his singing….

    “KEEP GOING, OLLY IMPERSONATER, KEEP GOING! Ah, he’s a nice impersonator, but that bloody singing non-stop. AH YES, KEEP GOING OLLY IMPERSONATER, stagger drunkenly off to bed so we can get some bloody peace and quiet.”

  380. bigolly Says:

    Oh goodness me. Look, I know how glam it must seem to others being me but it isn’t like that at all. I wish you would all stop jostling. Remember, unless it bears a sort of washed out ikon of me lying in bed it is not genuine. Accept no other.

    Well, save for the very first couple without my picture. That really was me…. I think.

    Love
    Big Olly

    PS: some of them lack my heartfelt sign off as well.

  381. P. Hilton Says:

    Hi Big Olly,

    The camera has no place in bed. And what were you lying about?

    love
    PH.

  382. The mildly disappointed ghost of Mike Smith Says:

    Kylflktszym.

  383. bigolly Says:

    Get %&$#ed the lot of you!

    What further evidence did you need, Dear and Gentle Reader.

    Love
    Big Olly

  384. Troy Dann Says:

    Jeez, mate! Go easy, wi’ya. Woss got inna o’ Lolly?

    ‘E newsed to talk all posh loik an’ flairy – now looks loik ‘es gone an lost ‘is manners. Won’t catch me doin’ that.

    Lost m’fishing rod to a croc up Katherine way; lost m’ wallet on the northern paddock up Bunangarra Stayshun; lost me shirt – well never really had one; lost me guts at the Curdimurka B&S – lost me virginity twice – once wif a pretty little barmaid round Mundi Mundi way – and once wif a pretty big shearer round the back o’ beyond – so to speak; oh and I basiccly lost me brain at birf.

    But nevva lost me manners, mate.

  385. The Ghost of Mick Nolan Says:

    G’day all, I was summonsed to appear by Big, I know not why. Oh wait on, I’m dead, that’s why.
    I do resemble Big to some extent, being known in my former life as the Galloping Gasometer, something Big never encountered ‘cos ‘e never broke out of a painful gouty walk on the field.
    Still, I won me flag in 1977, and rubbed shoulders with the likes of Blighty, Cable, and Schimmelbush.
    And it is heaven up here, non-stop 4′n’20 pies, coke, and replays of the 1977 finals series – non of that modern prima donna rubbish.
    One last thing, Big: Darren Millane says g’day and says keep on drink drivin’.

  386. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    ON VIEWING “UNTITLED #8″

    WITHIN this restless, hurried, modern world
    We took our hearts’ full pleasure—You and I,
    And now the white sails of our ship are furled,
    And spent the lading of our argosy.

    Wherefore my cheeks before their time are wan,
    For very weeping is my gladness fled,
    Sorrow hath paled my lip’s vermilion,
    And Ruin draws the curtains of my bed.

    But all this crowded life has been to thee
    No more than lyre, or lute, or subtle spell
    Of viols, or the music of the sea
    That sleeps, a mimic echo, in the shell.

  387. Bosie Douglas Says:

    UPON “RESPONSE TO UNTITLED#8″

    Oh!
    I’ve got a dickie in my mouth
    doo dah doo dah
    Oh I’ve got a dickie in my mouth,
    Oh doo dah day

  388. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    Oh, what the f@#k.

    Get a case of Perrier-Jouët

    Get over here

    And get naked.

  389. Nary Whitehouse Says:

    Now see here you filth-peddling perverts, you’ll get away with broadcasting this over my dead body! Ah… Oh.

  390. JohnWayneIsBigLeggy Says:

    Thar’s a lotta poove talk on this ‘ere ranch.
    Mart have to change sides to get me some squaw.
    Roll over thar lil’ doggie.

  391. JohnWayneIsBigOlly Says:

    …or am I??

  392. JohnWayneIsBigLeggy Says:

    Ah don’ know what a “Olly” is, but as long as i’s BIG, I’m in.

  393. bigolly Says:

    Well, false bigolly, you are unmasked. By reason of not being masked with the appropriate ikon, if that makes sense…

    As for the rest of it, Heaven doesn’t seem quite as I had imagined it. I had assumed fluffy white clouds and boundless bliss, but it seems more like those public lavatories in the South Parklands.

    Of course, who am I to carp.

    Love
    Big Olly

  394. JohnWayneIsBigOlly Says:

    Swell! Say, Marion sure is a purty name…

  395. Bosie Douglas Says:

    Alright! Who scrawled that filthy doggerel in my note-book? Come on, fess up!
    The black icon gives you away. And it doesn’t even scan – it should be: I’ve a dickie, not I’ve got a dickie. And Dickie is my second cousin, and we’ve only ever been friends and I haven’t seen him for ages anyway and why must you make it sound squalid and meaningless?

    I’m off now to fling myself in a sulkily languid way onto the nearest divan.

  396. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    And it was someone else who deserted me at Calais? Another who wielded that searing rapier that excised my heart? An imposter who trod my very soul to dust? Oh, Bosie, Bosie – I know you cannot understand what you have done, but I pray that in time you may be able to accept that it was you – you, my boy – who did it.

    Albertus? Albertus? my wine… yes, I know, but bring it.

  397. Bosie Douglas Says:

    Calais! Calais!

    You weren’t there, Oscar. Do you hear me? You weren’t there. I strode the esplanade for hours on end. I tormented the concierge at the Hotel Batillon, only to hear that you had left with another.

    What rapier could I then have wielded but the self-turning blade of betrayal and despair? What else could I have trodden underfoot but the beckoning waters of the Channel that mocked me as they lapped and hissed at the pier’s end commanding me with the all the grim constraint that only broken hearts obey to take one further step…because of you.

    I crossed a narrow sleeve of sea to find you once – and oceans of time to find you again. I am so weary of the crossing, I can scarce remember what I came to tell you. No, that’s not right. I know what it was. I know what I want to say. But your need to be right, your need to be hurt, bruises my pride, Oscar. I do have some you know, some faint tatter of self-regard.

    And I will not say it. I will not say it.

  398. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    Left with another?

    There is no other Bosie. Never has there been nor can there ever be another.

    To say I left with another is to say I left with no man, to say I never left at all. And that is true. Reading Gaol, Calais; all the same; every room a prison cell; each crowded salon desolate. I cannot leave, for all places are the same to me; each door opens to the same bare chamber.

    Albertus – bring my wine. Perhaps I can dream of another place, a place of sun and warmth; perhaps I can hear faintly the songs of Pan, out of reach, forever out of reach.

  399. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey Ollster! I’m 400! (400est? – whatever) Yay Me!

  400. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Oh Shit – I stuffed it.
    I thought I was 400est but I was only 399st.
    Bugger. (sorry guys.)

  401. Freddy Says:

    I recall the milk of which Mr Olly writes. Mother would supply me with a sachet of Nestle’s Quick to stir in, thus rendering it a ‘big choclatey vitamin pill’.

    Incidentally,while I wasn’t a milk monitor, I was a lunch monitor an got to stack the Snips. I remember a Polish boy and I going crazy one afternoon and hurling darts at them. Our punishment was that we had to consume all te perforated ones.

  402. CheekyGeorge Says:

    We get milk at our school in the morning. Mum gives me one of those little packets of cereal, like you get in the motels, to take along. But last week uncle Phil said she got a wild her up her arse and took off for the weekend. So I had to have Twisties instead of Corn Flakes. Anyway, still tasted Ok.

  403. Janie Hudson Says:

    But Cheeky George, what did you put in your roll then?

  404. Some Bloke Says:

    That reminds me how in the olden days my Monday lunch for 20 cents was a pie, a coke, and a kitchener bun, with 5 cents left over for a healthy serve of mixed lollies.
    Now, you give a kid 20 cents for lunch today, and he wont get too far, will he?
    I blame the youth of today for this.

  405. Petra Fide Says:

    Exactly. They’ll just spend it all on ‘crack’ or ‘Wii’, or some other double entendre.

    We used to scour the gutters on the walk home from infants for lost change. If we found any we’d leg it back to the shop. Half a pee got you two aniseed balls. Served in a paper bag.

    (PS: percolating)

  406. CheekyGeorge Says:

    Roll?

  407. Freddie Quince-Jellie Says:

    Kitchener Buns! Zis is ersatz name for Berliner Bun – like Alsatian for German Shepherd and Windsor for Saxe-Coburg-Gotha – you ain’t fooling none of us krauts!

  408. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Does anyone remember Humphrey B. Bear honey sticks? Whooo, hooo. Now that was a treat.

  409. Freddy Says:

    I still remember my lunch monitor call for tuck-shop orders. Wanna hear it? Okay, here goes…

    Pies
    Pasties
    Sausage Rolls
    Othellos
    Kitcheners Buns
    Cream Buns
    Fruit Buns
    Finger Buns
    Vanilla Squares
    Donuts

    Thank You.

  410. Some Bloke Says:

    I always thought that they were named after Lord Kitchener, the English colussus who provided us with such fine modern language as guerilla war, concentration camps and Galipoli.

    “No, no, no, Sir, … Oh, no, no, no, it wasn’t a fine court such as this. No, no, Sir, there were no rules such as these. We used rule 303. We caught them, and we shot them, under RULE 3-0-3!”

    Which explains how the Kitchener Bun was invented, you rusty old Kraut.

  411. Freddie Quince-Jellie Says:

    So, ven JFK famously remarked: “Ich bin ein Berliner!” he meant “I am a Kitchener Bun!”?

  412. Some Bloke Says:

    I’m sure my old pal Fruity could clear this up in a trice.

    Taken alone, there’s nothing funny about a Berliner, which supports your argument about inherent german-ness. But, if you put that same Berliner under, say, Big’s seat in Grade 3, it’d be hilarious, though not as funny as sticky taping an upturned drawing pin on his chair, and definitely not as funny as Big catching up with you.

    Criminy, Big would probably do something extreme like hang you upside down on the bus with your feet in the straps-that-you-hold-to-avoid-inertia, and use you as a battering ram and maybe even threaten your future fatherhood plans, so much so that you leave the school and later on invent highly dubious stories about dramatic chases on Today Tonight, and dont bat an eyelid when your integrity is demolished.

    Or maybe Big wouldn’t.

  413. Darrell Rivers Says:

    I don’t know about those sort of good natured boyish pranks for day bugs, but at boarding a sheet of glad wrap placed under the seat and stretched as taut as taut can be across the bowl of the WC was always frightfully good fun.

    Not good to clean up, of course, but it’s never fun to clean up after high jinks, is it?

  414. Bosie la Bop Says:

    One day at Loretto me and Tiggerman picked at the icing on Bennett’s chocolate doughnut whilst he ate his serious lunch. He cried and we were punished by having to finish off the whole thing!
    That got us. Stupid nuns.

    That’s a true story, hand of God.

  415. Le Phantome D'Yve Saint-Laurent Says:

    Sacre blue!
    I am, how you zay in you vorld, dead pinnis.
    I sort I vould get le good velcome, as I have le nom d’saint. But NON!

    Zer is no God , Olle`! Zer, I ave zed it.

    It was mah vish zat I vould see my grand shildren’s virst birs day and un more blog e vous.
    It vas not to be, cherrie. Le grand shildren are, but of course, 21 now, but er, zer is non blog nuvo, you know.
    Ces le vie, I guess, but oi vey, how zay dress up here! Have zay never heard of zee silk for vings? Zee feathers are so, how you say, Pollynesia.

  416. The Ghost of Marine, back from Iraq, shot dead in his home town Says:

    29 an’ I wake up! Sniff the pine! Sniff that crotch down by the river, hot damn!

    Hey Taylor, how long you got?

    332. 332 days.

    Seem long my boy!

    332?! You gotta count backwards, you know, you got 43 days in. Think positive dude!

    Hey Taylor, you look educated! How’d you get here anyway?

    I volunteered. You believe that shit.

    ********************************

    And now because Olly is on strike, Taylor’s as dead as Eaves Saint Loren

  417. From the Uncorporeal Desk of Sydney Pollack Says:

    Holy Fuck, you sons of bitches, lemme tell you somethin’. Just get the fuck in front of the camera and do you goddam lines. It ain’t that fuckin’ difficult.

    If only life were as easy. But Hell no! Some goddam shitheel grand fucking architect of the fucking universe’s gotta make my pancreas hurt like a sonofabitch.

    You put that in a movie and the critics’d say it was too fucking melo-fucking-dramatic.

    Can’t cut that out.

  418. Junior Says:

    Hey white boy! That ho-oooole aint gonna dig itself.

  419. Christian Dior Says:

    Yves! You? Grandchildren? As eef!

    By ze way, putting women lezzer jackets, what was that all about?!

  420. Bosie Douglas Says:

    Bosie la Bop! You beastly doughnut-icing-picker. You just take back what you said about me right now and stop using my name or associated parts thereof in connexion with scandalous anecdotes – or else!

  421. Heath Ledger Says:

    Coops, y’mean to say that you’ve been sitting there, doing nothing, staring at the blog waiting to be post 400, not actually so you can contribute anything but just so you can say: “Hey, I’m post 400.”?

    And then you go an completely stuff it – so we have to watch you do it twice! Talk about asleep at the wheel! And they say I can’t keep my eyes open!

    Tell ya what, when you slammed your life into that concrete minda-arrester! Now THAT’s something I’d like to watch you do twice!

    Stay beatiful, mate.

  422. Some Bloke Says:

    In the Bosie La Bop scheme of things, in the olden days I confessed to old Fr Logue, SJ (Fr Lazarus we called him) that, inter alia, I’d stolen a cup cake, just to pad out the list of sins to a believeable number, more than anything else, it really being mine seeing that my mother had baked them for us.
    “Did you eat it?”
    “Yes Father.” (That would be the point of stealing a cake)
    “Did you replace the cake?”
    “No Father.”
    “Why not?”
    “Because I dont know how to cook cup cakes Father.”
    “An Our Father and Three Hail Marys.”

    A few weeks later I upped the anti to stealing a 5 cent piece and what an argument that provoked – me trying to point out that I took it, spent it, and could not replace because I had no money, the only way I could the money would be to steal it again to replace it.

    I copped the dreaded “Stations of the Cross” for that one.

  423. Le Phantome D'Yve Saint-Laurent Says:

    Ven ah says, how you say, grans shildren, ah ham but of course referring to mah collections, such as zee white shirts for men, and zometimes, ties. Zometimes, zee less is more, no?
    Ah come across a bit scherman no? Ha, in mah dreams cherries.

    If ah knew ‘evan was so full of zee PDs, or pooves in your tounge, ah’d ave topped my selve yonks ago, sure as the pen of my aunt!

    Come on ‘eath! I vill round zee mutton wis vous un mo’e tyme. Baa Baa! Oops, ma fur eez falling off! Mules me -how you say- cowhomme. Baa!

  424. Bo Diddley Says:

    So I am dead now. I stand cursed as Robert Dylan as being covered better than I ever was myself.
    Still, even dead I’m better than that c#nt RINGO

  425. CheekyGeorge Says:

    Dear Bo,
    Were you a boy or a girl? My uncle Tony talks about a girl called Bo Derek (that’s a funny name, a lady and a man’s name). He says that if she’s a 10 my mum is a 3.141, and he’d like a bit of that pi.
    cG

  426. Christian Dior Says:

    Oh, Yves you stupide. It is not “cowhomme” but garçon-de-vâche, n’est-ce pas? And ze moutons ‘ave fleece not fur lark all zose old stations de petrol called: Toison d’Or with ze restaurants zat served you froot copp and poulet au baskette.

    Com to sink of eet, froot copp sounds lark a village personne!

  427. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey, Heathey mate!

    How did ya go with them grid girls? No sure what happened mate; where did you end up? I lost you guys after a while…

    Anyway, guess what – I was 400st poster after all! Bugger me! I didn’t realise until just then, but the first time I said Bugger me I stuffed it that actually un-stuffed it! So – the one after 399 ended up being 400. Well, of course, now that I think about it it had to be, but how’s that for luck?

    Nah, mate – I’ve been really busy and I hadn’t had time to look at the blog. I’ve been writing poems. Well, one poem actually.

    I think I mentioned it – the poem about Toranas. I actually got stuck for a while, but I read the tuck shop talk, and that got the creative juices flowing again:

    My XU1 Torana
    Was like nirvana

    Then I bought a Berlina
    it was wider not thinner

    And I couldn’t eat it
    cos it wasn’t a banana

    but I could of
    if it was a bun

    (Berlina bun – get it?)

    catch ya mate.

    Coops

  428. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Readers all, has it ever been explained how the grid girls ended up in the hereafter. I think maybe Heaf and Coopsy have been bummin’ with their eyes closed. Boys, have you noticed a new “grid girl” who has zee outraagess French accente?
    stabby

  429. Some Bloke Says:

    I notice Big’s gone on strike again – out in sympathy with the Canberra public servants, who are being forced to work until 5.05pm and other extreme stuff like that.
    I’d prefer it Public Servants lived up to their name. I’d quite fancy going into the ATO and making the desk clerk clean my shoes, but anonymously, so he couldn’t then go do an audit of my last 5 years of tax returns.
    Wait on, there’s your answer – I’d tell him I’m Big. Problem solved.
    Wait on again – I forgot that lawyers are too busy to subit Tax Returns.
    Back to Square One.

  430. Bo Diddley Says:

    Well they keep astin’ me to play line dancin’ music, but it’s more a chain they do than a line, ifn you follow my rift, an’ it’s a-named after a flower.

    And it is a self raisin’ flower, now that you ast.

  431. Heath Ledger Says:

    Stabilo, my friend. You have a Cooperesque attention-span! It was explained ages ago that the San Remo chics OD’d their way into this place. What did it for them, I couldn’t say, ‘cos they don’t speak much Latin. But I’d say it’s a safe bet it was a shitload of…shit (so to speak).

    Doesn’t trouble us now, but. In Purgatory ya can do as many of the old recreationals as ya please. Only problem is, you never seem to get enough to pass out – and believe me that’s a bad thing when you DJ died in 1985.

    As for Yves Saint Laurent? No. 23 Avenue Montaigne. Shop there all the time. Ya don’t think I wear beanies and seat-shirts for real, do ya?

    As for your crazy obsession with my sexuality, join the cue, mate.

  432. Jambie the Genie Says:

    it was no spell of mine that made Paul Reubens career disappear

    nor did I cast another one to make Big Olly do likewise…all these famous individuals visiting his blog from the spirit world and other such places, and yet he denies them

  433. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Ah, yes. Thankyou Heath for setting me straight (ooohh, I say). The San Remo chicks, of course. Forgive me, it was written about sooo long ago that I had forgotten. In any case my old computer doesn’t have enough memory for me to scroll back far enough to check. Someone please log a Microsoft service call for me. If I don’t get back to my Second Life persona as a brain surgeon I may not be able to save Trotsky (he’s got an ice pick in him don’t ya know).

  434. Chemical Ali Says:

    Sheik Olly, blessings be upon him, has presumably been detained under the decadent weatern anti-terror law, in which people are hauled off without judicial process and held without being able to contact the outside world.
    How oppressive is that?
    Now, excuse me whist I use these American supplied toxic gasses to waste some Iranians.
    Later,
    Chemical

  435. Chemical Ali Says:

    And I said weatern on purpose, because the law is based on the hair colour of a petit saudi prince, blessings be upon him.
    Every time I think of it, I cry with the happy memory.

    Oh well, time to burn someone to death on a stove element.
    Later,
    Chemical

  436. Some Bloke Says:

    Chemical, or Chem, if I may.
    Maybe big took a sightseeing trip to Saudi Arabia and they falsely accused him of stealing and cut off both hands and now poor Big cant – try as he might – write his blog.
    That explanations is every bit as logical as the none I’ve heard so far.

  437. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    My theory is that Big was trying to become the first woman to fly solo across Spencer Gulf (up at the top bit where it’s not too wide).

  438. Napoleon Solo Says:

    Sorry, you’re way off. I’m not nearly aerodynamic enough (it’s the Brylcreme).

  439. Jay Dedewth Says:

    If, as Some postulates, Olly has had his hands amputated, maybe he’s learning to blog with his foot and mouth at the Columban Monastery where they make all those crappy calendars they used to palm (so to speak) off onto you at St Joan of Arc’s every Easter.

    Even more annoying was the fact that January, February and most of March had already elapsed but no discount.

  440. Petra Fide Says:

    Following that logic, Olly’s blog will no longer be digital, but rather phalangic? Do I need a software upgrade?

    Isn’t it cruel that so-called ‘foot & mouth’ cattle are destroyed, instead of
    fulfilling their potential by painting calendars? More lucrative for the farmers too.

  441. J. D. Ponsinby-Molyneux Villliers-Smythe Says:

    Phalangic! Well done, that gal! My dear Petra, my spats are off to you!

    Although a phalangic blog might just attract an host of right-wing Levantine Christian militants to post wistful reminiscences about the old Beirut.

  442. Petra Fide Says:

    Mr P-M-V-S,
    I blush. Your continued assistance in these matters needs mentioning here, as does my gratitude for the same.
    As extremists, rather than extremities, I always imagined such militants to be part of an ‘arm’ of some sort…
    Your humble servant,
    Petra

  443. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey – Some! Where are ya mate?
    JD’s trying to steal your chick – Get the kettle on mate.
    Anyway, we always used to say “phalangeal” at the XU1 club, but that was usually after a few cans, so who knows? But get on to it mate, I reckon once JD’s got his spats off he won’t top there.

  444. Some Bloke Says:

    Coops,

    Thanks firstly for the imagery of your death – top notch, I gagged on me West End can as it happened.

    Sadly, my relationship with Ms Fide has gone down the gurgler. She shows as much interest in pursuing a relationship as Big does in blogging. I cant make it any clearer than that, and sadly I now have a massive stockpile of assorted tea bags, my dowry, if you will, to get through, solo.

    In other news I have on slight authority that Big has been rendited to Egypt, so will be out of commission for as long as it takes him to name the other Harold Holt assassination plotters.

  445. J. D. Ponsinby-Molyneux Villliers-Smythe Says:

    Yes, indeed, dearest Petra. It’s rather like the phrase ‘arms of the sea’, used to refer to inlets of water navigable by sea-going ships, rather like the waterways of Venice.

    It was the Venetians, of course, who introduced coffee to Europe… I..I don’t suppose you’d care to share a cup with me, by any chance?

  446. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    Dear Ms Zaetta (and the ghost of your Bollywood career)

    I sincerely apologise on behalf of the armed forces.

    You skank

    Later,

    AVMAH

  447. CheekyGeorge Says:

    Hey!! I found Olly. Can you?

  448. Petra Fide Says:

    Some Bloke, where did it all go wrong? You’ve said nary a word to me for farther back than I care to scroll! Then you blithely announce to all & sundry that it’s over & it’s all my fault.

    Mr P-M-V-S,
    I’d be delighted. Where do you suggest we go?
    P.F.

  449. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    My dear Miss Zaetta

    May I offer some advice?

    As one whose own impeccable reputation was once besmirched by a brutish blackguard, I suggest the following:-

    Sue. Sue the bastards. Take them to the highest court in the land!

    It worked for me.

    Yours sincerely

    Oscar Wilde.

  450. Some Bloke Says:

    Dont worry Petra,
    I’m fairly sure this is what happened in the original ads that showed on TV – Olly disappeared and without his guidance, the relationship floundered and the bloke went back to straight scotch and the bird became a hippie and took LSD and drank herbal tea and listened to “Hello, Goodbye” all day long, another great song by the beaterer of one-legged gold-digging second wives.

    (Pan pipes? No, George Zamfir is elsewhere…)

  451. Petra Fide Says:

    That’s alright then. Apart from the LSD & hippy bit. It’s too dangerous. (The last time I hugged a tree I got splinters).

  452. Bosie Douglas Says:

    I warned Oscar not to sue, Petra… but d’ya think he’d listen?

  453. JennieThreeScarves Says:

    Hellooo Johnny2H,
    Fancy a hot mug of soup together? My other boyfriend George Glass doesn’t suspect a thing.
    ;)

  454. Petra Fide Says:

    Bosie, of course not, they never learn.
    Why would anyone expect justice from some bloke in a wig?
    (note lack of capitalisation)

  455. The Probably Still Alive Johnny Mathis Says:

    Some up-beat lyrics to cheer up Petra and Some’s day:

    “Yes, it’s over, let’s call it a day
    Sorry that it had to end this way
    No reason to pretend
    We knew it had to end some day, this way

    Guess it’s over, the kids are gone
    What’s the use of tryin’ to hang on
    Somewhere we lost the key
    So little left for you and me and it’s clear to see

    Too much, too little, too late to lie again with you
    Too much, too little, too late to try again with you
    We’re in the middle of ending something that we knew

  456. Petra Fide Says:

    … I always thought you should have stuck to Putting the Shot, or whatever it was.

    As Lenny Kravitz, another man with an afro who also has difficulty fastening his shirt buttons, says

    “It ain’t over t’il it’s over”

  457. Bosie Douglas Says:

    Believe me, sugar; with some folk, it ain’t NEVER over!

    (Sorry, I’ve been conversing with Mahalia Jackson.)

  458. Kurtz (the former Big Olly) Says:

    I suppose you’ve come to kill me like the others. that is the others who came not the others who killed. Big Olly yes that’s a name I aint heard for long time, long time. Excuse me whilst I go and cut the arms off those innoculated children……………………..[dies

  459. Some Bloke Says:

    Speaking of long books, I found ‘the Count of Monte Christo’ too hard to read, but found myself in possession of the DVD, “starring” Richard Chamberlain.

    It was full of dramatic long-shots to close up, with accompanying tense music. Anyway, Chambo counted down his vanquished enemies one-by-one, but I didn’t realize who the first three even were, and only recognized the last one because he was still Tony Curtis, in the role of his life.
    The banker he ruined through the Spanish bond purchase made no sense, because even if he sold them on a flase rumour of a Spanish Civil War, being false, the price would not of been affected.

    My point being, if you’ll let me get there, is that Chambo was a much better murderer/revenger when he and the missus chopped out their baby in Coop’s old Torana (or was it a rare Sunbird), and then blamed the nearest dingo.

  460. stabiloBOSS Says:

    It has passed by unnoticed that yesterday was the 100th day of this blog.

    March 27th 2008.

    Everyone remembers where they were on that day, and the buzz and excitement as the readership scrambled to login and read was to be said.

    The next milestone is 500 posts. But will we make it to 666? I’m scared we will.

  461. Tom Cruise Says:

    I aint so scared bein’ as how by that time I will be one of the 144,000 – the elect of God (or at least of Lafayette Ron H.) – and I’ll be ready to take off in Rapture with Some Bloke – and I aint talkin’ no fag elopment… not this time… I’m talkin’ the Great Rotanic Conflagration – you don’t know Rotanics! I do! and we’ll meet up with John Travolta, Jamie Packer and start handin’ out the planets!

    Yeah! Not so tough now, are ya, Buddy-boy Olly?

  462. Chemical Ali Says:

    Well, Iam a martyr now, Cruise offendi. Don’t get so hung up about promises about the afterlife. Yi! 70 virgins already. I never realised they are marked “single use only” and now , for eternity I have 70 wives. Take my 56th wife, please. t/boom
    My 42nd said,”Chemical, I want to go on a holiday”
    I said “Where?”
    She said, “Somewhere I’ve never been before”
    I said “the kitchen?” t/boom
    My 12th wife is so fat, when she sits around the house, she sits around the house. t/boom
    What’s the difference between my 54th wife and a piece of dog faecal matter?……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….[eternity

  463. Chemical Ali Says:

    Speak of which, Hey Patra? You sound like a switched on chick? Wanna have a coffee with me and become liable for a stoning?

  464. Halitherses Says:

    “Hear me, men of Ithaca, and I speak more particularly to the suitors, Big Olly is not going to be away much longer; indeed he is close at hand to deal out death and destruction, not on them alone, but on many another of us who live in Ithaca. Let us then be wise in time, and put a stop to this wickedness before he comes. Let the suitors do so of their own accord; it will be better for them, for I am not prophesying without due knowledge; everything has happened to Big as I foretold when the Argives set out for Troy, and he with them. I said that after going through much hardship and losing all his men he should come home again in the twentieth year and that no one would know him; and now all this is coming true.”

  465. Petra Fide Says:

    Mr Ali,
    It really impresses we birds if you manage to get our names rite. (Although it might be an issue of accent). Anyway thanks, but I think you’ve got the wrong idea.

    Although it looks like Mr J.D. P-M-V-S has decided to stay at home & polish his spats instead of meeting me.

    I’ll just have a refill & pretend I’m sending a text so the waiter stops looking at me pityingly…

  466. Sigismund Says:

    Ms Fide,

    Forgive me please, for intruding, but as one who has observed the budding, the blossoming, and now the withering of your relationship with Mr Bloke, may I offer the following?

    I am not familiar with Mr Ali, and so cannot speak with certainty, but I conjecture that his calling you “Patra” was not a random typo, nor carelessness; such things rarely are.

    As you may be aware, I am a simple man of science, and I claim no great expertise in the workings of that intricate mechanism that is the human mind. Never the less I offer the following:

    “Patra” was a brand of orange juice. It has long since passed, but it was available in Big Olly’s home town in his time of free milk and lunch monitors.

    Why Mr Ali should refer to you as “orange juice” I know not. Sweet? Health Giving? I am not sure – it may be something as base as the suggestion that he would like to give you a squeeze. I do remember that a liking of orange juice was one of the (many) things that made so many of the readerboat feel that you and Mr Bloke were destined for one another.

    Ah, they were simpler times, Ms Fide, were they not? And may I suggest also happier times?

    Yours truly,
    Sigismund

  467. Some Bloke Says:

    But that’s my point, Sigi, I orso bought a 2 litre thingo of orange juice to offer Petra, but for some reason even that has soured.

    Mind you, it’s use-by date coincided with Big’s most recent comment, so it’d have to be 11 years old, at least.

    24 years, waiting for the chance, to tell her how I feel and maybe get a second glance….

  468. Petra Fide Says:

    M. Sigismund,
    Thank you! As ever, the insights provided by your scientific knowledge put some much-needed perspective into the matter.

    Perhaps in the words of Orange Juice the band, we should
    ‘Rip it up & start again’ ?

    In the unlikely event I venture outdoors again, I’ll eschew the coffee shop, & suggest making for the juice bar forthwith!

  469. Kurtz (the former Big Olly) Says:

    Big Olly, who was he? A computer user you say. He must work in the Pentagon on a single floor where I hear there is a machine that can divide. If only I had men with the resolve of that machine I would have won this war years ago.
    I’ve written a poem about a cloudy memory. When I’ve read it, you can cut my head open. Or off. I don’t care anymore.

    I was once, I suppose, Big Olly
    A man of dedication loose
    But before then I was Big-O
    Which is also, as it happens, a brand of orange juice

  470. Kon-ji Me Says:

    Well that is spooky, I don’t mind saying so.

  471. Petra Fide Says:

    Now just a cotton-picking minute!

    Some Bloke, when I read this blog not half an hour ago, your post wasn’t there. Yet there you are, before my reply to Sigismund!

    However did you manage to get us into an alternate dimension? Either that or I’m having delusions brought on by too much vitamin C.

  472. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Chemical, wife no. 23, keep the romance alive, go out to dinner once a week…..she goes Tuesday, you go Wednesday. t/boom.

  473. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Nippy’s, also an Orange juice and a blog. whooooo

  474. King from Charlie Company Says:

    You gonna forget about Olly and all the good times we had right in here?

  475. Troy Dann Says:

    Hang on! Just who the hell are these Argives setting for me?

  476. J. D. Ponsinby-Molyneux Villliers-Smythe Says:

    Well now, Petra, there is lovely little trattoria off the Via Condotti where the coffee is superb. I find that the Italians make it best.

    Found the place when the Marquess had sent me to Rome to spy on Bosie. Didn’t do a thing for the old monster, not after that blasted little counter-jumper, Parker, refused to spring the trap at Calais! Could have made my fortune, the wretched little swine. Well, you may call it swindling, but at least I should have restored some modest comfort to an ancient name. Instead, I am doomed to serve in the house of my inferiors. So I just sat there in the winter sunshine and watched the world and nursed my spite.

    But as I say the coffee was superb.

  477. basilsBOOTS Says:

    To all the Olly baggers , and I am one :( , you should cut him some slack. He started quick off the blocks like a bat out of hell, way back in Feb ‘07, when Adam was knee high to a pup. No one, human or otherwise, could have kept up that pace. He tried, oh how he tried. And now just ‘cos he hasn’t written anything for 43 years you’re all like “Olly you don’t care” and “Olly what about your mates” and “Olly you’re a hack”. Well I feel ashamed I do. Damned ashamed. And if I could take back all the nasty, hurtful things I’ve said…….. Well I’m no Sigmo, or Pollysby Villeu, or Major Capt Frooty, or poofy Coops and Heath, but I say give Olly a go. (Stands up and starts clapping, slowly at first and then everyone joins in and forms a guard of honour).

  478. Some Bloke Says:

    A funny thing happened just now to me, and I’ll tell it unless any of you ring me in the next 10 seconds to stop me.

    3,2,1, 0. Okay then.

    Well, I logged on to Big’s site, and was delighted to see a whole new blog titled “Imagine Nation”, full of witty ‘takes’ on the ‘The Beatles’. But when I go to the end, I saw that there were 100’s of responses, including some from yours truly! :-)

    You see, it was written so long ago that I had completely forgotten it! “Olly strikes again!” I yelled, in good humour! Oh, how I laughed here in the office, so much so that workmates asked me why! You should of been here!

  479. Heath Ledger Says:

    Poofy Coops, eh! D’ya hear that, Ash, mate? Poofy Coops!

    Well, how d’ya like THAT, mate – Gucci loafers on the other bloody foot now, I reckon!

  480. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Sorry Heathy mate – what was that? – I missed it; I’ve been really busy on this poem.

    I wonder if it was too obscure?

    Like the whole Berlina/Berliner thing..

    D’ya reckon that people know that the Berlina is a type of Holden, and the Berlina is a type of bun?

    I dunno mate – sometimes I’m feeling like peole don’t understand me; like I feel things and sense things that other people miss out on.

    Sometimes I wanna shake them and say – “hey! did ya see that? Did ya see the paintjob on that Statesman in the dusk, when it caught the last rays of the sun and the traffic lights were starting to glow the same as the tail lights, and the girls were wrapping their Ford jackets a little closer round them as the chill started in…”

    I feel like, oh, jeez Heathy, I dunno…

  481. bigolly Says:

    ….amscol…..orange jooce….frozen pure….orange jooce…on a stick….take a lick…….today

    I think I smell bread baking.

    Love
    Big O
    lly.

  482. Petra Fide Says:

    Big Olly, don’t go towards the light!

    (PS. J. D. Ponsinby-Molyneux Villliers-Smythe, I’ll get them in, what are you having? A double espresso with simmering resentment?)

  483. bigolly Says:

    Goodness me, another comment on “Imagine Nation”.

    Who would have thought?

    Love
    Big Olly

  484. Heath Ledger Says:

    Ashie, mate, when you said back there: “I feel like, oh, I dunno.” I was gonna suggest: “A minda?” – to score what passes for a cheap laugh in this queer shadowland of Olly’s and notch up one more pointless jibe in the relay of sneer and counter-sneer that animates this living death.

    But then I thought about what you said, about how you sense things that others don’t and it makes you anxious – yeah, well, I’ve worked out what that is – turns out it’s not methedoxital in a vodka martini; it’s sensitivity, mate – like truly great method actors have who can, say, play gay cowboys even though they’re not, and then not get paranoid when they don’t even pick up a frickin’ Golden Globe for their trouble!

    And I reckon you’ve got that too – all that stuff about the setting sun and the chill of dusk – and I figure – we ain’t so different after all, you and I…

    The glowing red lights, though, that’s definitely phenodoazine! Classic after-effect!

  485. Jay Dedewth Says:

    I think you were right with “minda.”

  486. Jay Dedewth Says:

    PS: My apologies for that to the troubled shades of Messrs Cooper & Ledger but it’s a cheap laugh in the world of the living as well.

  487. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey Heathy

    Yeah, it’s funny; If I’d never of smacked the V8 into the wall I never would of discovered a whole lot a things; I never would have had time to think.

    I was thinking the other day about one day, long time back, at Bathurst. And I was in the XU1; it was the end of a long day, the crew had been tweaking the cam timings and touching up the camber angles, looking for the extra 1.5 seconds a lap that we needed to run with the big boys. The light was starting to go; we knew we had one chance to get it right before the race next day. It was just me and the machine – the carbies breathing hard, the flat out song of the exhaust, the banshee wail of the gears. And then coming out of Conrod and into the first left hander the world went still; like the whole place just paused for a moment and drew breath, and then something magic happened; we flew around that circuit Heathy, we just flew. I was so calm; it was me and the machine and the circuit all together; it was like I could see it from above, I was there, and it was like Brabham and Brocky were there too, and every bloke who’d ever hustled a sedan car through the esses, we were all one spirit, one being.

    So now I’m dead I’ve got a bit more time, and hanging with the other ghosts, you know, the clever ones that write poems, I’m really starting to be able to express myself through poems as well. It’s beautiful Heathy, it’s almost better than being alive.

    So here goes:

    This one’s called “XU1 up Conrod in the arvo”

    XU1
    Man, it was fun.
    And fast.
    BLAST!
    Up Conrod in the arvo.
    And quiet – til the pit crew’s bravo,
    At my fastest time.
    And I felt fine.

  488. Some Bloke Says:

    I’m preparing myself to be the 500th commenter, so, like a well-primed distance runner I am making my move now, with a slight upping of the tempo 800 metres out, hardly noticeable, now that Coops and Heath have accomplished their job of setting the pace and will now drop off. I can picture me leading a full scale sprint to the line, following which the gold will be mine.

    My only worry is that African Mbutu fellow, dead or alive. Oh, not in any stereotypical racist way, Lord no, but rather because he’s a skinny black African and they’re all bloody good runners.

  489. William Hope Says:

    If this race gets to a photo finish, might I offer my services?

  490. Dorothy Lady Townshend Says:

    I thoroughly recommend Mr Hope – here’s one he took of me at Raynham Hall – late for dinner as usual – about 300 years late! Ah, well, typical me.

  491. Dorothy Lady Townshend Says:

    PS: And what’s all this “Brown Lady” nonsense – the shade is “rust”.

    Oh, dear me, “shade”, get it? Ha! ha! Totty, my dear, you are witty as well as tragically earthbound!

  492. Some Bloke Says:

    Whoops, I’ve gone too early by the looks – seems all the normal pacey contributors have a touch of ollyitis. Not sure if we’ve ever cracked the 500 before – I might go back and check, but I’d better be quick, as my internet history automatically clears itself every 7 years, and I think that was when the last blog was written.

    Come on, baby, come…on… (hand on the mouse, head swivelling back and forth.) Come -arrrnnn! No Virgil, I’m too late. It’s all up to you to find that 500th comment.

  493. Virgil Says:

    Here’s one I prepared earlier:

    Et iam nox humida caelo praecipitat
    Suadentque cadentia sidera somnos.

    That good enough?

  494. The Lanky Yank Says:

    Hey-ya everyone, we’ve got a big show on tonight!
    We’ve got … … ol’ whatsisname my sidekick, a-ha, and oh, the star of Saturday Night Fever … um.. and what about my team the New York Giants beating … the sensational Mark Spitz…
    Oh yeah, hey-ya everyone, we’ve got a big show on sometime. Now? What are we doing now…. ?
    Oh yeah!

  495. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    no you don’t

  496. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    Some Bloke

  497. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    I will

  498. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    get the 500th

  499. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    comment with the

  500. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    same military precision

  501. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    that I got

  502. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    Ms Zaetta’s career

  503. Air Vice Marshall Angus Houston Says:

    so there!

  504. Some Bloke Says:

    Hey look, it’s the same symbol as the Lanky Yank – they must of run out.

    Hats off to the Vice Marshall – I was running along in a trance, picturing the win and the resultant sex romp with Ms Zaetta, and ‘being my shoes’ so to speak, so much so that I raised my arms in triumph before I saw the Vice bloke thanking his scientist for dispensing drugs beyond the reach of modern testing.

    PS Air vice, you forgot to put career in quotation marks (” “), ‘as in I got Ms Zaetta’s “career” so there!’ If any of the readersloopjohnb can point out just what her “career” entailed, apart from knocking off soldiers, I’d be mighty obliged.

  505. basilsBOOTS Says:

    I try my hand at poetry. Here’s mine (translated from the Latin).

    Dead is he, Heath
    bequeath
    to us your talent.
    One day filming
    Dark Knight,
    Joker,
    scheming.
    Next day,
    poof
    you’re gone.
    Poof,
    you’re not.
    So you say.

  506. Some Bloke Says:

    Just timing my run make the 600th comment, like a well-oiled (settle Heathy) marathoner, just leaving the stadium for the Bejing smog, about 25.8 miles to go, settling into stride behind Mbutu and his cohorts.

  507. Heath Ledger Says:

    Boots, my friend. I’m not much of poet off-screen but Lord Alfred assures me that ain’t no poem.

    You’re right about one thing, tho – I did bequeath my talent. My Joker is terrifying, so terrifying they’re starting to think he sacred me to death or at least drove me to scoff rather more pharmaceuticals than was good for my career. Maybe they’re right. Personally I don’t know much more than I read in the papers.

    But it would mean that my talent killed me, and so, ironically, it is my killer that makes me immortal… Wow! I reckon I’ll need a couple of rendophydresols to get my head around that one!

    By the way, I didn’t go in a “poof”. As I recall, it took several hours of mind-churning stupor followed by a blazing spiral of red and green filaments, a black curtain descending, a feeling of falling backwards in a chair over a cliff with the sound of a child weeping in the distance and a voice like a long-distance telephone operator speaking from the middle of a train-station, repeating bland instructions which I couldn’t decipher, then sudden silence and… this place.

  508. Heath Ledger Says:

    Come to think of it – the voice could have been that f#$%in’ masseuse asking Mary- f@#$in’-Kate f@#$in’ Olsen to get her f@#$in’ security guards to come over and see if maybe they should think about f#$%in’ calling me a F#$%in’ ambulance!

  509. Mary- f@#$in’-Kate f@#$in’ Olsen Says:

    You’re a F#$%in’ ambulance. Bit late now, like yerself…

  510. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Hey there Mary-f@#$in-Kate, that’s a pretty name. You might know my friend Lindsay (x+a)^n=∑_(k=0)^n▒〖(n¦k) x^k a^(n-k) 〗 Lohan. I love her but she’s a complex girl, I’m still trying to work her out.

  511. Mary- f@#$in’-Kate f@#$in’ Olsen Says:

    Yeh she’s in my set (or it might be subset). I don’t know anything about Parabolic Equations with Time- Dependent Coefficients. After 25 tequillas, it doesn’t seem to matter.

  512. Lindsay Head Says:

    Don’t start one off on my sister, Lindsay Lohan. Ah, such promise in “The Parent Trap”. Acting as I haven’t seen since “The Patty Duke Show”. In “Trap” young Lindsay plays an ‘igh class pommy girl, and also the role of her (unbeknownst) twin a tough talking yank! They meet at a girls only summer camp, such as they have in L’America.
    The hijinks are endless, as you can imagine.

    Now she’d have rooted the girls in the camp, and when she realised it was incest and the pommy was in fact her twin, she’d have gouged her eyes out with a burnt stick. Or something like that.

    Am I 600th?

  513. Hayley 'Corks!BlueBlazes!Dash-It-All' Mills Says:

    Upstarts! How dare they consign my finest performance(s) to the bargain bin when they foisted an inferior ‘remake’ on my unsuspecting public?

    Eye hem en ectyewl ‘igh class pommy girl, hi neau hwhat heyem hon habout (hand neau mistake.)

    Happarently, heye ham 512th. It’s to do with the hinternational-dateline-timezone whatnot heye hexpect.

  514. Mrs Mills Says:

    Ah
    Roll
    out
    the
    barrel
    We’ll ‘ave a barrel a fun

    Ah roll out the lezzers
    Lindsay
    Lohan
    is one.

    ‘ello Olly me ol’ watcha. I’ve modernized don’t cha know. I now drink a pint of alcopop at me sing song concerts. The kids are buying me recerds by the bushell.

    Ah roll out the barrel

    [dies

  515. Lady Heather Mills MCCARTNEY (yes I'm keeping the bloody name, you bastard!) Says:

    Oh Mam, why’re yer always embarrrasssin’ me?

  516. Some Bloke Says:

    Paul McCartney did a big concert in the Ukraine.
    “Sigh”
    I wish I was there… :-(

  517. Lady Heather Mills MCCARTNEY (yes I'm keeping the bloody name, you bastard!) Says:

    Great! Think I’ll nip out & get myself another diamone-encrusted-solid-platinum leg with the proceeds…

  518. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Did anyone see that show the other night about those people in that place? Man it was funny, especially the bit where the girl said that thing to the boy. As what’s his name says, “I laughed my tits off.”

  519. Heath Ledger Says:

    Fine! He gets to say: “tits” with nary a tisk-tisk from Olly.

    But brilliant, underappreciated, misunderstood, sleep-disordered method actors of craft and genius – oh, that’s another question altogether…..

  520. Some Bloke Says:

    I might of seen the show you were talking about, if you, too, like me, were watching the DVD of the classic ‘Caddyshack’ last Tuesday at about 8.35pm. If you were, and it sounds likely, you’re probably referring to the witty repartee between Chevy Chase and the horn he scores. ;)

  521. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Yer, dats da one. Her name was Lacy Underall, brilliant! And then later on Bill Murray tells the story about caddying for the Dalai Lama (one L). Would that have been the same DL that is around abouts now? Who can tell me this?

  522. Some Bloke Says:

    I though that the DL played the role of the pesky gopher who gave Bill Murray all those problems, but I might of been mistaken. Bill Murray for mine was best on ground, with a typically fine performance from Chase, and Judge playing his best role of the year, well supported by Dangerfield, Underall, and the chachi lookalike who was the bad caddie. I could feel the tension as they jeered Tadeuz Jedynak as he tried to sink the winning putt.

    Caddyshack 2, though lacking all of the stars, had it’s moment, the best being when it finished playing at triple speed and was flicked like a frisbee into the bin, where it didn’t belong, there not being enough muck in the bin on that particular day. :-)

    But I digress, the DL re-emerged as Dangerfield’s chaueffer Lou in ‘Back to School’.

  523. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    Today is Paul McCartney’s birthday are you invited to the party Mrs Mills?

    Also, note to Cyd Charisse: when you’ve checked in look up Heath, I’ve heard he’s a bit of a hoofer.

  524. Lady Heather Mills MCCARTNEY (yes I'm keeping the bloody name, you bastard!) Says:

    No, & I resent having to pay my PA out of my own money* to buy a card for him on behalf of our daughter.
    *It is mine now, you can’t do anything about it!

  525. Petra Fide Says:

    Some Bloke,
    I’m sure one of the worst films wot I ever rented (I had to sit through it to get my money’s worth) entitled ‘Funny Farm’, would have been vastly improved if only the DL had been Chase’s wife. In real life I mean.
    (no beverage reference)

  526. Mrs Mills Says:

    Oh yes Johnny two embuttoned cloth caps, I’ll be there alright singing up a storm. I see Miss Mills replies as if these notes from you is meant for her. Uppity lady. I s’pose she’s been de-ladied, now that the state ‘as set her weddin’ aside. She can now dream of being han Earl, like Percy Snodgrass.
    she maight ‘ave a bit of wife (that’s slang Olly for truble) dreamin’ of a girl on eacjh knee, given sher aint a lezzer and she aint got two knees!
    Haw Haw Haw

  527. Some Bloke Says:

    Petra Fide
    I can see how far we have drifted apart, courtesy of your most formal salutation. Criminy, even Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington “Fruity” Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) passes for Fruity in correspondence.
    Mr Some Bloke
    (Kettle broken)

  528. Heath Ledger Says:

    Hoofer? Well, if you mean “dancer” – sure I can hoof with the best of ‘em ‘long as I got my ski-mask and a gill of psuedoephadrine-margarita.

    If you mean something that sounds like… see above, pretty boy!

  529. Petra Fide Says:

    Some,
    I didn’t mean to sound distant… but you can’t expect me to call you Sugar in front of all these people.
    Petra
    (You could borrow my thermos)

  530. The Ghost of Laverne Meyer Says:

    What do you mean “all of these people”?
    Most everybody here is dead, the most alivest being that old Army rank.
    I’m dead too, perhaps you knew me: A Canadian ballet dancer, director and teacher who played a noble part in establishing ballet in previously neglected parts of Britain.
    I hear Heath is up here and that he’s brokebacking once more. Yum!

  531. Petra Fide Says:

    I always assume anyone speaking to me is a person. Which might explain why I can’t get out of the lift without thanking it.

    OK then, please substitute the phrase with “anybody whatsoever; living, dead, unsure, fictional, factual, entity, non-entity…” I could go on (but won’t, just to break the habit).

    I didn’t meet you, but I have had the benefit of your Company. Although, by your own argument, being dead means you are a non-person & I shouldn’t be speaking to you… Anyway, how is Shirley these days?

  532. Heath Ledger Says:

    Oh, come on! I know when I’ve been set up. That whole dance-hoofer thing was nothing but a sleazy attempt to put me in the frame for the cheep, poof-dancer, come-on routine from one of you pretending to be late Laverne Meyer. Well, he’s been dead a whole two months and nobody’s heard a peep out of him til now. Must be in another place.

    So. who is it? Ashie? Boots? Stabilo? Johnny TH?

    Petra’s two sweet and suffers too much herself from insomnia to make cheap jokes about hunkily brooding yet tragically sleep-disordered screen idols. Some Bloke and Fruity Stokes have no priors for taunting the narcotically-challenged. And Oscar and Bosie are hardly in a position to cast stones (even in a girlie overhand sort of way). So fess up!

  533. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    I’m not even dead..am I?

    Should be, I grant you. And would be, if the gods were fair-minded. By rights I ought to have been done for in any number of Close Shaves, Sticky Wickets and Right Pickles – but I just seem to muddle through.

    Oh, yes indeed, Olly old box, if the Bey of Tangier hadn’t allowed the muzzles of his turret guns to become clogged with tobacco, spit and half-digested lima beans, old Fruity would have bought it in the Spring of ‘98, riddled with shot, instead of just showered with bits of exploded Arab and armament warmed curry!

  534. Deadliness Says:

    Somehow i missed the point. Probably lost in translation :) Anyway … nice blog to visit.

    cheers, Deadliness!!

  535. Mr Mills Says:

    Get her

  536. johnnytwohats Says:

    Heath, I thought you were going to be the next big thing in Hollywood, like Christopher Walken. He was a child star too, and a great hoofer. Noone would dare say that HE’s not manly and virile.
    My point is, I think you are imagining these allusions to your poofiness.

  537. Jadey Sill Says:

    Frankly, he goes on so much ’bout ‘ow ‘e haint a poove you start to wonder…..

  538. The ghost of Mbutu Batanga Says:

    My friends, I am thinking that things are slowing down a bit here, and we will never get to 600 at this rate.

    So, a tried and true ruse is required – best and worst Beatles songs.

    But, ha, I put an end to the argument by giving you the judges decision (being dead, I know, as God told me):

    Worst by a country mile is “Oh Bla Di Oh Bla Da” – an easy one I know.

    But best may cause a stir. God says it’s “I Want You (She’s So Heavy)”!! Who’d ‘a’ thought?

  539. Petra Fide Says:

    Shirley Temple was a child star & was known to hoof it a bit. Is she manly & virile too?
    As was Judy Garland. I’m sure Oscar & Bosie could tell you plenty about her career, but our erstwhile straightman-in-a-gay-cowboy-role won’t even have heard of her. He’s far too busy doing man stuff, like arm wrestling, felling trees & chasing girls.
    (Hope that keeps them off your back for a bit Heath. Oops. Sorry.)

  540. Heath Ledger Says:

    Thanks, Petra,… I think.

    Hey, I know you’re a coffee girl but would ya fancy a rohypnol malt?

  541. Petra Fide Says:

    Sounds delicious! Will it make me sleepy? If not, please put something in it that will.

  542. stabiloBOSS Says:

    Best: Yer Blues
    Worst: Oh Bla Di etc…

  543. stabiloBOSS Says:

    …I guess that also shows you where I stand on the Lennon vs McCartney debate.

  544. The ghost of the only good injun Says:

    How!! (bitten by a rattler while sleeping actually – boom-TISS)

    It-um heaps strange that McCartney song could be um-best Beatles song.

    Me think he sneek up on Lennon after he (Lennon (- ed)) smoke-um too many peace pipe and steal lyrics from pocket.

    Me like-um breezy blues bit in middle though.

  545. Some Bloke Says:

    Worst: Debut Single
    Best: Last song recorded
    In between, complete and utter muck, though I did quite like “I’ll Follow the Sun” from that The Beatles cartoon show. ;)
    Dont get me started on the The Rolling Boredoms – haven’t put out a good song since Some Girls, which has led me to re-visit that album and come to the conclusion that they fluked it in.

    Still, at least their output is more than Big Olly, who’ve I renamed “Little Olly these days, a (fuck)witty reflection by me.

  546. Jay Dedewth Says:

    “Sympathy for the Devil” justifies their continued and exponentially annoying career.

    As for the Beatles – like (yawn) who? – oh, yeah, that’s right – those guys – well: “She is Leaving” was kinda OK… I guess.

  547. Petra Fide Says:

    ‘Gimme Shelter’ & a break! ‘Oh Blah Dee..’ is bad, but nowhere near as cringeworthy as ‘Rocky Raccoon’. Surely McCartney’s worst ever, & I’m including ‘Ebony & Ivory’ in the comparison. It’s saying something that the worst doesn’t feature the vocal stylings of Ringo..

  548. Petra Fide Says:

    .

  549. Jimmy Connors Says:

    Hoo-eee, some folks have all the luck!
    Wow, lucky Greg Norman stabs me in the back and gets my girl! Boy! He passed me down the line, I never saw it coming. Hats off!
    I only got to bonk her between matches in the changerooms when she was a glamour 19 year old in a short white dress. And now the Shark gets her all day as a 52 year old. Woooo! Go Shark!
    Hey, you know what?! Maybe I’ll have a crack at Laura! No wait, buddy, she’s what makes the 52 year old Chrissie look hot in the first place.

  550. Jadey Sill with regard to "She" Says:

    Well, I am the 5 hundreth and 5 tee-ef! Well done for a B.O.B.G. record.
    That great industry is, ironically, a tribute to Olly’s indolence. At least you can’t say he’s beefed it up with his own contributions.

    I don’t want to pre-empt the next post by Olly, if that’s possible, but if I did I would steal from Alexi Sayle (after his time with “the Outer Limits” in the early 80s, and that’s true Petra, look it up if you can’t sleep) re the Beatles hit “She”.
    All the parents did was give her everything, sacrificed all of their lives for her, and she leaves home.

    The ungrateful slut.

  551. Petra Fide Says:

    Olly must be trying to prove the adage ‘Less is more’. Which it clearly isn’t, unless the criteria are hopelessly vague, i.e. more or less. Which proves only that the item to be speculated about is not nothing. I wish I’d thunked abit more about this before posting. I might have got the coveted five-five-five then as well.

    Jadey, I did as you suggested. Far from sending me to sleep, his career overview started me brooding over ‘Paris’…

  552. Arturo Taverna Says:

    Dear Olly.
    Speaking of matters milky. I have just returned from a 3 month hair conference in the Patagonion Andes. I was staying in a remote mountain village with a well-to-do indigenous family, who had their own Llama. I had believed this was motor car built somewhere East of (and prior to the fall of) the Berlin Wall, and was prepared to in awe of their ability to run such a noble vehicle at an elevation of 7000 metres. Knock me down with a hairdryer if I discover on arrival that, not only was I not going to be driving about in it , I was expected to milk the thing. And all this in return for access to (a) a bed made of leaves & sticks, and (b) all the un-married women in the town. A beast of burden, indeed, unlike Mr Jagger.

    I was exhausted by the time I finished with them all, and I confess that it took every fluid ounce (of product) I had with me to get that native hair under control, but by the time I left, every one of those dusky beauties had a ‘do’ that glowed. Sadly, I suspect that this state will not last, as the supply of my patented hair products to that region is at best sketchy, and alpaca butter is cheaper and more convenient.

    On a more prosaic note, may I say that, having been incommuindo for such a time, Since my return to the salon, I have it found it difficult to follow the thread of such a long thread. Therefore may I join the chorus of those beseeching a new start. Just a paragraph or two will suffice.

    More is less, I say.

  553. Arturo Taverna Says:

    And if you’ve lost any or all digits, as has been surmised by others, what about a pointed stick.

  554. CheekyGeorge Says:

    Dear Mr Travertine, our class went on a trip to a farm stay and we saw some llammas!!
    We got to milk them too!!! My uncle Charlie (who took me ‘cos Dad is till away) wanted to “squeeze the jugs” as well but the farm man said it was just for the kids to do. Charlie said the farm man was a fat lazy cunt and that night after dinner they had a fight ‘cos the beer makes Charlie strong. Anyway, we both got sent home but Mum says she’ll take me another time by herself ‘cos uncle Charlie is a loud mouthed hunk of shit.

  555. The Very Rev. Monsignor Felchey Says:

    Lammas! is the loaf-mass of August 6th, being the feast of the first fruits of the harvest for which we traditionally return our grateful thanks to a benificent Deity. As it falls, however, at the midpoint between the summer solstice and the autumnal equinox, I’m rather afraid today’s new age freaks tend to prefer dancing nude round forest trees than spending a few lousy friggin’ minutes worshiping at the foot of my altar the God that gave them all their cretinous useless lives – friggin’ pagans…

    Christ, it makes ya spit…

  556. Bad Wolf Says:

    I fort “lam ars” wuz der chewiest bit. Mmmm!

  557. Jay Dedewth Says:

    I once heard a comic genius sing: “Take the L out of Llama and it’s… Lama.”

    Not to be confused with “Del Mar”, that gay cowboy character Mr. Ledger plays so convincingly. Still, the less said about that the better.

  558. Some Bloke Says:

    Hmmmmm. (Thoughful ponder, then sound of illuminating fingersnap!)

    Hey now wait a minute! Mick Corby Senior is up there, isn’t he? Perhaps someone could ask him just who the hell put the drugs in the bag, notwithstanding that he “neverrrrrr eeeeven ssaawwWWWW THE BLOOOOOODY BAAGGGGGGGGG!!!!!”

    Coops, you ask him, tell me, and then I’ll become the new white knight – there’s a family that I’d love to save.

  559. CheekyGeorge Says:

    My Mum told me to ‘pologize for using the “C” word in my last post. I said to her, “do you mean Charlie?”. She said, “same”.
    Oh and by the way she would like to meet up with someone for a coffee, but they has to be an alive man.
    cG

  560. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey, Some, how are ya mate!

    Tell, ya – sure he’s probly a good bloke and all, but I haven’t really talked to old Corbs Senior much. Not meaning to be rude, but I think he’s a bit of a bogan. Not much going on upstairs, if you know what I mean? Heathey seems to like him, though, always popping over to borrow something or other – ask him about it.

    Tell you what though – Jane McGrath is seriously hot. I was having a bit of yarn to her about donating some organs. (I tell you – It’d be criminal to let her tits go to waste, for a start) I was able to be a bit of a comfort to her I think; you know, we both left kiddies behind and all.

    In fact I’m working on a Haiku for her – lighthearted sort of – might cheer her up (and do me some good; you never know…)

    (draft only at this stage)

    between your bosoms
    love to rub the old fella
    sorry a bit quick

  561. Some Bloke Says:

    Good work, Coops, with your valuable input I can now contact Mercedes Corby and tell – oh for fuck’s sake-.

  562. Petra Fide Says:

    Chaps, have you heard about the latest in internet freedom? No more ‘dot com’ nonsense, now you can suffix howsoe’er you like.
    Big Olly, you’d better make sure you get hold of BigOlly.ByChristmas(weatherpermitting)

    For myself, I rather hope for Ellipsis.dotdot

  563. Phillip Lipeens Says:

    Well, I’ve been away for a while. I’ve even got a new computer, but at the WordPress glacier I see all is as it was.
    In my day, when Big was around, there’d be a sharp smack for the sailor talk, that’s fo sho.
    I think that your correspondant re the sqoozies of that cricketer’s wife didn’t read the death certificate.
    But it raises this issue, if you like die in a car crash and you’re all mangled up and stuff, is that how you are in heaven?
    If so, if you get cremated, are you a pile of ash, but getting around in anthropamorphic form? Spooky, you’d be like the mummy in the film “The Mummy”

  564. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Hey Phil; jeez, ya got me there mate! I didn’t know they were fake tits, but who cares? Whoever built them sure as hell knew what he was doing! And besides, if you’re going to pass them on to some worthy living sheila you might as well give her ones that won’t go south after a coupla years, eh?

    Besides, there’s the added benefit of getting her personality traits with them; just think, some selfish tart who cares about nothing but the fact that she’s a bit on the flat side gets Janey’s rack, and bingo! Next thing you know she’s starting charities, helping the kiddies, all that stuff. Can’t be bad.

    As for whether we ghosts look banged up, well, I don’t. I look just like I’m about to get into the V8 for a lap of honor. Fit as a flea, mate; got me fireproof overalls, shoes, helmet etc. So it sort of depends. No one looks too bad – except Marcel is still wearing that fucking stripey sailor shirt with the fucking carnation and the banged up top hat. Jesus – gimme a break!

  565. Jay Dedewth Says:

    Now, that is interesting: Who of the readerdestroyer remembers “The Monkey’s Paw”, a famous tale of love and greed – but mainly greed?

    The paw, acquired in India (of course) grants three wishes to its possessor, but in unexpected ways, and an elderly couple wish for a thousand pounds and then their son gets mangled in a machine down pit and then they get a thousand pounds compensation and then the old dear secretly wishes her son back and nothing happens so they go to bed; and they wake up in the middle of the night to hear someone (ie dead son) dragging his crushed leg up the drive and the old man says: “What have you done you foolish woman?” just as the mangled son pounds on the front door with the knock of doom; and she tells him, and he says: “But you didn’t view the body… I saw him. I saw him. AND HE HAD NO FACE! Then there’s a mad scramble to find the monkey’s paw and wish their only son back in his grave before his corpse can greet them.

    The fascinating thing from Mr Cooper’s point of view is that the Hitchcock film changed the son from a factory worker to a racing driver who crashes his car and there is nothing more eerie, I tell you, than the familiar gurgling rumble of the stacked Lotus Elan pulling up at 3.00am on Mumsy’s gravel return drive!

    If I were Ashley Cooper, I’d check what’s under those overalls and the shoes and the helmet – if it’s crushed bone and twisted metal… Hitchcock was right.

  566. WW Jacobs Says:

    I remember it. It was nearly as good as The Cursed (“cur-said”) Dollar. Said item granted wishes, but if you died still owning it, the devil would get your eternal soul. It couldn’t be lost, or given away, it had to be sold for half the amount it was bought for, & with a complete & accurate description of what it was. Talk about caveat whatsit! If anyone is still looking to off-load it, the exchange rate in Zimbabwe looks favourable right now.

  567. WW Jacobs Says:

    The Cur-said yellow wink of doom has infested my post!! ARGH!!

  568. Verbal Kint Says:

    Where is Big Olly?

    (in teary voice) “He was my friend!”

  569. Mr Kobayashi Says:

    You will wait here. Mr Olly was most insistent…

  570. Capt. Oates Says:

    I thought I was going out for some time. Nothing on the rumored Big Olly of whom I have heard so much. He is like the supply dump “just round the next cwm” Always promised, never realized. You could say it’s made me a bit ‘blue’
    Any woos, I am the 570th poster, but I find no joy in that. I am rather ‘cool’ on it, you might say. It’s a bit like being second to the pole.
    It, like me, is a bit ’stiff’.

  571. The Most Fev Archbishop of Canterberry Says:

    Those frikken schizmatics really get my goat. A new college of bishops they decree in Jerusalem. Isn’t that build-ded on Engerland’s pastures, green?
    How dare they usurp the most Holy authority given unto my office as it was by the Defender of the Faith serial womanizer/murderer STD carrier blessed Henry VIII.
    The joke is on them. They are anti women and anti gay. So I will be at the Lambeth conference surrounded by female bishops with no pesky vows of chastity (as the Catholics have) whilst they’ll be having their all-male conference. Don’t tell me there wont be a bit of laying with men as women, Heath Ledger style. They go on about how bad poovery is so much that you just start to wonder, don’t you.
    Not so anti gay after all, eh boys? ;-)
    Go in Peace,
    Rowan

  572. The Most Rev Archbishop of Canterberry Says:

    Sorry about the typo in my title, imagined Olly. I am not the “Most Carlton Full Forward Archbishop..”
    I expect Jenson will yclept himself this title in the scizmatic church.

  573. Sigismund Says:

    Ah, glaciers!

    Please forgive this uncharacteristic ejaculation, my dear members of the readerflotilla, but I return refreshed after some dozen months in the Pyrenees, where I have had the very good fortune to be an observer on an expedition of glacial discovery and measurement.

    Many keen amateurs such as myself were able to rub shoulders with preeminent glaciologists from the world over, in one of the few regions where one may still hope to discover a new glacier.

    And indeed this happened!

    What had for decades been assumed as merely a static body of ice was shown by members of our expedition to be a glacier! It is only recently that scientific instruments of sufficient precision to measure this infinitesimal progress have been available.

    Indeed, so grindingly slow, so tedious, so seemingly unlikely to exhibit any progress whatsoever is this new glacier that common units of measurement are too coarse to track its progress. While common glaciers may move centimetres pre year, even microns per year would return a null result for the new glacier. No, only when a unit of one thousandth of a micron – that is one thousand-millionth of a metre per year – is employed will progress be measurable.

    And, fellow readers, may I admit to some pride that when names for this new unit of measurement were being considered, the “Olly” (symbol O), was unanimously selected?

    Ah, Olly! Ah, humanity!

  574. Some Bloke Says:

    Sigi

    I thought you were harking back to that Ice Age blog of Olly’s, about 6 or 7 years ago, and were going to say that in your new glacier they found a man with a clean slate and charcoal in one hand and a ponderous look on his face and that this man had been over-run by the glacier while waiting thirteen years to write something, and that a subsequent DNA test found him to be an original Olly-ian.

    But your post mentions none of that, so my thoughts were wrong.

  575. Sigismund Says:

    Goodness me, Mr Bloke; my head is swimming! What may we yet find inside this slowest of all glaciers, this “glaciers’ glacier” if you will?

    Could this latest discovery really provide a clue as to the origin of the Ollyian?

    Presumably the proto-Olly, if such creature exists, was far more numerous in prehistoric times; I imagine that unlike most species which increase in number, the Ollyian was at its most plentiful at the moment of creation and has moved ever after inexorably toward extinction?

    If we were to excavate in this glacier do you think it possible that we might find thousands of Ollyians, all captured in various moments of repose? Each one caught in some slightly different form of inactivity?

    What might we learn about the world at that time? Might we find the first ever example of a boxed trifecta? What would an examination of an Ollyian’s undergarments tell us of their diet?

    Mr Bloke I cannot thank you enough; I will write to my friends in the society straight away.

  576. The Yet Even More Rev. Archbishop Jensen Says:

    Schismatic, am I? Well, if that ain’t the pyx calling the censor black!

    If to topple you from your popish throne, ya great, bearded Whore of Babylon, is to be schismatic, then yea, I am schismatic!

    If to protest that the injunction of the Almighty is to love your neighbour not to covet his ass, if that be to protest too much, then, yea I am too much protestant.

    If to sit here in sunny Jerusalem with the Jews, Sefardic and Ashkenazi, Rabbinical and Mosaic, and with the Muslims, Shiite and Sunni, Fatamid, Fanatamid, and with the Christians, Orthodox, Coptic, Orthodontic, Arthroscoptic, Gnomic and Psychotic and spit venom at all of those blind infidels and heretics who have squandered the precious unity of the children of Abraham in the very land where the smoke of Sodom went up like the smoke of a furnace! If that is apostacy, lo am I apostate!

    If to make the love of men by men the focus of the unifying hatred of the great montheistic religions of the world… if that is wicked and inhuman and contrary to divine law and revealed truth and reason and philosophy and science, if it is the spewed poison of the Devil himself, then I am wicked and inhuman and against divinity and truth and reason and philosophy and science and it is I INDEED WHO AM THE VERY DEVIL!

  577. The Yet Even More Rev. Archbishop Jensen Says:

    Hang on! That didn’t quite come out the right way….

  578. Petra Fide Says:

    Olly had better write something new very soon, otherwise the blog will tip over the ideal ratio of 5% musings to 95% non-musings.

    In the non-musings category:
    ‘Gay-ness’ 39% (with 33% devoted to ‘Heath Leger’, the rest to the inner wranglings of the church)
    ‘The Be-a-tles’ 37% ‘(& their assorted wives, ex-wives, widows, potential fifths at 33 1/3%)
    Tits at 17% (the anatomical variety, not the status of the correspondents)
    Leaving 7% for miscellaneous conversational asides between the readerfriggate (Hello).

    In addition, the larger proportion of the readerghostship are dead.

    Statistically then, to get the widest number of readers back onside, Olly’s next subject should be: ‘”I shagged Ringo after his breast implant op whilst dressed as Calamity Jane” claims Thomas a Beckett’.
    Ideally in blank verse.

  579. Some Bloke Says:

    I think that the original Ollyian was musing over something along those lines, but had a bad dose of “Olly’s block”. Hopefully Sigi and his beard-but-no-moustache mates can determine whether or not this is genetic.

  580. Sigismund Says:

    Mr Bloke – my heart sings!

    I have just heard from members of the society that indeed there appears to be a very large number of mammalian creatures preserved in the ice.

    That they are some form of proto-Ollyian seems certain (surely there could be no other creature immobile enough to be outrun by this slowest recorded glacier). I hasten to add, though, that preliminary examination of the ice is only by portable X-Ray machine, and not until magnetic resonance imaging equipment can be hauled up the mountain will we know for sure.

    Permit me please to conjecture a little further: (I know I am running ahead of the established facts, but the conclusion, if realised, it so far beyond the wildest dreams of the readerlillypad that I think it permissible to do so)

    Let us suppose there are 5000 Ollyians frozen in the ice (the earliest X-Rays would seem to bear this out)

    Let us further suppose that of these Ollyians perhaps ten percent were engaged in the process of writing, or thinking about writing a blog entry when the ice overtook them.

    And then let us say that of these, perhaps three percent finished a blog entry. (Remember that there was a time when our own late Olly was able to do this)

    Now – these figures are, I believe, conservative. And if true, there could well be 15 or more complete blog entries by early Ollyians preserved in the ice.

    Imagine that! If a way can be found to extract the entries non-destructively from the glacier we may well have many rich years ahead of us.

    I will report again as soon as I know more…

  581. JohnnyTwoHats Says:

    I would like to hear what ice age Olly has to say about leaving crates full of milk out on the asphalt all morning. The poor little grommets probably had to hack the cream out with a mamoth’s tusk or sabre’s tooth.

  582. Petra Fide Says:

    In the ice age, surely bottles would be superfluous? They’d just have milk lollies.
    (That’s lollies in the pom usage, a frozen thing on a stick, not sweets. Now I’ve belaboured that point, I’ll be off.)

  583. Dr Williams Says:

    Well, That old Jenson blew off didn’t he? Perhaps a little techy that he isn’t the ARCHBISHOP OF CANTABERRY.
    I wonder who is?
    Oh, IT’S ME!
    And what I say goes. I even think Jesus wants us to re-unite with the Catholics, and he wants me to be a cardinal in the Holy catholic and Apostolic Church, and one day, who knows, the Pope.
    Jenson on the other hand wants to be like the travelling Levite who the wicked men wanted to ravage but his host refused them entry, instead sending out the Levite’s concubine to be ravaged. And she was. And next day when the Levite went to leave he said “come on then” to his concubine but then realized she was dead with her arms outstreched o’er the hearth. So he cut her into 12 pieces and sent a piece to all the tribes in Isreal and said “see what you have done?” but in flowery bible talk.
    That’s who Jensen is. He’d rather cut a victim up than take the pain himself.
    Having said that, there were no kings in that time and people did what they thought right in their own eyes [Judges 21 v.25]. I suppose that even covers the Heath Ledger types who wanted to skroink the Levite’s botty in the first place.
    Peace etc
    Dr RW

  584. Robbie Williams Says:

    Oi Petra me old watcha, I thought Lollie were a cockney euthemism for money, not an ice block.
    Fakken north trash

  585. Dr R Williams (Archbishop) Says:

    Well Robbie, Them africans and Aussies not coming, I hope to see you at the Lambeth conference, were you’ll find us all walking.
    For are we not, my friends, the Church of Engerland itself!
    Did those feet in ancient times not walk on our pastures green, not Africa, not Australia’s but Fakken Engerland! Ours!

  586. Joseph of Arimathea Says:

    No they didn’t actually. I planned the trip but didn’t get past Carthage where I let Jesus off. Sorry. Didn’t get there, but I heard about it from Ceaser. Sounded excellent!

  587. Sigismund Says:

    It has happened, readers!

    The glacial society has been hard at work, and has excavated the first of the proto-Ollyians. And what a find! Next to his perfectly preserved body was a pile of shale tablets, offering us more than we could possibly have hoped for – a post!

    Well, enough from me; Let one of the first Ollyians speak to us from beyond his icy tomb;

    ” I apologise, humble and devoted reader, for the relative crudity of this musing. I am an as yet unevolved cave man, so I beg you to indulge a lack of sophistication in what I have scratched out on this soft bit of rock with a pointy bone.
    I wish, however, share with you following:
    I love a song with spelling in it. I don’t know what it is but spelling out a word to the banging rhythm of a couple of old jaw bones seems so clever and satisfying.
    There are a couple of ways of doing it. You can do a sort of lyrical acrostic like the singer Ugg Ugg does in M-A-M-M-O-T-H. For those who, by reason of old age or infirmity don’t know what the hell I am talking about, it’s the one that goes “M is for the way you’d like to maul me, A is for the Ahh! as I run away, M is for your very very extraordinary mouth” etc.
    This is good, but tortures sense a bit. I have trouble with “very extraordinary” let alone very very. It smacks of tautology and you, gentle reader, know how I hate that.
    The other kind of spelling in a song is the simple sort where the letters are just strung out. My earliest memory of this type of spelling is probably ICEMAN by someone. A paleolithic sort of surf/girl singer. Maybe Ugg Ugg. There is no point in setting out the relevant lyrics ‘cos they are just the letters. There is a challenge to getting them to scan but it can be quite satisfying.
    A slight variation is where you link double letters but still manage to keep the scansion. I humbly submit the timeless classic “Sabre Tooth” by (I think) Ugg Ugg:
    S,A,B,R,E ,T double-O, T, H
    S,A,B,R,E ,T double-O, T, H
    Do you see the clever way that by saying “double O double T, H” the songsmith has managed to get a couple of extra syllables for scansion?
    It is nothing short of majestic.
    I am not sure if it is in the original version, but there is a cover of “I Feel Like Making Fire”, the Ugg classic, in which, instead of singing the lyric as it is written –
    That’s the time
    I feel like making fire, for you
    the artist renders it thus;
    That’s the time
    I feel like making F, I, R, E , for you, ooh ooh ooh

    It doesn’t look like it would fit, but it does and has a lot of impact. ”

    …ends

    Well, – this one will keep the scholars busy for months, I leave it with you all while I return to the mountains to see what the glacier might give us next!

    Sigismund.

  588. stabilloBOSS Says:

    not going to the new one. I like it fine just here.

  589. Boo Boo the unbearable Says:

    Hey Yogi Sigismund the sea monster, you must be wrong, or like those Germans at Crete who destroy/produce evidence to support their theory, because writing wasn’t invented then.
    Am I 500th?

  590. Some Bloke Says:

    Sigi

    This proves the poitn entirely!

    The ice probably first coame into contact with this early Ollyian at the point he wrote “I wish, however, share with you following:”. My calculations, which hopefully the Reverend Ghost of Fr Dennett will bear out, has it that glacier probably trapped this Ollyian withing 55 years, and I’ve deduced that, on the current speed of writing, this is how long it’d of taken the current B. Olly to complete the task, to within a micron or two.

    So far, the hypothesis is succeeding!

  591. Mr and Mrs Big Olly Says:

    Oi Vey already. Get movement out of Olly you vish? We’ve been trying to get him to move for 46 years yet. Amatures we aren’t.

  592. Sigismund Says:

    Another fragment from the ice, dear readers!

    Forgive my haste; again I leave this with you without comment. It was found next to another proto-Ollyian of more advanced years who had inscribed it on one tablet apparently just before expiring. I must return now to see what else the glacier will divulge; no time to read or respond to comments I’m afraid!

    Sigismund.

    fragment begins..

    “One of my favourite things, sweet and mellifluous reader, about living in the Paleolithic era (if that, indeed is where I live) is that there is plenty of time for good old fashioned clowning.
    Now, don’t get me wrong; some things about clowning get right up my nose:
    a) They are drunks.
    b) There is a caveman called Jerry Ugg Lewis and another one called Robin Ugg Williams who are very unfunny when they try to be clowns.
    However, this is more than compensated for, polite benevolent and reader, by the facts that:
    a) All clowns have different faces
    b) They all paint their faces on an egg (yep, I just love that part!)
    Well, urbane and querulental reader, that just about wraps it up. I’d love to hear what you think, though.”

    …ends

  593. Mr and Mrs Big Olly Says:

    Enough already Sigismund, you kibitzer! Think of the clown faces on those dinosaur eggs! Such detail in the clown faces, with such a big object to draw them on yet!
    You would have to get your design on pretty quickly, or the ‘raptor would hatch and cut your stinking drunk guts open, already.

  594. bigolly Says:

    If I didn’t know any better I might be tempted to imagine that certain desperadoes on the readerfloe are just hanging ’round here to be no. 600.

    Very well. I know who you are and will remember this next time there is a whole lot of whining about me not working hard enough for your pleasure.

    Love
    Big Olly

  595. Mr and Mrs Big Olly Says:

    How you should treat your mother!

  596. Mr and Mrs Big Olly Says:

    And father!

    (Am I 6ooth?)

  597. bigolly Says:

    Yes, you are 600th. In my affections.

    Love
    Big Olly

  598. Ashley Cooper Says:

    Ollster Mate! Glad you’re back!

    Hey, tell me; in Adelaide last year I hired a clown for Ella’s birthday party – name of “Fritz Sandwich” What the fark is that all about? If it’s some kind of local humour for you crow eaters, maybe you can explain.

    Coops

  599. Some Bloke Says:

    Coops

    Sigi and his cohorts may hold the key to that one. Now I fancy that if there are a lot of people in ye olde ancient ale house under the glacier all eating a schnitzel parmagiana, then the ancient Ollyian will have the biggest. That nugget of gold, if you will, was passed onto me by Kickos, a famous parmagiana measurer.

    As for a fritz sandwhich, take your question to some humourless German.

  600. A Ward Says:

    I am the 600th, yee Har!
    Milk is good food, and it makes you pretty too (as well).
    I’d like to thank Ringo and all the other ghosts

  601. bigolly Says:

    Welcome aboard, A Ward, though I suspect this is a witty pseudonym.

    Now, come on you clowns. Put your shoulders to the eccentric wheel of the new post, or it will go hard for you!

    Love
    Big Olly

  602. stabilloBOSS Says:

    Fritz Sandwich was a very scary clown. And to prove it I have included a link to his site.

  603. Vice-Admiral Sir Lamington "Fruity" Stokes-Sodbury, KCVO, DSC* (Ret) Says:

    Anyway, Olly old beaver, as I was saying, the old Nabob of Hyderabad…

    Hang about, where’s everyone gone?

    Well, I’ll be dashed!….

  604. bigolly Says:

    Coo, Stabby, that sends a shiver up my spine. Beware, beware FritzSandwich’s flashing eyes, his floating green hair, Oh weave a circle ’round him thrice and close your eyes in holy dread for he on honey-dew hath fed. Etc.

    And as for you, Vice-Admiral, I’m sure you can get your Batman or whatever he is called to wheel your bath chair over to the new post. You will be there in ample time for tiffin.

    Love
    Big Olly

  605. Petra Fide Says:

    Robbie Williams, as well as being a purveyor of extremely bad songs (or ’shite’ as we call them round here) have you entirely forgotten your Midland roots? Back to Stoke with you.

  606. Heath Ledger Says:

    Now see here Dr Williams, I am getting pretty sick of being the euphemistic bum skroinker point of reference. It was funny, maybe, for the past 6 months but it is wearing pretty thin.

  607. Bosie Douglas Says:

    Oscar?

    Are you still there?…

  608. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Says:

    TO DAVROS:

    TO drift with every passion till my soul
    Thy doméd cap on which all winds doth play,
    Is it for this that I have given all
    That on the six-skirt manikin dost roll?—
    Methinks my life is a twice-written poll
    With Daleks on some boyish holiday
    With idle blinking lights and virelay
    Which do but mar the secret of their stroll.
    Surely there was a time I might have trod
    The sunlit heights, and from life’s dissonance
    Struck one clear chord to reach the ears of God:
    “Exterminate!” Is that time dead? lo! through the summer airs
    I did but touch my Tristan with romance—
    And flee from Davros just by climbing stairs?

    My wine, Albertus. Yes, now.

  609. Bosie Douglas Says:

    Well, I guess I had to ask!

    You’re on, this time. Just give me a moment to find pen and paper and a quart of Perier-J and I’ll be right back. Much easier to work without all these interlopers…

  610. Bosie Douglas Says:

    ON READING “TO DAVROS”
    An Elegy on the Hopelessness of Certain Kinds of Love

    O Turlough! Soft! What shall men say of thee?
    Whose unassuming ways the Lord of Time’s
    Endearment won with boyish revelry
    That hid behind its mask of Youth such crimes!
    O public-schoolèd infidelity!
    That came, all blazer-clad and russet-hair’d,
    With stripèd tie and cool, clear face, unpock’d,
    To tempt greatTristan’s love, had he but dared
    To bridge the gap of Age thy blue eyes mock’d!
    As thou on Davros-challeng’d stairs depart
    Methinks ‘tis fitting thou do make this room-
    Antipodæan Teegan takes thy part!
    Who, tho’ with screeching voice and strident boom
    She speak, yet speaketh from a purer heart
    That hurts him not. I know, for I was thee,
    Where Alby taketh now the part of me.

  611. CJ Dennis upon the series "Doctor Who" Says:

    Oh!
    I used to only like a boy,
    And muse upon his willy.
    till thence the modern Doctor Who,
    Exposed Piper, yclept Billy.

    Oh!
    No boys for me since the Piper Girl,
    And I loves her ‘n’ her fishy smell.

    Oh!
    So some may love the celestial and the time travel caper,
    But I still wouldn’t spurn Billy P if her vag was like sand paper.

    Would you?

  612. Bosie Douglas Says:

    That’s torn it. I’m off!

  613. sara Says:

    good info

  614. bufare Says:

    That was a nice read.

Leave a Reply