Said Jerome K. Jerome to Ford Madox Ford,
'There's something, old boy, that I've always abhorred:
When people address me and call me, 'Jerome',
Are they being standoffish, or too much at home?'
Said Ford, 'I agree; it's the same thing with me.'
I finally tracked down this squib, which regularly comes into my mind, but the last line seems a bit lame. The first four are better alone.
Nowadays, alas, almost everyone is on first-name terms anyway, something I hate, but my American software which sends out mass emails makes me more guilty than most people.
Where did I first hear it? I am sure quoted by the great Robert Robinson on the unsurpassable Stop the Week on Radio 4 one early Saturday evening. It sounds quintessential Robinson.
Where did I first hear it? I am sure quoted by the great Robert Robinson on the unsurpassable Stop the Week on Radio 4 one early Saturday evening. It sounds quintessential Robinson.
In my quick search I have came across this line, which I like:
Is it any better in Heaven, my friend Ford,
Than you found it in Provence?
I did read The Good Soldier and did not see what the fuss was about.
ReplyDeleteThe last line MAKES the poem, you fisheyed fool
ReplyDelete