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Ian Hay - A Safety Match


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ISBN: Ostalo
Godina izdanja: 1937
Jezik: Engleski
Autor: Strani

Ian Hay - A Safety Match
Penguin, 1937
256 str.
meki povez
stanje: vrlo dobro

Barbara Cartland: Library Of Love, No 4


`Nicky, please, have you got Mr Pots the Painter?`

`No, Stiffy, but I`ll trouble you for Mrs Bones the Butcher`s Wife. Thank you. And Daph, have you got Master Bones the Butcher`s Son? Thank you. Family! One to me!`

And Nicky, triumphantly plucking from her hand four pink-backed cards, slaps them down upon the table face upwards. They are apparently family portraits. The first—that of Bones père—depicts a smug gentleman, with appropriate mutton-chop whiskers, mutilating a fearsome joint upon a block; the second, Mrs Bones, an ample matron in apple-green, proffering to an unseen customer a haunch of what looks like anæmic cab-horse; the third, Miss Bones, engaged in extracting nourishment from a colossal bone shaped like a dumb-bell; the fourth, Master Bones (bearing a strong family likeness to his papa), creeping unwillingly upon an errand, clad in canary trousers and a blue jacket, with a sirloin of beef nestling against his right ear.

It was Saturday night at the Rectory, and the Vereker family—`those absurdly handsome Rectory children,` as old Lady Curlew, of Hainings, invariably called them—sat round the dining-room table playing `Happy Families.` The rules which govern this absorbing pastime are simple. The families are indeed happy. They contain no widows and no orphans, and each pair of parents possesses one son and one daughter—perhaps the perfect number, for the sides of the house are equally balanced both for purposes of companionship and in the event of sex-warfare. As for procedure, cards are dealt round, and each player endeavours, by requests based upon observation and deduction, to reunite within his own hand the members of an entire family,—an enterprise which, while it fosters in those who undertake it a reverence for the unities of home life, offers a more material and immediate reward in the shape of one point for each family collected. We will look over the shoulders of the players as they sit, and a brief consideration of each hand and of the tactics of its owner will possibly give us the key to the respective dispositions of the Vereker family, as well as a useful lesson in the art of acquiring that priceless possession, a Happy Family.

England -- Social life and customs -- Fiction
Subject Marriage -- Fiction, Romance

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Predmet: 75932489
Ian Hay - A Safety Match
Penguin, 1937
256 str.
meki povez
stanje: vrlo dobro

Barbara Cartland: Library Of Love, No 4


`Nicky, please, have you got Mr Pots the Painter?`

`No, Stiffy, but I`ll trouble you for Mrs Bones the Butcher`s Wife. Thank you. And Daph, have you got Master Bones the Butcher`s Son? Thank you. Family! One to me!`

And Nicky, triumphantly plucking from her hand four pink-backed cards, slaps them down upon the table face upwards. They are apparently family portraits. The first—that of Bones père—depicts a smug gentleman, with appropriate mutton-chop whiskers, mutilating a fearsome joint upon a block; the second, Mrs Bones, an ample matron in apple-green, proffering to an unseen customer a haunch of what looks like anæmic cab-horse; the third, Miss Bones, engaged in extracting nourishment from a colossal bone shaped like a dumb-bell; the fourth, Master Bones (bearing a strong family likeness to his papa), creeping unwillingly upon an errand, clad in canary trousers and a blue jacket, with a sirloin of beef nestling against his right ear.

It was Saturday night at the Rectory, and the Vereker family—`those absurdly handsome Rectory children,` as old Lady Curlew, of Hainings, invariably called them—sat round the dining-room table playing `Happy Families.` The rules which govern this absorbing pastime are simple. The families are indeed happy. They contain no widows and no orphans, and each pair of parents possesses one son and one daughter—perhaps the perfect number, for the sides of the house are equally balanced both for purposes of companionship and in the event of sex-warfare. As for procedure, cards are dealt round, and each player endeavours, by requests based upon observation and deduction, to reunite within his own hand the members of an entire family,—an enterprise which, while it fosters in those who undertake it a reverence for the unities of home life, offers a more material and immediate reward in the shape of one point for each family collected. We will look over the shoulders of the players as they sit, and a brief consideration of each hand and of the tactics of its owner will possibly give us the key to the respective dispositions of the Vereker family, as well as a useful lesson in the art of acquiring that priceless possession, a Happy Family.

England -- Social life and customs -- Fiction
Subject Marriage -- Fiction, Romance
75932489 Ian Hay - A Safety Match

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