Congratulations, Sir!


a1mamacat wrote:who's the cute red squirrel???
Was she pretty much Evenly Gorgeous?Evil Squirrel wrote:a1mamacat wrote:who's the cute red squirrel???
I don't know, I never asked what her name was.....
I should rather think that is the Red Baron. Or rather Baroness.a1mamacat wrote:who's the cute red squirrel???
Oh, okay. I thought she was holding a writing implement and, with the ink bottle next to her, I was trying to figure out what she was writing on. It was as puzzling as ES' antics in the Catfish picture.tanstaafl2 wrote:I should rather think that is the Red Baron. Or rather Baroness.a1mamacat wrote:who's the cute red squirrel???
Although why she is flying a british aircraft is a bit puzzling. Maybe a descendent that moved to Britain.
I know I haven't!peacock2121 wrote:Has anyone ever seen Eugene and wintergreen in the same place at the same time?
Bravo!EugeneF wrote:Last October's New York Times Magazine had a gruesome attempt at being cute. The feature story "The Squirrel Wars" told of a British lord's crusade to exterminate gray squirrels in England. The gray squirrel is an alien species, an American tourist who doesn't know when to leave. In fact, the gray has proved quite an Anglophile (imagine Henry James cute, furry and tailed) and is crowding out the native red squirrel. To protect the native English squirrels, Lord Redesdale founded an organization called the Red Squirrel Protection Society. That protection requires the extermination of gray squirrels. Lord Redesdale is distributing traps and instructions how to smash the skulls of the trapped animals. In his efforts to protect the traditions of England--including its rodents--Lord Redesdale seems a disturbing combination of Beatrix Potter and Rambo. If you were more familiar with his Lordship, you might even be further unnerved.
In the first paragraph of the story, Lord Redesdale lets you know that his family came over to England with William the Conqueror. He ironically overlooks the fact that the Normans were an invasive species, too. Furthermore, for a man who knows his ancestry, he seems to have forgotten his last name. He tells the author, "our original name was Bertram." However, since the 18th century the Baron Redesdales have had an impeccably English surname: Mitford.
That was quite an oversight by both the Baron and the Times reporter. You see, the Mitfords are renowned for their crusades against "alien species". The second Baron Redesdale, great-great-uncle of the Squirrelicide, apparently used Mein Kampf as a guide to childrearing. His daughter Unity Valkryie Mitford had a wild crush on Hitler and was disappointed that the Fuhrer did not want to marry her. (Hitler was old enough to be her father.) When her native Britain went to war against her beloved Adolf, she attempted suicide--shooting herself in the head. Surprisingly, her brain was large enough to be hit and damaged; leaving her in a vegetative but more likable state.
Unity's sister Diana was a more practical Nazi groupie. She at least found a functioning heterosexual among the Brownshirts: the leader of the British Fascist Union Sir Oswald Mosley. And they lived happily after, if you don't count their years of imprisonment as Nazi agents. Their brother Tom shared their political sympathies; when he was killed in the war, at least it was by the Japanese rather than his beloved Nazis.
(Three other sisters--Deborah, Pamela and Nancy--were politically neutral: Jews should be snubbed but not murdered. And they certainly could not approve of Hitler's table manners. Yet another sibling, Jessica, went to the other extreme: she became a Communist and even married a Jew.)
So, the alleged Mr. Bertram seems to have inherited the Mitford heritage as well as title. In espousing the racial purity of the red squirrel, however Baron Redesdale seems to show better taste in rodents.
Eugene
ES!Evil Squirrel wrote:Congratulations, Sir!
I think artistic license might apply in this case. I hope so, anyway.MarleysGh0st wrote:Outstanding work, ES!
Is this the first time a BB has had his old avatar incorporated into his ES portrait?![]()
I'm not sure I can identify the RAF plane the red squirrel is flying. The de Havilland Mosquito had twin engines but it didn't have a rear canopy like that. The Lancaster did, but that was a four-engine bomber. These details would be very important for military historian like Flybrick!
No, it wasn't artistic license.SportsFan68 wrote:I think artistic license might apply in this case. I hope so, anyway.MarleysGh0st wrote:Outstanding work, ES!
Is this the first time a BB has had his old avatar incorporated into his ES portrait?![]()
I'm not sure I can identify the RAF plane the red squirrel is flying. The de Havilland Mosquito had twin engines but it didn't have a rear canopy like that. The Lancaster did, but that was a four-engine bomber. These details would be very important for military historian like Flybrick!
MarleysGh0st wrote:No, it wasn't artistic license.SportsFan68 wrote:I think artistic license might apply in this case. I hope so, anyway.MarleysGh0st wrote:Outstanding work, ES!
Is this the first time a BB has had his old avatar incorporated into his ES portrait?![]()
I'm not sure I can identify the RAF plane the red squirrel is flying. The de Havilland Mosquito had twin engines but it didn't have a rear canopy like that. The Lancaster did, but that was a four-engine bomber. These details would be very important for military historian like Flybrick!![]()
I'm ashamed to admit this, not only because it betrays my unforgivable lack of trust in ES's historical accuracy (particularly considering that he's an associate of Notebookboy) but also because my thinking got stuck in the the track of trying to connect an RAF plane with the (British?) red squirrel, instead of associating it with Flybrick. After all, Ms. Red Squirrel is most likely just borrowing the plane from his collection.
The plane is most definitely one the Beaufighters in the Night.
Like I said, I'm embarrassed that I didn't, at first. I guess that's why I don't usually post late in the evening. I'm not a night person.littlebeast13 wrote: I was figuring at least FlyBrick would make that connection when he saw it....
MarleysGh0st wrote:Outstanding work, ES!
Is this the first time a BB has had his old avatar incorporated into his ES portrait?![]()
Although if one did choose to pick a nit I would think the Beaufighters in this book would have had a USA roundel on the side given they were US Army Air Forces aircraft. And may well have been brown since they were stationed in North Africa, at least until they moved to France after D-Day. No doubt FlyBrick would know for sure!littlebeast13 wrote:MarleysGh0st wrote:No, it wasn't artistic license.SportsFan68 wrote: I think artistic license might apply in this case. I hope so, anyway.![]()
I'm ashamed to admit this, not only because it betrays my unforgivable lack of trust in ES's historical accuracy (particularly considering that he's an associate of Notebookboy) but also because my thinking got stuck in the the track of trying to connect an RAF plane with the (British?) red squirrel, instead of associating it with Flybrick. After all, Ms. Red Squirrel is most likely just borrowing the plane from his collection.
The plane is most definitely one the Beaufighters in the Night.
I was figuring at least FlyBrick would make that connection when he saw it....
lb13