Help me find this quote
Jun. 7th, 2021 06:49 pmIt is, as will become obvious, almost certainly from a British comic novel, but since I can't remember all of the actual quote, googling is not helpful. I think it is describing a woman - possibly blonde, ditsy, or simply a bit naive, and is something like '[she had the] look of a [rabbit?] that has gone on [a spree/the loose] and was astonished by the result'.
All suggestions welcome! It's lurking annoyingly in my mind, but not sufficient to be useful for me to find it.
ETA: Identified by
antisoppist as from Gaudy Night.
All suggestions welcome! It's lurking annoyingly in my mind, but not sufficient to be useful for me to find it.
ETA: Identified by
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I need to get a printer and am considering the usual things one needs to consider (like ink costs, wireless etc). Some things are pretty straightforward, as I don't do a load of printing and don't want a giant all-bells-and-whistles machine, but what I'm really not sure about is whether I want it to have a scanner, which raises the price. There are some things I would like it for, basically hobby-related. On the other hand, post lockdown I will be able to scan stuff at work as I have done previously.
So comments welcome if you have a scanner and love it/never use it/can't make it work/don't have one and wish you did/don't have one and never need it etc. All thoughts gratefully received!
ETA: I am mainly struck here by how many people have HP printers!
So comments welcome if you have a scanner and love it/never use it/can't make it work/don't have one and wish you did/don't have one and never need it etc. All thoughts gratefully received!
ETA: I am mainly struck here by how many people have HP printers!
AKICODW/LJ - word search
Apr. 14th, 2019 11:34 amI feel sure that there must be a word - probably specific slang - for this, but I can't think what it could be.
I want to describe someone leaving the British army - voluntarily - at the end of a long career. This is taking place in the 1920s. Essentially he's retiring, but while I can use retiring I feel there should be something more precise.
ETA: Solved!
I want to describe someone leaving the British army - voluntarily - at the end of a long career. This is taking place in the 1920s. Essentially he's retiring, but while I can use retiring I feel there should be something more precise.
ETA: Solved!
What are you reading on Thursday
Nov. 20th, 2014 08:27 amTell me about your e-readers, please!
I think that it is time that I took another step into the digital age and got myself an e-reader/similar. When I bought my phone I decided to buy a small rather than large one so that I would actually carry it with me, and that worked, but it does mean that the screen it smaller than is desirable for reading something long on. I don't expect that I'll buy lots of ebooks, but at the moment I'm sometimes not reading stuff because I'd have to read it on my computer/print it out. And I'm sure I will buy some things on top of catching up with Trollope, long fanfic, and the library. Maybe I'll finally read War and Peace on holiday.
So... Kindle, Nook, Kobo, Sony? What't good? What's annoying? At the moment I'm thinking an ebook for ease on the eyes rather than a tablet, but do feel free to make the case for a tablet.
I think that it is time that I took another step into the digital age and got myself an e-reader/similar. When I bought my phone I decided to buy a small rather than large one so that I would actually carry it with me, and that worked, but it does mean that the screen it smaller than is desirable for reading something long on. I don't expect that I'll buy lots of ebooks, but at the moment I'm sometimes not reading stuff because I'd have to read it on my computer/print it out. And I'm sure I will buy some things on top of catching up with Trollope, long fanfic, and the library. Maybe I'll finally read War and Peace on holiday.
So... Kindle, Nook, Kobo, Sony? What't good? What's annoying? At the moment I'm thinking an ebook for ease on the eyes rather than a tablet, but do feel free to make the case for a tablet.
AKICOLJ/DW - interwar firearms
Nov. 16th, 2013 08:24 pmWhen Lord Peter Wimsey has his revolver on him in the course of criminological investigation, where does he carry it?
Wimsey apparently has a range of firearms to hand in canon. Leaving aside the unnamed weapon, presumably a shotgun, with which he despatches a partridge in Whose Bodu, he possesses an "automatic pistol" in The Learned Adventure of the Dragon's Head (AKA the one with little St George), and has "a revolver ready" in Five Red Herrings, in circumstances in which the person he may potentially use it on is not apparently aware of the fact*.
In my particular circumstances I am working on the assumption that Wimsey has a bog-standard WWI British army service revolver, which Wikipedia tells me was a Webley Mk IV,V, or VI depending when issued. So I know what it looks like. But how does he carry it on his person, when he's not actually holding it in his hand? Bear in mind it is hot, and he is wearing a linen suit comprised of trousers, waistcoat, and possibly jacket, and he doesn't want anyone approaching him to notice that he's carrying it. Does he have a belt, some sort of holster, or even just shove it in his pocket? Wimsey's pockets do appear at times to have a similar carrying capacity to Mary Poppins' bag.
*And also, that the police don't mind him potentially intending to shoot - or at least threaten - a suspect. As he presumably didn't go on holiday with it, I can only assume it was sent up from London specifically with the idea of confrontation in mind. I must look up whether there is a DLS Society article on contemporary gun laws in the UK, but as my scene is set not only in Corsica, but wizarding Corsica, I am happily able to avoid concern with accuracy on that front.
Wimsey apparently has a range of firearms to hand in canon. Leaving aside the unnamed weapon, presumably a shotgun, with which he despatches a partridge in Whose Bodu, he possesses an "automatic pistol" in The Learned Adventure of the Dragon's Head (AKA the one with little St George), and has "a revolver ready" in Five Red Herrings, in circumstances in which the person he may potentially use it on is not apparently aware of the fact*.
In my particular circumstances I am working on the assumption that Wimsey has a bog-standard WWI British army service revolver, which Wikipedia tells me was a Webley Mk IV,V, or VI depending when issued. So I know what it looks like. But how does he carry it on his person, when he's not actually holding it in his hand? Bear in mind it is hot, and he is wearing a linen suit comprised of trousers, waistcoat, and possibly jacket, and he doesn't want anyone approaching him to notice that he's carrying it. Does he have a belt, some sort of holster, or even just shove it in his pocket? Wimsey's pockets do appear at times to have a similar carrying capacity to Mary Poppins' bag.
*And also, that the police don't mind him potentially intending to shoot - or at least threaten - a suspect. As he presumably didn't go on holiday with it, I can only assume it was sent up from London specifically with the idea of confrontation in mind. I must look up whether there is a DLS Society article on contemporary gun laws in the UK, but as my scene is set not only in Corsica, but wizarding Corsica, I am happily able to avoid concern with accuracy on that front.
One for
wellinghall, perhaps?
What might Lord Peter Wimsey hunt, shoot, or fish on foot, with only a couple of people, in Highland Scotland in 1927, at some point between November and March? Ideally in January/February. No financial, social, or technical limitations apply; canonically we know he fishes, shoots partridges, hunts foxes, and poaches rabbits.
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What might Lord Peter Wimsey hunt, shoot, or fish on foot, with only a couple of people, in Highland Scotland in 1927, at some point between November and March? Ideally in January/February. No financial, social, or technical limitations apply; canonically we know he fishes, shoots partridges, hunts foxes, and poaches rabbits.