The Truth Shall Make Ye Fret - 80: Carpe Jugulum Pt. 1 (Let's Get Liminal)
Episode Date: April 4, 2022The Truth Shall Make Ye Fret is a podcast in which your hosts, Joanna Hagan and Francine Carrel, read and recap every book from Sir Terry Pratchett’s Discworld series in chronological order. This w...eek, Part 1 of our recap of “Carpe Jugulum”. One Magpie! HaHaHa! Two Magpyr! HaHaHa! Find us on the internet:Twitter: @MakeYeFretPodInstagram: @TheTruthShallMakeYeFretFacebook: @TheTruthShallMakeYeFretEmail: thetruthshallmakeyefretpod@gmail.comPatreon: www.patreon.com/thetruthshallmakeyefretWant to follow your hosts and their internet doings? Follow Joanna on twitter @joannahagan and follow Francine @francibambi Things we blathered on about:Tom Parker obituary | Pop and rock | The GuardianCarpe Jugulum - Colin SmytheThe Annotated Pratchett File v9.0 - Carpe JugulumPratchett on the title - alt.fan.pratchettMating Pandemonium - Elephant VoicesWhy are we so superstitious about magpies? - Country LifeThe Folklore of Discworld - Sir Terry PratchettMagpie (TV series) Intro - YouTubeWhat is the Mysterious Rule of Three?The Triple - TV TropesThe Elements of Eloquence: How to Turn the Perfect English Phrase by Mark Forsyth“Blue Beard” | Fairy Tales and Other Traditional Stories | Charles Perrault | Lit2Go ETCThe Bloody Chamber - WikipediaLancrastian Army Knife - Discworld & Terry Pratchett WikiMusic: Chris Collins, indiemusicbox.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today, I was doing linear interpolation, which means I had to learn what linear interpolation
was. No, I don't know. I'm not going to explain it.
I was deciding whether I was going to ask.
It's maths, Francine. It's dangerously close to physics. And we know what happens if I go there.
Newton didn't. And that's the problem.
I'm rereading Rivers of London right now, which obviously gives me a very different
perspective on Isaac Newton, secret wizard.
Isaac Newton, secret wizard. He would have been if he could have been. He was an alchemist,
that's for sure.
Yep. And you know what they say about alchemists?
Linear interpolation.
Run the guilds exploding again. But yeah, I forgot how good these were. These are because I haven't
read like the last two or three. I've only got up to the hanging tree, so I'm rereading them all.
And then I'm going to grab the last few I don't have.
I haven't read the last one yet. I've had it at home for ages. And then when I start, it'll be gone
in like a day. Yeah.
Unput. Downable. God, I hate that.
Unput. Downable. Yeah, sorry.
That's an awful word.
I can't say that. Yeah.
Well, I couldn't think about, I couldn't think of pick what to read next. I know I've got books on
my shelves that I literally haven't read that I should read. And there's just millions of things I
haven't read that I should read. But I decided to just start at the beginning of my bookshelves and see
how I feel about wandering through them, which meant starting with Aranovich, because he's got two
ways at the beginning of his name.
The Crafty Bugger. Yep.
That's how they get you.
I've changed my name to Ardvark.
Please, please change your name to Ardvark. So in first and last name, please be Ardvark.
Ardvark. Ardvark.
What's your middle name again?
That's what A.A. Milne stands for, little no fact.
Ardvark, Ardvark, Milne.
I think so. Can you dispute it?
No. No.
I mean, I could. I could literally Google it, but I'm not going to because I'm enjoying it.
I appreciate that.
As opposed to Jolkin, Rolkin, Rolkin, Tolkien.
Oh, yeah.
Rolkin, Rol.
It's J. Rolkin, Rolkin, Rolkin.
Ah, yes, of course.
And crazy saxophonist Lewis.
Right, we're going to run out of these soon.
Now, now I've run out of them.
Desperately staring at.
George.
No, I can't think of any other good R words.
Randy Renaissance is good.
George Randy Renaissance Martin.
It fits.
Yeah, no, we'll go with it.
Cool. Okay.
So the world's awful.
Yeah, that's that's the thing.
Winter came back after a week of spring and we've had snow and hail and things for the last two days, which is lovely as the energy prices shoot up.
Yeah, the tabloids have gone for such cheerful slogans as April Cruels Day.
Yeah, beautiful.
Oh, it's April Fool's Day.
It is April Fool's Day.
That's a less depressing thing.
Listeners, we're becoming a Harry Potter recap podcast.
This is works.
This isn't going out on April Fool's Day.
Yeah.
I might have edited that there, but I don't, we can't afford to lose like the 5% you wouldn't listen till we, we revealed the jokes three seconds later.
I don't think anyone's going to believe us for a start.
We're very convincing.
I'm not.
You're an actor.
Not anymore.
Gave it up.
Oh, does that mean you just forgot?
Yeah, completely forgot.
Yep.
Can't lie.
Cool.
Have you seen me decent April Fool's stuff?
No, it's been, there's not been a lot of it.
I think everyone's too busy being horrified to really do the April Fool's thing this year.
Normally there's some quite funny corporate ones.
Yeah.
Well, we haven't had California properly wake up yet, have we?
No, true.
And they do it all day in America.
Americans go all day.
BBC used to occasionally do some funny ones, things about pasta farms.
Yeah, but then they spent the next 20 years going on about that one time they did the pasta farms.
Oh yeah, good point.
It was quite a good one in our local paper one time where they claimed that there was going to be a Barry's-Nedman's version of the London Eye.
I'd have enjoyed that.
Just looking through the BBC now and honestly, if they've done one, I couldn't tell you.
I think at this point, nothing's really credulous.
Oh, the Will Smith hit Chris Rock.
Maybe that was just a long con.
I feel like that probably wasn't an April Fool's joke.
God, that was a fucking weird 24 hours.
I woke up on Monday morning.
So this is obviously going to be a week ago from when this came out.
So I woke up on Monday morning after the Oscars, quite looking forward to,
oh, I'll look through the outfits because that's the only bit of the Oscars I'm interested in now.
And since I no longer work at a cinema, I don't have to feign interest in the rest of the shit.
And then saw, because I obviously look at my phone as soon as I wake up because I am a broken person.
The first thing I saw was a Guardian News headline about Will Smith punching Chris Rock.
So obviously, I didn't read the Oscar.
I just went to Twitter and God, the takes for the opinions.
It was so much deeper than I thought.
I just thought, oh, that's really funny.
Dude, the Oscars, what the fuck?
And then it was like, no, this is about racism in America.
This is about toxic masculinity.
This is this is about ableism.
I don't have the energy to personally have an opinion on it.
I don't know if you formed one.
I have an opinion.
How do you feel?
Everybody involved is a twat.
But also it's really quite fucking funny.
I quite enjoyed the little discussion we all had earlier about obituaries.
Wow, that's a depressing thing to say.
You and I and our other friend in the group chat were discussing the nature of the obituary.
Yeah.
And whether it should be sugarcoated or even handed or the particularly bitchy obituary that we read.
The one that's passed on to brain cancer.
Yeah, that was the problem.
Someone posted on Twitter, what's his name?
It's Tom Parker.
You made a very good point.
It's as much about being a decent journalist as it is about being a decent person.
Yeah.
And I think one in theory should lead to the other somewhat.
I'll link to it in the show notes listeners.
If I don't edit this bit out, the obituary of Tom Parker by Caroline Sullivan
is just the shittiest thing I've ever.
It's not the shittiest thing I've ever read, obviously.
There's a really bad obituary.
It reads like a low-grade interview in troves.
It just got recycled for this because they can't pay proper writers to do obituraries anymore.
And now she's one of those really awful, arcy, sarcastic fucking entertainment writers I hate.
There are so few entertainment writers I don't hate.
I'll tell you that, Joanna.
I have a couple of entertainment writers I'm a huge fan of and they're basically the only ones I read.
And by a couple of, I basically just mean Joanna Robinson, who pretty much only podcasts now.
Oh yeah, obviously, Mark Burroughs.
I feel like it goes without saying that the podcast supports Mark Burroughs.
But now I can't think of any more that I am.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm sure there are a few I don't hate, but it's just, do you know what?
Yeah, I'm going to read the first paragraph of this.
A manufactured boy band has two objectives.
In the short term, it is to sell as much product from albums to dolls as possible.
The longer term aim is to achieve the kind of fame where the wider public can put names to the members' faces,
thus spoozing the way for post-band careers.
The wanted British Irish quintet, who helped revive the stagnant boy band sector in the early 2010s,
did not quite reach that point, blah, blah, blah.
This is the start of an obituary.
The man's name isn't mentioned until the third paragraph.
The fact he's died isn't mentioned until the fourth paragraph.
And it's kind of weirdly put in in an awkward subclause.
Yeah.
The writer's like boring take on boy bands is not more important than what the fucking guy's life was.
He was 33 years old and died of a brain tumour, and that's how you're going to, yeah.
Also, I did a shit ton of charity and a raising awareness work,
which I only found out about because of the comments on Twitter, under the obituary, not the obituary itself.
Oh, exactly.
Well, there was a deeper point I didn't get into in the group chat because, as I said, I was finishing a sock,
but I started thinking about was this weird idea of parasocial relationships,
and especially when it comes to celebrity death,
because it feels like it's almost the opposite when it's a minus celebrity, it's not a fair way to say it,
but like I couldn't have told you who Tim Parker was, and I forgot the one that existed.
Of people like almost wanting to show how little they care,
it's the same people who comment over fuck's sake, this isn't news under literally every celebrity news article.
It's very much that's attitude.
As opposed to the weird obituaries of the famous people that we all feel like we had sort of a claim on or a stake
and like David Bowie passing away, those obituaries like were held to a much higher standard
because everyone, not everyone, obviously.
Yeah, Caleb Moran's was fantastic.
Caleb Moran wrote a beautiful piece, but people felt more invested.
Yeah, I didn't have really much more to go with than that.
Well, to bring it back around to Terry Pratchett was a very weird thing when, you know,
people felt felt a genuine sense of grief that they had lost
something like a distant family member when Terry Pratchett passed away
because he'd been such a big part of his readers' lives.
Yeah, I'm not being funny.
I cared more than I would have if a distant family member passed away.
Not me. I'm not meaning to sound terrible.
Not meaning to sound terrible.
That's just my default state.
Actually, that's vaguely relevant.
We recently passed the anniversary of his death, don't we?
Yeah, it was a few weeks ago and we didn't tweet much and stuff
because I think I was probably still vaguely in the grip of a fever at that point.
I was ill.
This is why I should have passwords to things.
When you're fever dreaming.
That was a great week.
I was off my tits for it.
I can't remember any of it.
Oh, good. Yeah, good fun.
Anyway, we've talked enough, Boloch.
Do you want to make a podcast, Francine?
I guess we can make a podcast, yeah.
Don't have to, if you don't want to.
No, I want to make a podcast.
Yeah, let's make a podcast.
I mean, if it's OK with you, no worries, if not.
I am worried, either way.
I am always worried.
I fucking love ridiculous anxiety tumblr memes at the moment.
I'm very into tumblr text posts at the moment.
It's it's far too late for me to be getting so into this niche genre of comedy,
but it's here now and now it's been melded with my brain.
I love it. Right.
Podcast podcast.
Hello and welcome to the Two Shall Make You Threat, a podcast in which we are
reading and recapping every book from Joe Pratchett's Discworld series,
one at a time in chronological order.
I'm Joanna Hagan and I'm Francine Carroll.
And we are here to talk about Carpe Juggulum.
Yeah, the 20 Carpe Straighten the Juggulum.
Yeah, we're going to seize that throat.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, as well as the more you think about it, doesn't it?
Yeah. No on spoilers before we crack on.
We're a spoiler like podcast.
Obviously, heavy spoilers for the book Carpe Juggulum,
but we will avoid spoiling major future events in the Discworld series.
And we are saving any and all discussion of the final Discworld
novel, The Shepherd's Crown until we get there.
So you dear listener can come on the journey with us.
In a carriage in the dead of night with many black plumes.
Plumes. Plumes.
I'm going to keep the lifting to a minimum, I promise.
Yes.
It doesn't pick up well on the microphone, find you noise reduction.
So.
Damn it.
And I was going to do the whole episode in the start of ego.
Follow up. We got stuff to follow up on Francine.
Yeah, Steve Jeffrey replied about bromide in your tea.
So we were talking about the reference to putting something in tea.
Having something to do with libido was probably a real thing.
And indeed, the earliest use of bromide was in medicines.
Some bromide salts, notably potassium bromide, were found to be natural sedatives
were prescribed in the 19th century as remedy for epilepsy.
However, they had a curious side effect.
They dampened the libido, which only reinforced the common misconception
at the time that epilepsy was brought on by excessive masturbation.
The side effect also lies behind the urban myth that bromide was added
to the tea of prisoners in World War One soldiers in order to reduce sexual urges.
Ah, that was an urban myth
till it started the research and I hadn't even heard of the urban myth.
I'd heard of the urban myth, but I'm not sure if I thought it was a urban myth
or a urban fact.
You remain one step ahead of me, Joanna.
I was myth taken.
I saw that joke from Buffy.
I'd have never known.
I know, but at least one listener.
All right, fine.
Other follow up from Andrew Broadford emailed us.
First, a reminder that you're great and your podcast is very good.
Thank you, Andrew. I might just leave it there.
Yeah, no. No, quick theory.
And I like this.
We're told Mrs. Rinswin ran away before Rinswin was born,
but never where she went or why.
And then the last consonant, we meet Bill Rinswin,
Archchancellor of the University in XXXX.
What if that's where she ran away to?
They could be half brothers.
There's more than enough magical interference
and timey, whiny nonsense involved to smooth out any issue.
So without a compelling argument, to the contrary,
I am adopting this as my personal headcanon, says Andrew.
And I agree.
I love that. Yeah.
Yeah, she climbed a bit of driftwood with some camels.
Obviously.
She was on the camel on the driftwood.
It's the only way to travel alone.
Driftwood, Camel, Mrs. Rinswin.
Then Turtles all the way down.
Yeah.
And Paula on Twitter confirmed for us that Cal Gauley
is where it is, which is the middle of nowhere with no water,
because it's Australia's fifth most productive goldmine.
The giant hole in the ground is three and a half
by one and a half kilometers, and it's called the Super Pit.
Oh.
And it's the biggest goldmine in Australia.
The Super Pit.
Goodness me. Super Pit.
My nickname.
But enough of the last consonant.
Let's talk about copy jugular.
OK, back to the first consonant.
Yes. Introduce us, Francine.
Introduce us to the book.
Well, Joanna, this is the 23rd Discworld Book.
By the way, we missed marking the halfway point.
I feel like we should have done that.
What? Oh, yeah, of course.
Yeah. Also, this is our ETS episode, which is a nice round number.
And there are 41 Discworld Books.
We're now on the 23rd.
So listeners, if you could retcon it so that we said something notable,
a couple of episodes ago, an episode and a half ago, I suppose.
Two and a half episodes ago.
If you could generally retcon that we ever say anything notable,
actually, that would be great.
It would save us a lot of work.
Yeah. Anyway, it was released on the 5th of November.
Very memorable date, of course, of 1998.
I can never remember the 5th of November.
It was adapted into a play by Stephen Briggs in 1999.
Yeah. Lovely.
The title.
I've had today, as Joanna knows,
because I've sent her a few screenshots,
I spent a happy half hour to an hour digging through the alt.fan
and alt.book.pratchit forums from the late 90s,
because Pratchit was quite active online then,
and found some useful bits of snark.
And he was talking about the title at one point.
He's so grumpy on the internet.
I love it.
It's great.
Somebody commented,
why isn't the title of Carpe jugulum?
Carpe...
Oh, fuck.
Eugulum?
Or lugulum, maybe?
The current convention is to use v for the consonental u,
but to keep consonental i as i and not j.
Did the period in which the old way was still taught
intersect with the period when Pratchit took Latin
or was the j adopted in order to dumb down the title?
Question mark.
Smiley face.
Pratchit's head.
Who gives a damn about a current convention?
There will be another one long soon.
I've just pulled a couple of books off the reference shelf
at random and found plenty of j's in Latin.
Passions come and go, and importantly,
non-scholars.
Pratchit's status, most people, lag well behind,
if indeed they're even aware of the changes.
The important thing here is that someone
whose knowledge of Latin is only average
will have a much better chance of getting Carpe jugulum
because of the jugulum jugular resonance
than they'll have with Carpe eugulum,
which, depending on the font, will get most Brits
thinking about ears, lugulum.
There we go, see?
He's right.
It's hardly a case of dumbing down.
It is, worse, an acceptable, if brackets,
arguably, archaic usage for clarity,
as opposed to say,
fabricate, DM.
PVNC.
PVNC.
And he's ended with a smiley face.
Notably, I would say,
Pratchit puts a little nose in his smiley face,
which the original commenter did not.
Old fashioned.
Remember the days of a nose in a smiley face?
Yes.
Now, I may have said this on the podcast before,
but I think it's important.
I don't think that the current thing
that all software seems to do
of turning the, apart from signal,
which we use, which is good,
of turning the little colon bracket
into a round circle,
yellow smiley face.
A emoticon.
An emoticon.
I don't think that's acceptable.
No, I don't like it.
If I mean a yellow emoticon face,
then I choose one, and I choose the correct one.
However, it doesn't convey the same emotion
as colon bracket.
And definitely not the same emotion
as colon hyphen bracket.
Yes.
So if whoever's in charge of these things is listening,
could you please fix that for me?
Thank you.
Yeah.
I mean something very specific
if I use the colon bracket as a smiley face.
And normally what I mean is that I am being a dick.
This is not relevant to the book Carpe Giacomo.
Is it Francine?
No.
Which isn't Joanna.
So perhaps we should...
Should we keep talking about the book Carpe Giacomo?
Yeah, okay.
Would you like to read the blurb?
Okay.
And then a point that I could be...
I don't remember actually, but I'm not going to.
Carpe Giacomo is Terry Pratchett's 23rd Discworld Novel,
but the first to star vampires is not the first to feature vampires.
We had vampires in Witches Abroad.
But I'm not going to be able to think about it
because the vampire in Witches Abroad
didn't exactly have a starring role.
It was a brief bat that Griebo ate.
Did I say something about it being the first one with vampires?
No, the blurb did.
Right, right.
Yes.
This is the first one to star vampires.
Indeed, indeed.
And I'm going to allow it because it says star and not feature.
It's got a couple of similarities to Lords and Ladies, isn't it?
But I think as you noted with the last kind of echo one,
it's not the same as Pratchett redoing it again,
as he kind of did.
It's these plot works for this setting.
It does.
Just take the bones and rebuild it.
I'm going to go out and say,
I think this is a kind of an underrated Discworld book
and an underrated Witches book.
I never see this one in people's top 5s or top 10s,
including my own.
But I'm also going to come out and say, on this read,
I've decided it's actually the best Witches book
and going up into my top 10, if not top 5.
Okay, okay.
I will make my decision on that by the end.
And I will be continuing to present this unifying theory
as we work through the book
and write that down.
Joanna, Unifying Theory, Rackets, 10.
Cool.
This section goes up to page 129 in the Kofi paperback
and ends on the line she reached into her sack
and took out a thick pair of socks
and set off onwards and upwards,
handily followed by some little asterisks
for a nice break.
In this section,
a star or similar falls specifically
as something small and blue enter Lanker Valley
unsurreptitiously.
A black cult rolls in with a bickering family within
and changes in the air as a posh invite
leads Nanny to prepare.
Agnes, now resident in Magretts Old Cottage,
drives a witch's hat on for size,
watched by two magpies.
That's the extent of the rhyming.
I was going to see what you'd rhymed with cottage then
and I'm very upset, but carry on.
The only thing I could think of to rhyme with cottage
was frottage and I don't want to put that word
in our podcast.
That's both cottage, but that's me.
Anyway, Brani is definitely not looking for anything
at all when she gets a knock on the door
and flies out to a difficult birth
and an even more difficult decision to be made.
Fire flickers in the castle muse
while Nanny and Agnes head to the castle proper
to celebrate the naming of Magretts New Baby.
Mytaleoats, an Omnian priest,
brought to Lanker for the proceedings,
steps out as Agnes chats to Queen Magretts.
Meanwhile, a highwayman becomes a handy snack
as the coach dwellers discuss the country's witches.
Flying home and not to the party,
Granny spots the mist rolling in from Uberwald.
Magretts frets that Granny may have missed her invite
to be a godmother.
Nanny steps in as a placeholder as Varence tries
his best at kinging and politicians gather
for the naming at midnight as Magretts hopes
for a dramatic entrance at the last minute.
She gets her wish, but it's not Granny
bursting through the doors.
Agnes and Nanny meet the Count and his family,
though Perdita, Agnes' inner voice,
is steadfastly unaffected.
As Oat suffers a headache,
Agnes and Nanny head home,
meeting centaurs on the way.
Back at the castle,
Magretts meets a young man who seems to know her name.
Nanny spots vampires in the throng
and steps out to interrogate their Igor.
After the handsome Vlad appears
to enjoy a delicious garlic canapé,
things get fuzzy around the edges
as Agnes and Nanny meet the Count and his family,
who are the first centaurs on the way.
Back at the cottage, Perdita takes over
and fills Nanny in who's suddenly determined
to take down the mind-altering magpies
and wonders where Granny might be.
As Hodgzar chases a lost phoenix,
Nanny and Agnes storm the castle
only to become incredibly reasonable
around the charming vampires,
and plan on making Lanker their own personal duchy.
Vlad notices Agnes' resistance
as Perdita gets violent
and they storm back out the way they came.
The next morning, Granny's cottage
is infinitely granny-less,
and magpies watch as Nanny and Agnes arrive.
The inventory's in threes
as there's been a shift in hierarchy
and Granny takes to the woods.
I like the roaming start.
Yeah, I wanted to keep it going,
and then I realised that there's only so many minutes.
Yes.
Helicopter and loincloth watch.
Helicopters?
Very few helicopters, but optimistic
about phoenix, representing eventually.
Granny did fly on her broomstick.
Which is definitely a form of helicopter
as we've discussed many, many times.
Loincloth?
Hints of loincloth implied around the troll.
Sure.
I imagined him in some kind of guard's uniform.
Well, no, they didn't have a uniform that could fit him
apart from the helmet that's tied on with string.
Quite right, yes.
I assume he's got some sort of official loincloth.
Other bits that we keep track of.
Deaths here. Hello, Death.
Hi, Death.
We're sort of open on the disk
in that we've got the star flying over.
Yeah.
I'm going to allow it.
And keeping track of when we are,
it's the end of the century of the fruit bat.
Got it.
So we're going to be dragged kicking and screaming out of it.
Yes, that has been confirmed.
Quite.
We've got to be kicked and dragged kicked and screaming into it
before we can be dragged kicked and screaming out of it, of course.
Can't I just saunter towards it?
Do I have to be dragged kicking and streaming?
Yes.
If you will exist on dribbling those candles everywhere.
I like the aesthetic.
Quotes, quotes, quotes, quotes, quotes.
Me.
You can go first.
Thank you.
This is when Granny is
thinking to herself about
some of the hard decisions she's had to make.
Mm-hmm.
And after the time she made the decision
to have a murderer hanged.
Yes.
The villagers had said justice had been done
and she'd lost patience and told them to go home then
and pray to whatever gods they believed in
that it was never done to them.
The smug mask of virtue
triumphant could be almost as horrible
as the face of wickedness revealed.
Ooh, that's a good line.
Isn't it?
I think it almost...
Yeah, I think it's the same kind of
attitude as
when we were talking about how
well, if you want justice so much
you throw them off the cliff kind of thing.
But, you know, that...
I didn't mean I should throw them off the cliff,
just they ought to be thrown off the cliff.
Yeah, it's the same kind of
along those lines of taking
joy in justice instead of seeing it
as a necessity.
Prachi, I think, gets some of his best
rage at humanity out with Granny.
Yeah, oh, for sure, yeah.
It's so well done.
Yes, unlike Vimes, she doesn't have
to put a cork in it
to go and have dinner with her wife.
Yeah.
Mine's a much shorter quote
than poignant, I feel.
I didn't know boys had glass
balls.
I'm sorry.
I didn't want to shatter that silence.
There's going to be
so many big heavy things to talk
about. I really needed the ball stroke
in there somewhere.
Now, here's another example of when
there's going to be a bit of a drawback,
because I didn't know
buoys had balls, doesn't work as well, does it?
Yeah.
I'm always still mildly
confused by the American pronunciation
buoy.
It does make sense if you look at the word.
It does.
Well, I feel like
I'm not sure either of them makes much
sense, but it's buoyant.
It's buoyant.
I feel like it's the country.
Yeah. I feel like as a country that has
Worcestershire, we just can't judge.
Oh, for sure. Jack's playing the
Assassin's Creed that's set in
England now that you play a Viking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, East Anglia.
Quite enough.
But when the characters are saying
the county names,
you start to see what the fuck
happened, because they pronounce them still
in full and they're slightly different, because
they pronounce them back down and it's like, oh, god.
Our languages
are a mess. Let's talk about characters.
Sure.
Talking of messy language, or at least
only a cousin to ours
at best, the Knackmack Fiegel
and their particular brand
of Scots.
Yes, yes.
In case listeners haven't guessed that this was meant to be a bit
Scots, ask to keep your trackings.
I forgot they were introduced
in this book. If you cast your mind back
to
Feet of Clay,
a small, short, very angry Scottish
no, I assume is something of a precursor
to bringing in the Knackmack Fiegel.
Yeah. Well, while I was looking through
the forums again, I found
commentating on this
saying the genesis of the Knackmack Fiegel
meant something like this. I wanted some background
to we mad Arthur
of Feet and Clay, and so they'd be small.
I'd been listening to Lorena and the
Kennet singing The Stolen Child
since Racket C1, the tribe would be
Codd Scottish, and Braveheart
and Rob Roy were natural
targets, which meant that they would be blue.
They're small
and blue.
What am I reminded of?
No, give up.
But it seems somehow seems so right
that they have just one female. Can't think
why. Small, blue, nope.
He seems like he's really heavily hinting at something
if I don't know what it is.
Oh, do you actually not know?
It's the Smurfs.
Oh.
Smurfette. Okay, yes, I did know that
I suppose my brain was just not
making that a connection.
And five, a group of small creatures
with just one female reminds me of social insects.
So the color of the queen would be
bigger and in some way in charge. After that
it was just a matter of style.
Excellent. I do love them. They are good
fun, although they're only just introduced here.
But also since reading this, there's a song
we are the Knackmack Fiegel
from the Winter Smith,
the disquelded album
that Steeleis banded.
If you are reading for the first time,
don't go listen to the album because spoilers.
But it's a very good catchy song
and I know because it's been in my head
for the last week.
If you're at Winter Smith or Further in your
Disqueld Adventure.
I should wear Midnight, although the album's
called Winter Smith, definitely.
Oh, no, yes, quite right.
Yeah, it goes a bit further, doesn't it?
Anyway.
Igor.
And Id.
A delightful character.
Yeah.
Is he your first eagle?
I think we've had little hints of eagles around
the edges, but I think this is the most
established eagle we've had.
First eagle on the spotlight.
What a delight.
I'm going to talk more about the vampire lore
and vampire tropes next week, but I do love
the eagles, the tropes of version
of the words they're doing and eagles,
like strong determination to stick
with the old traditions.
You've got to have plumes.
It's traditional.
Yeah, for sure.
I think some of these themes are so spread out
through the whole book that we're going to do
a bit more jumping back and forth than we
usually do listeners.
So we'll be calling back to section one and
section two and so on.
And the proper billowing curtains.
Oh, yes, it's very important.
That in whatever it was, lords and ladies.
I want to point out now I put all these characters
in a really weird order. I meant to reorganise them
and then I got distracted.
So let's talk about Agnes.
He's back.
I didn't want to say at the end of Masquerade
because spoiler, but we get to see Agnes
again. I'm very excited about this.
I think you did anyway.
Oh yeah, probably.
Spoiler, she didn't like die at the end.
But yeah, no, she's back and Perdita
is more fully formed, I would say.
Yeah, Perdita is almost a whole character
now, as opposed to just
some bitchy background lines.
Still some weird stuff about fatness.
Not as bad.
Not as bad, but
it's better without
like a Christine next to her.
Yeah, I feel like here it's
more referencing the fact that people are
shit than just being shit.
But there's still some lines like the outlying regions.
He just can't seem to let go of saying
movement in the outlying regions about fat
people. This is the third.
Nani Og is meant to be on the
more generous side as well, and her
outlying regions are rarely mentioned,
which is excellent. There's also
I'm irked by the lack of Nani's outlying
regions.
Sorry.
And her outlying regions are rarely mentioned.
There's my new favourite line about Nani Og.
It's like geographical, you know.
The lesser known outlying regions
of Nani Og
are good by sea.
I'd say they're quite well known
around Lanka.
I'm sorry, please continue.
There's one weird Agnes fat
phobiary moment that rubbed me up the wrong
way, and I'd probably
reacting to it more than I should.
It's when they're outside
the castle and looking at the food, and there's
vats of roast potato swimming in
butter, which is... God, I love
that line. And Agnes says,
do you think I could get a salad,
hopefully?
And it's this weird thing of like,
it's okay that she's fat because she doesn't
want to be. She knows that she wants a salad,
so it's okay.
Yes, I think that is
the kind of
tangent, not tangential, but like
micro... Is that...
What's the word for you trying to
compensate too much? Anyway, I don't think
people are aware of it in the 90s very much.
That doesn't mean it's not annoying to read.
So, like, I feel like, and this still happens
really then, it was like, look, I'm doing a nice thing.
Yeah.
I'm not just saying she shoved her hand in the potato
fat. Yeah, look,
but it's weird, like...
Like, saying that that's a nice thing
rather than...
Because it would be mean if the fat personated much potatoes,
whereas everyone else there is eating a bunch of potatoes.
It's this weird, like, moralising, like it's only
okay to be fat if you know it's bad and
that you don't want to be and you want a salad.
And...
That said, and I know this isn't...
Well, I'm pretty sure this isn't the
drive behind this. I have also
read and heard
a lot of people say that
they just... There isn't a correct way
to act in this situation. If you ask
for a salad, then people think like that.
If you load your plate up with food
and people are like, of course, she did.
Yeah, that's fine
if you're talking about being a fat person,
but when you're talking about writing a fat person...
Yes, that's what I mean.
Yeah. It's not a huge thing.
It's just something that always rugs me up a bit
the wrong way. I feel like
Pratchett has gotten so, so much
better at writing women at this point
that when he does it badly
it's just a little bit more obvious.
Yeah, this barely would have stuck out as...
In fact, I doubt
we'd have waited a post-it note on it in the first
five books, but...
The first five books would not have
had that many women that weren't blonde
and tan. I think Harena, the
henna-haired harridan, might be the only one.
I don't even know what colour Agnes's hair is.
I don't know, but it's very good
and there's a lot of it. But it's great, isn't it?
It's big and it's good.
I very much imagine Brunette.
I feel like most of the people I know
with big, good hair are Brunette.
I feel like I relate
to Agnes enough that I might look a bit
like her and I'm very happy with that
in that I've got a giant amount of
Brunette hair. You do have a giant amount of Brunette hair.
It does eat comb, so I found
that line particularly relatable.
Fingers crossed I'd grow up to be
Nanny Og and her Outlying Regions.
I did then enjoy the immediate
answer to that, though, which was
I hope not, so that I might get a salad.
Oh, yeah.
Nanny Og has some fantastic
one-liners in this.
Oh, I love Nanny Og. Before we get to Nanny, though,
brief shout out for the cameo
from Kassanenberg. Yes, you're right.
This is a very odd order. I love it.
It made sense when I was drawing it out.
No, it didn't. Yeah, Kassanenberg
is aged nearly. Yeah, kind of.
Well, I actually know. You've jumped around.
Okay, no, it's fine. Anyway, Kassanenberg, yes.
Hello, Kassanenberg, hello.
Nice to see him, isn't it? Yes, it is.
I'm glad he's there. And then we have...
Does he turn up again or is this it? I think this is it.
Ah, what a shame.
Nanny Og could do with a nice date after the day she's had.
I don't even think...
I feel like he might be there
because there would have been like a subplot
somewhere with him and Nanny and then there just wasn't
room for it. Yeah, but he's a handy-dandy witness.
But he is a handy-dandy witness.
It's nice to see something through the eyes
of a familiar character, even if you've got to look up
to see it.
The elongated confusion
with the highwayman was quite good.
What, the death scene? Yeah, yeah.
I'm not here to take your money.
No, you don't.
Just to be very clear about that.
I love how polite death is in that situation.
Well, very clearly being furious.
I don't have time for this.
And then we have the quite reverend
mightily praiseworthy i.e. who exalted
oaths.
I did not practice saying that.
I quite possibly should have done.
Oh, that was good.
I wonder if he's a formidable visit.
Maybe they went on one of those missions together.
I like to think when they were teenagers, they were
knocking on people's doors with leaflets.
I like to think maybe they write to each other every now and then.
He's not quite hit the point
of giving out explanatory pamphlets.
He's just sort of optimistically
preaching to an empty forest.
Now, would you say becoming a priest
is slightly past the point of handing out pamphlets?
Quite possibly, actually.
That's a higher level of devotion, I suppose,
because Constable visit the infidel
with explanatory pamphlets.
He does it on his days off from the police force, doesn't he?
True, but then that means he is just
devoting all of his spare time to it.
Whereas oaths has kind of made it his day job.
It's a bit like, I don't know,
being really into cooking at home versus being a chef, I guess.
So oaths is the chef
of Omnianism.
Omnianism? Yeah, sure.
Omnism. No, fuck.
Let's carry on.
Omnism.
Let's talk about Granny.
Granny's having a time of it.
One of my points for
saying this is one of the best,
if not the best witches' book
is that Granny
actually isn't really
there interacting with the other witches
and isn't in the action that much until
we get to the final part.
Everything she's doing here is
not really part of the main action.
It's establishing the mood she's in.
And I know it's a bit counterintuitive
to say, oh, it's actually a witches' book
because Granny's not around as much.
But Granny does her best work in Act 3
in all of the witches' books.
Yes, she's there when they're moving
the kingdom in Weird Sisters,
but it's really the big face-off at the end
of Weird Sisters.
It's facing off against her sister at the end
because it's controlling the bees
in Lords and Ladies.
Granny's the best part of the action
when she knows when to take herself out
and obviously she's not actually sentient
or real because this is a fictional book.
So Pratchett is best at writing witches
because he knows when and where to use Granny
and not to just keep her there
because she's good fun to write.
Like the luggage.
Not that I would wish to compare Granny
to a murderous suitcase.
Who do you think would win in a fight?
Granny.
Because the luggage would know not to fight.
The luggage would sit down and allow itself
to be tamed on the end of a pair.
The luggage in this case is a unicorn.
But the luggage would beat Grebo in a fight.
Yes.
But then let him out again
because Nanny looked angry
or upset.
I also think that having Granny on her own
gave her space
for the
kind of
intermadness slash crondom.
Yes.
Which is one of the best written bits of Granny
those few pages.
I love her waiting.
The rest of them sort of speculating about her
definitely waiting for the most dramatic moment
when to the christening because she would.
Oh yeah.
And Margaret's little side thing of
actually caught her waiting for a dramatic moment.
Yes.
You or I would be leaning against a wall
in a corridor.
She just knows when to walk in.
And Agnes having that really great realization
when she's watching
Margaret and Varence wait to enter and she's like
this is the thing, it's the dramatic moment
when you enter.
Why are you standing there waiting for a moment?
You've just got to do it.
Which Agnes sort of being almost
the best witch at getting into Granny's head.
Understanding
things the way Granny understands them.
Understanding that you make your own dramatic moment.
Yes.
I'm going to be out of my lane here
and switch around Margaret and Hodja
because this is a good time to talk about Margaret.
Oh yeah, let's talk about Margaret.
I think that Agnes kind of
shocks Margaret with how
open she is about her speculation about Granny.
Yeah.
And Margaret has kept her mouth shut
about so much of this for so long
and Agnes must surely be echoing
a lot of what she's thought but still
somehow she's like no
you can't say it.
But I also think Margaret's gone through
a lot of character growth especially
from like weird sisters Margaret to now
like when she's sort of quite happily
like winking at Agnes as they're trying
to get ready for the naming ceremony
in Gribos on the throne.
Yes.
And I think Margaret's grown enough
to know that there's no point
saying it, it won't make a difference.
Whereas I think Agnes
is still with this kind of balshy youth to her
she's a very different kind of young witch
who Margaret was.
Yeah, that might be part of why
Margaret seems a little unsettled by it as well.
Yeah, it's the speaking.
There's so many similarities and so many differences.
The speaking before thinking thing
and Nanny's reaction when Perdita says
something really bitchy about Granny
I can't remember the page now but Nanny
immediately just smacks a one.
But then he's very much like right well
that's that settled.
Yeah, it's very near the end of the section.
The fact that Margaret still clearly cares
about the witch's talk about it like
she'll give up queening one day
and come back to her proper job.
Yeah, it's a really nice little section.
She's open about it which is interesting
having to settle that about her not being open about.
She's sort of, I want to be treated
as queen all the time but not you know
I want them to know I'm queen but I don't want them to treat me
as queen. It's nice that she's still
you know she really came into her
queendom at the end of Lords and Ladies
it's nice to know she's still got
her weird little bit about it.
There's an interesting
gendered word that I never really
thought about it's still a kingdom if one is a queen
and I don't like that.
No, I mean either. Let's fix that.
Let's call everything queen. The United Queendom.
Yep, calling it that.
Right, now let's talk about Hodgesar.
Ah!
Hodgesar! Ah!
He's so sweet.
We've met him.
We didn't really need to talk about him.
I think I only put this in because there's one line
that I love which is he was like
a man with a big dictionary who couldn't
find the index.
Which makes
less and less sense the more you think about the
sentence because dictionaries don't really
have indices that's the point.
Yes, but ties in nicely to when he's
looking for Phoenix under F.
F. Yes, and yes
this is a nice little
flag, Phoenix flag planted
in the ground for later isn't it as well.
It's worth mentioning him.
He's got a very good setup and payoff
in this book.
And then King Varence.
Yeah.
He's working hard. He's kinging.
He's trying to put Lanker on the map
which is a terrible idea.
He means well.
Interesting that he's one of the only people
who's visibly fighting against
the vampires.
Yeah, he's got a very
strong will kind of combined
with subservience. If you think about
his journey,
the fall has to be the fall for whoever's
in charge and sleeping at the door
of the master and Magretts realising in lords
and ladies that now he sleeps at the door
to his kingdom because the kingdom is his master.
Like he means so well.
And so I think he's really, really caught
in this, you know, as much
as he can comprehend what's going on,
what he owes to his kingdom
and this sort of
full subservience
thing he's got that makes him quite
susceptible. I do like the,
as he's having that little rant, he says
if Clatch sneezes, Ancmo catches a cold
which considering we're only two books off from
Jingo.
Yeah. It's quite nice to think about how the
events of Jingo were affecting the wider world.
Yeah.
Interesting that Verrance was probably
fretting over his news
and with news scrolls.
Yes. Pigeons.
Yes. Pigeons, thank you.
His daily news pigeons and
the kingdom had no fucking idea.
No. He probably told Magrat and
Magrat was like, oh dear.
Anyway.
Let's put on this ridiculous
fucking rough.
And then yeah, going into the vampires.
Vampires. Yes, it's
vampires. I suppose it is vampire.
It's vampire. I'm just trying to find
as many stupid ways to say it as possible.
I think they deserve that.
Vlad.
Says the line, I like a woman with spirit
and forward deserves anything that comes to him
and more. Absolutely.
But I want to know where he got his waistcoat embroidered
with peacocks because I want one.
Yes.
And I'm not
going to embroider peacocks on shit myself
because I have a life.
I was about to say, I can do that. I can't do that.
No. Francine, do not embroider peacocks
on anything for me. No.
I mean, you don't, even if I wanted to,
you don't want me to. I'm struggling at the moment
to forget mean arts down. I feel like
it's a few steps up from that.
I'm embroidering my denim jacket. Oh, cool.
So Vlad, yes, he's a little
sleazy fuck. He's a sleazy little fuck.
And
Perdita fancies him and then hates him.
I like how mercurial Perdita
is because it's very relatable to the teenager.
He's that teenage girl.
But he's cool. He's got a cool waistcoat.
But he's a dick. Yeah.
Still like his waistcoat. Kill him.
I went through that emotional journey
many times at house parties as a teenager.
Yes, fuck, yes.
Oh, it's lucky we weren't at balls.
The count, the count, as you say.
Ah, ah, ah.
Such a good description.
One for sorrow.
Ah, two for joy.
Ah, ah, ah.
Alright, carry on. No, that's the best thing
that's ever happened on the podcast. I think we should just stop now.
I think we're done.
No, no, I'm good. I can keep going.
The count gets a really good description
because Agnes has like
gone into kind of pod people mode
but has still got that little bit
at the back of her brain.
So she's expecting a somber man
with an exciting widow's peak hairstyle
and an opera cloak.
But she's not sure why she's expecting that.
He said he looks like a gentleman
of independent means and inquiring mind.
Perhaps the kind of man who goes for long walks in the morning
and spends the afternoons improving his mind
in his own private library
of heiroments on parsnips.
Never ever worrying about money.
Like an English country vicar, of course.
Very much so.
I think another part of the description is something like
and he had the heir of a man
who'd just read a very interesting book
and was going to tell you about it.
Which is possibly our vibe at all times.
Are we vampires?
I hope so.
We might be.
You know how I'd like to be immortal.
Lacrimosa.
Lacrimosa means...
Shit, where have I put it?
Fuck.
Right in the bottom. There we go.
It's a Latin for tearful one.
Ah, of course.
Well, I suppose she should be careful
with all the eye makeup.
Oh, I don't know. Smeared black eye makeup
is the correct look for her.
It's a good aesthetic. No, it's fair.
Agnes hates her on first sight.
Good. Which is fair. She's kind of a bitch.
And then we have Nanny, obviously.
Who's having a lovely time
until she isn't.
Yes.
I'm trying to remember the exact moment she isn't.
I think it's...
Obviously she's stressing about the vampires,
but I think it's the moment she realises
Granny's gone that's her real
switch.
Especially when she realises this whole thing
of the hierarchy, which is
such a good plot point, this idea
that Granny's taking herself out of the equation
because there's a new mother, which means
there's a new other one.
Yes. No, that's it.
The moment Agnes realises that she's
kind of out of herself,
not the glass balls, but when she just
explains to Agnes
what she's thinking instead of vaguely
alluding to magical powers and letting her
ask more questions.
And Nanny gets the really good line
of she's been herself lately
talking about Granny Weatherwax, which is
one of her most perspective.
Perspective.
Perspicacious.
Thank you.
Because Nanny
is so often this comic relief
who really does know what's going on
is being very clever behind the scenes
and understands what's happening with Nanny.
It's nice to see her kind of thrown off her
axis a little bit.
There's also some just
beautiful
Nanny one-liners in this.
Repent me cheek.
I can't start repenting at my time of life. I'd never get any work done.
Anyway, I'm sorry
for most of it.
Agnes trying to explain Perdita
and saying, you know, part of you that wants to
all the things you don't dare do, like maybe
rip off all your clothes and run naked in the rain.
Perdita is that part of me. And I said, really?
I've always been that part of me.
And finally,
now off you go and look conspicuous added Nanny,
a lady wearing a two foot tall
pointed black hat.
I hope she's worn her red boots for the occasion.
It does say she was having one of her many
daughters-in-law polish them, was she not?
Ah, they were polishing something.
They were taking lint off the hat
and ironing a petticoat. I know that.
Why ends a fucking petticoat?
Well, if you've got three spare daughters-in-law,
why not, I suppose?
I guess so.
I believe life is too short.
Location-wise, obviously,
we are firmly
steadfastly
boots down in the Kingdom of Lanka.
Red boots. Yeah, you're good.
Red boots down in the Kingdom of Lanka.
The good thing about having e-book version
is you can just search for boots.
That is a lot better than my frantic flicking,
but I enjoy it.
But not as good for Foley.
It adds verisimilitude.
Well done, after we couldn't say perpicacious.
I'm trying to make up for it.
I'm trying to make up for it. And you pulled it off.
Good job.
Lanka gets established really kind of cinematically.
I don't really remember talking about
that fantastic week, kind of getting like the strings
as the disc is introduced
and the turtle slowly swims into view
done with varying degrees of success
in the different TV adaptations.
Yes.
The PS1 animation of the turtle
at the beginning of the soul music adaptation
being my favourite life quite some.
Yes, yes.
But because you have the star
as it kind of crackles
over the mountain slopes and it says,
under it the land itself
began to fall away
and the fire was reflected off walls of blue ice
as the light dropped into the beginnings of a canyon.
Like you can see it.
It's such a good way to do this
and come into this network of valleys
and patchwork of forests
and land on this tiny kingdom.
It's great.
And then there's kind of a throwback to it
right at the end of this section
when Granny's looking down and seeing that
the mist has puddled in this valley.
Yes.
It's like mist.
From Ubevold.
Is it Ubevold, by the way,
should we try and be dickheads about this?
Ubevold.
She's trying to be the little German boy.
No.
Don't go to Ubevold.
What is this?
In Magpai.
No, little German boy.
Magpai.
In Magpainen.
Right, we need to stop, Francine.
We need to stop.
We are a sensible intellectual podcast
talking about the book Carpe Juggulum
by Terry Pratchett, the 23rd Discworld Novel.
Yes.
Thank you for rooting me back in reality there.
Speaking of being rooted in reality, actually,
the philosophy of the people of Lanka is great,
especially coming off this beautiful,
big cinematic opening coming in
and then the people of Lanka have heard
of the turtle and the elephants
and sounds about right.
The turtles can shift a fair load, elephants are pretty strong,
no major gaps in the thesis
and quite happy with it.
I enjoy that type of philosophy.
Relevant elephant, relevant elephant.
Yay.
There was no such thing as a fish,
the latest episode of that that came out today
had a whole section on elephants
in which they mentioned a website
about all the various things
that elephants can do with their trunks communication-wise
and there's hundreds of them
and I will link to that website.
They mentioned a lot of elephant facts
and I think you'll understand
why only this one's stuck in my mind
is that one of the rituals,
one of the communications
that elephants can do with their trunk
is after a female has had sex
if she stands there
and the sperm I think falls
to the dust some of it,
then the others might touch
some of it to their trunk
and then hear a wet away from her
in some kind of celebration.
It's not
a sentence
that kind of goes away easily
and yet it never makes any more sense.
I don't have words.
I'm going to have to let that one.
Yeah, just let that one.
Pirouette.
Pirouette away, yes.
Shall we take a quick break?
Do you want to talk about the philosophy?
I just interrupted you.
No, that was pretty much all I had.
I like the line that philosophers
only said this kind of off-in-the-air stuff
if they were really sure where their next meal
was coming from.
Which is correct.
Anyway, let's just pirouette to the kettle.
Good idea, Francine.
Sorry.
It's beautiful. I love it. Never changed.
Right.
Little bits we liked.
What did you like? What did I like?
I put myself first rather presumptuously
because I don't have any page numbers.
Francine, black and white motif.
Yeah, I just like Pratchett's doing that cool thing
where he just
threads the entire book with...
Yeah, it's a motif, isn't it?
Yeah, he mentions
black and white thinking a lot.
The invitation and the black and white
and gold and everything's all
very colour coordinated.
You say it's quite cinematic this one again, isn't it?
It is. I don't think this will ever get
adapted for screen because it's
a weird one because it's
the fifth in a story arc.
But it would be so good on screen.
It would be so fun.
Yeah, apparently the play was kind of oddly
received by a lot of people because of that
because it's really hard to find the balance of how much you explain
from the previous.
What was the other...?
Of course, you have the magpies and the...
Yeah, that's right. The magpies.
There's a couple of magpies landing on this hat in the moonlight
and when she's flying back
from the midwifery job,
she's thinking to herself,
and any midwife out in isolated costas
on bloody nights would know all the other little secrets
never to be told.
Yes. From the rhyme.
Which will come to letter.
Yeah.
I'm going to be taking that to a lot of this later.
I like all of the... It's not quite foreshadowing.
It's not quite flag planting.
It's just theme, Marie.
It's really weird as well because obviously the magpies
are intentionally quite sinister.
The vampire family are the magpies.
And they are obviously not the good guys in this book,
but I have a weird attachment to magpies
because it's the nickname for Newcastle United,
which is my football team because my dad was from Newcastle.
How do you do like your corvettes?
And I love corvettes.
Although the crow I feel like was compared
in a favourable light to the magpies
when Miley Oates was compared
by Agnes to a ragged little crow.
Yes, very true.
And from a serious discussion
of clever use of motifs to an imaginary
pole which made me laugh.
You've just written here,
imagine a pole and I'm doing my best.
Please imagine a pole. It's stripy.
Unfortunately, it's not available at the moment,
which is why we're imagining it.
It's when the vampires are coming into Lanker
and the trolls on the bridge waiting for people
to come in doing things properly.
And there's this sort of metaphysical conundrum
as it's described.
Before we go, this guy decides to play the stupid
servant of the troll
saying, well, I have to stamp something
where you can't come in. I won't lift the pole.
That is definitely there.
It pops up in a few books, doesn't it?
Where, practically, it just highlights
the kind of absurdity of bureaucracy
a lot of the time. It's like, yes,
it's imaginary rules. We're going to get stuck
on them.
But it's the way the
troll is just
takes it so seriously.
Look at you. I'm lifting the pole.
Here it goes. Look at it pointing up in the air
like that. What's his name? Beef something?
Big Jim Beef.
Which Nanny describes
as, you know, similar to a guy, a human
calling himself Rocky.
Speaking of the names, actually,
Thomas Peerless is
in a book that highlighted
all the stupid names specifically.
I liked Thomas Peerless, who was
mentioned.
My vote goes to James. What the hell's
that cow doing in here, Portick?
Oh, yes, more of a classic. That's fair.
If things left behind an address,
oh, yeah. So
when Agnes is thinking to herself
about magra.
Yeah, I've seen the things you left behind in the cottage.
Yes. The woman had left
echoes of herself in the cottage, an old
bangle lost under the bed, rather
soppy notes and some of the ancient
notebooks, vases full of desiccated flowers.
You can build up a very strange view
of someone via the things they leave behind
the dresser. I was wondering what view
people might build up of you.
I wonder what view people will up of me
other than doesn't hoover
that really.
Just looking around my desk because I can't see my dresser.
I mean, obviously we've got too
many post-it notes. I've got a book here
about limpet, pie, because I never
told you that way after last week.
We've got paintbrushes.
I feel like it's
somewhat cheating looking around this because it's also in my sewing table.
I can see
four notebooks
in my laptop because I use that
along with a computer when I'm studying.
A small blue duck
which I will lift up to the webcam
or the patrons.
It's a lovely little blue duck that you made me
so I can bitch about coding to him.
Does he work? He does work.
He's a very good listener.
There's five pairs of scissors.
A token bag for
a board game that I need to fix.
Assaulted bobbins.
I think it's
almost parallel to the
podcast.
Or just in the group chat of the five items
you would use to summon
you. I think it was in the podcast.
Five items you put in the circle to summon
one of us. In your case
I'm just using five cups of coffee.
We need the smints in there
and the...
All right, three cups of coffee, a packet of smints and a biro.
Thank you.
What have you got there? I thought red wine
was thematically appropriate. Perfect.
Oh yeah, and flat being like
no, don't have the white wine, have the red wine.
Ah, dick. What a prick.
Like I know it's because
he's a vampire and shit, but like
don't order my fucking drink for me, dude.
Yeah, he's being
one of those dating
gorey dick ads, isn't he?
Yeah.
The playbook.
Yeah, I don't like it.
I bet he really likes
Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for life.
I bet he does. Sorry, Vlad is now
every fuckboy.
Although he won't subscribe to the Alpha Theory, of course,
because we don't get along with wolves.
That is the best renunciation
of wolf.
Well, if you're going to go mental, we're mad for you.
Vampire.
No, vampire is something different.
The Royal Society for the Betterment of Mankind,
France, in that's better ourselves.
Please.
I just rather enjoyed that Sean
is taking upon himself
a birthday afternoon to be asked any spare time
to better mankind and has so far
invented draft excluders, which
has earned him a small medal and I think deservedly so.
Yes, draft
excluders are a godsend.
I've sold a couple of myself this week.
I'm very proud of you.
I got rid of a bunch of clothes that were past
donating or fixing
a few months ago, to be fair.
And then I needed a bunch of scraps to go inside
my draft excluders.
Oh, you should have said.
And another bag full of clothes under that.
But I had to look for them.
I have a basket for fabric scraps
because obviously I end up with quite a lot from
trimming things and bits that aren't big enough
to use for anything else.
Watch out, that's how the Triangles Shirt Waste Fire happened.
I don't think that's likely.
Okay.
I'm quite good at disposing of it.
Because I often smoke cigars
around my fabric scraps.
I don't know what you do.
Actually, that's a fair point.
I'll allow that.
Anyway.
I like the sort of reference back
to the young witches
and how the attitudes to witchcraft
have changed in the country as things go on.
Being a witch was an honourable trade in the mountains.
Only the young ones invested in real crystal balls
and coloured knives and drivly candles.
The old ones stuck with kitchen cutlery,
fishing floats, bits of wood.
Any fool could be a witch with a runic knife,
but it took skill to be one with an Apple Cora.
Which is just such a nice throwback
to the previous books from Magret Learning
that a bread knife in the boot is the best.
Yes.
Granny's Face-Off with the Young Witches
in Lords and Ladies, which is where we first meet Agnes.
And this kind of idea that Agnes
has somewhat graduated
to the more serious school of witchcraft.
But also just as a world-building thing,
knowing it's still happening.
Can we go with the Young Witches in the future?
Yeah.
And a theme that plays off,
I think we've said before, haven't we,
that Magret likes everyday objects being
tools.
Like the peasant weapons and the...
It's also quite nice
if you compare it to the tropes
of version stuff with the vampires.
They're trying to give up these old-fashioned drivly candles
that the Young Witches are embracing.
Yes.
Fucking blad.
Fucking blad.
Speaking of vampires.
Magpires.
Can we talk about magpires?
Yeah, yeah.
Yes. Okay, so magpirems.
And this is reference.
I did actually note down
which page they were talking about it.
When Nanny and Agnes
go to Granny's Cottage.
It's page 124 in the Coggy Paperback.
Magpires is turning up and chattering them.
And Agnes is saying,
one for sorrow, two for joy,
and Nanny says, two for mirth.
And they have these conflicting magpirems.
So the one I know that I grew up with
and that I think is sort of the most common one
that most people know.
One for sorrow, two for joy, three for a girl,
four for a boy, five for silver, six for gold,
seven for a secret, never to be told.
I think there's also a much more
of a kind of English superstition.
So if people are broad that are listening,
I don't know if magpirems are a thing where you are,
if there's folklore around them.
Yeah, I think I mentioned before
one of my few practising superstitious things
is that I'll morning Mr. Magpire.
Yes, if you see a solo magpire, it's bad luck.
And counteract by wishing him good morning
or asking after his wife.
So I wanted to look into partly
the version that Nanny says and other versions
that exist.
So just a brief bit of the history of them.
The first sort of magpirem
was recorded around 1780
in a note on John Brand's popular antiquities.
But only the first four lines,
one for sorrow, two for mirth,
three for a funeral, four for birth.
Slightly later in publishing
the longer version, Michael
Aslebi Denham's
Proverbs and Popular Sayings of the Seasons
published in 1846.
Golly.
This is considered the first proper one in print.
One for sorrow, two for mirth,
three for a funeral, four for birth.
Five for heaven, six for hell,
seven for the devil, his own self.
That's Nanny's, isn't it?
That's Nanny's. But
I was stupidly
spending a while googling all of this shit
before I realised
where Pratchett would have probably looked
for an alternative magpirem
and that I also happened to have a handy copy
of Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
which I should have probably looked at
first before I spent so fucking long googling.
And under magpire
the old rhyme about magpires in
Brewer's Phrase and Fable
Phrase and Fable. Yeah, I also didn't think
to look at the fight glory of disco. I probably should have done.
No, it's cool. I'll just,
I'm pretty sure he'll have just referenced Brewer's
but just in case. Yeah. And this is
an older Scottish rhyme
it's considered and it's not quite
full on Scots how it's written but close enough.
One sorrow, two's mirth,
three's a wedding, four's a birth, five's a christening,
six a dearth, seven's heaven,
eight is hell and nine's the devil,
his own self.
So, again,
sort of variation
and from
the Oxford Dictionary of Superstitions
which was published in the 90s
we have one for sorrow, two for mirth,
three for a wedding, four for a birth, five for rich,
six for poor, seven for a witch
I can tell you no more.
I can actually find the origins of that
going to further
back than the Oxford Dictionary of Superstitions
but that's obviously another version. It's very regional
but
there was a
TV series run from 1968
to 1980 called Magpie
it was a kids magazine
show but like Blue Peter but a bit more poppy
and
the theme tune for that was the Magpie Rhyme
the one that's now most commonly known
one for sorrow, two for joy
it ends on eight's a wish, nine a kiss
and ten is a bird you must not miss
and the sort of
theory around Magpie Rhymes
and regional ones falling out of favour is that
that was such a well-known show that that became
the one that people knew in the one lexicon
but it seems like
the sorrow mirth may actually be
kind of older but
listeners if you've got like a weird region specific one
or you've heard different versions of it
please let me know because this is really fascinating.
Yeah, I have
I have
read something about
Practit or
someone associated with them
spending a long time researching these
and asking everyone about Magpie Rhymes
in fact I think Practit might have asked
this might be in his slip of the keyboard
where he was asking everyone in the queue
what Magpie Rhymes they knew
but yeah the folklore of Discworld
you've come up with exactly the same stuff
I have one thing to add, apparently another way
you can counteract the bad luck of a single Magpie
is to recite this charm
I crossed the Magpie and the Magpie crossed me
Devil takes the Magpie and God saved me
Nah, I think I'm going to stick to
Sounds less polite than just saying good morning
Kaz, you
how's your life?
The thing is normally I, you know
if you're on your own and you're walking along and you sort of
you know very morning with Magpie
you're not going to be able to know that you're doing it
but I taught it to my little nephew
who's six so walking anywhere
with him and seeing a Magpie
means an exuberant scream of morning Mr Magpie
I found it, it's in this book
it's the introduction to this book
it's the
by Tray Practit
not long after I did this
I did a book signing on the south coast
where I took the opportunity to ask practically every person in the queue
to say the Magpie Rhyme
every single one of them recited with greater
or less accuracy the version of the Rhyme
that used to herald the beginning of the 1960s
and 70s TV program Magpie
it wasn't a bad Rhyme
but like some cookie in the nest
it was forcing out all the other versions that existed
around the country
then a distinguished looking lady was in front
of me with a book and I asked her with some
inexpressible hope in my heart how many versions
of the Magpie Rhyme she knew
after a moment's thought she said about 19
and that is how I met Jacqueline Simpson
who has been my friend an occasional consultant
on matters of folklore
and is the co-author
so that's from the intro to the Folklore of Discworld
oh amazing
fantastic and yeah so you came up with exactly
the same research as they did so well done
we're all asking many people in a queue
because I haven't had a handy book signing
they wanted you to write a book first
these days I suppose
we did just ask for our listeners
this is the thing we have an audience for
yeah
that and leaning out the window and yelling
I feel like this is more efficient than that
you there boy
recite via the Magpie Rhyme
why it's one for sorrows there
why am I doing a bad English accent
I was going to say
I'm from this tree god damn it
yes but you're not from a Dickens novel
I might be
I'm a vampire I might be
you're sewing draft excluders to stop you from getting
chill blames you might as well be in a fucking
Dickens novel anyway
the rule of three Francine
oh fuck right okay
are we going into deeper folklore
no I've skimmed over folklore
on this because otherwise you're going to take
fucking fat ever okay
so the rule of three
we kind of touch upon here and we go into a bit later
as well
Granny has left everything out in threes and obviously
we're trying to symbolise the fact that
a coven comes in a three
yes it's the hierarchy shift everyone's got to
move up one now Margaret's had a baby
yes that's so
which by the way we do have a mention of Nanny's
outlying regions don't we because she says I can't
be a hag at my time of life my bras won't fit
ah yes that's a lot
but it's not specific
no it's just
geographically
yes
so rule of three
it pops up in fucking everything it's in
art and photography you've got the rule of thirds
it's mythology
and religion you've got the holy trifecta
you've got in lots of different religions
you've got the rules of three you've got the three fates
and folklore
everything's in fucking threes you've got
three daughters, three sons
three magical items, three billygoats
gruff whatever
comedy rule of three
comedy rule of three known as the what's it called
the triple
and marketing and copywriting
comes up a lot
music you've got the triads, the chords
all of this stuff
for art purposes today obviously we'll focus
a little bit on rhetoric and literature
because that's kind of a practice thing
so things coming in threes are just more
memorable and I was hoping to find
a definite reason for that
and there are theories
but there aren't like a this is why
it's
it's the smallest amount of things you need
to make a pattern
there's two lines, two dots
make a line not a pattern
yes in literature you have
three acts of a play
any story you have to start
middle and the end and they are
rising action, falling action and denouement
thank you
the three parts of a true shall make you
frapped podcast recap
is a classic example of course
that's why we split the books into threes
we split the books into threes
and
the rule of three is used in just so many
different contexts
and it's so effective in all of them
so if you think about
the most memorable lines
like safety
things, if people want you to remember
something safety we still remember
stop, look and listen
to cross the road, we remember that
no one's yelled that at us since we were little
stop, drop and roll if you're on fire
we all know that
I'm not sure it's what I actually have done
when I've been on fire but I remember it
on fire like ah the rule of three
ah
even just repeating like the same thing
three times in a row is more memorable than doing it
other way so like location, location, location
yes
there are two in Rhetoric
two main segments of the rule
if three likes that so you've got
hen dietrists
which is three successive words to express
one central idea
you've got liberty, agility, fraternity
yes for instance
and then you have the trichodon
or the triad which is three parallel
elements which is what we're looking at here
so it's veni
vidi veterinari
it's the father
the son and the holy ghost
it's the maiden, the mother
and the other one
as a writing device
the third is often unexpected
you set up a pattern
and then you break it
and that works
because surprise works in comedy, it works in drama
it just
it engages your mind to see a pattern
coming along and then go oh
yes for that reason
a lot of tricholons
set up in Rhetoric and especially speeches
the third one is the longest
if they're not all exactly the same lengths
you put the longest one at the end
yeah the father, the holy ghost
and the son doesn't quite work
and you put the surprise at the end
another great example
is from God's guards
the three rules of the librarians of time and space are
one, silence
two, books must be returned
no later than the last date shown
and three
do you not interfere with the nature of causality?
quite right and you remembered it
I'm really glad you did
otherwise I'd have had to wear it
I interfered with the nature of causality
once, got away with it
and then you hit the orangutan creep up behind you
and so in this one
they bring it back a little bit from the
realms of everything else
ever, the main
the mother and the crone
and the other one which is the longer one
but even the crone
although it's shorter it gets rid of the
alliterative action it's a little bit of a shock
because main mother
safe nice rolls and then you throw
in there the crone or the hag
and the syllable thing as well
the maiden, the mother, the crone
the other thing I wanted to find out
is how international it is
how universal it is
it does seem to be
obviously it's a bit harder to look
properly at all the examples you could
like copywriting and things
but certainly things like folklore
like Japan's three wise monkeys was one that
sprang to mind
and a lot of fairy tales
have been translated
I'm going to have to assume
I haven't been translated so much that the numbers
were completely changed but yeah
from all over the world it does seem to be
three
and I like that and I like the three witches
and
I like that Pratchett has a natural
flair for
the triads and
I liked also
that one of the things I was reading about it
I think it might have been in the elements of eloquence
and a wonderful write up on it
and I will as always
recommend everyone go read it
was talking about how
three makes a list
but two
that is two sides of the coin is a pairing
is perhaps something
a little liminal
Joanna? Yeah, should we talk about the liminal
so I'm going to preface all of this
by saying that I am not a fucking scholar
of Gothic literature
I did half an A level, I did not finish
my A level
but I've refreshed my memory somewhat
to talk about this because the thing is
he finally read Gormungast
I said I'd buy it this year
and I did not promise to read it
and I haven't had time to read Gormungast
or reread Frankenstein, Dracula or North Anger Abbey
but
so
what I love about this book one of the things that's great about it
is that it is not doing
direct parody or homage
the way like masquerade is this big
you know, it's Phantom of the Opera with a bunch
of other opera and musical references thrown in
this is a much less direct parody
but it is very much an homage to Gothic literature
and a really specific part of Gothic literature
which is where the use of the liminal comes in
so like a very brief overture
of the like Gothic novel tradition
you can go back to like the 1790s
and the reason it was called Gothic
is because the settings were often
these big medieval buildings and ruins
it's kind of considered like a pseudo-medieval
idea of mystery and terror
this atmosphere
and then it kept going through these different
resurdances and some of the
biggest ones that you can think of, Frankenstein
also, you know, shout out
to Mary Shelley for inventing sci-fi
to get away from Byron and Percy
because we all would, like I'll invent
a genre to get away from a fuckboy
Oh, at Psygno Bridgeton series 2
Byron Slander, everyone should tune in
Yep, support it, very much support
Byron Slander and Dracula which is much later
Dracula was written in 1897
Oh, that is much later
Yeah, and it's
I really ought to re-read it, especially talking
about this book, there's some Dracula references
It does not deserve my hatred
I hate it because I had to study it
with a particularly bad teacher
Another good one though
that came up before either of those is Northanger Abbey
which was a Gothic satire
this was Jane Austen taking the piss out
of the Gothic novel tradition
She wrote it in 1803 but it wasn't published until
1817 so I think it kind of lost
a bit of its bite as a satire
Right
But if you read it with it as a satire
in the back of your mind it's very funny
and it shares its DNA with Carpe Giaculum
that's where it's getting it from
but one of the biggest ideas
in pieces of rhetoric used in Gothic literature
is this idea of the liminal
I am going to bring this back to the book
I don't care, this is very interesting
But you're talking here especially more in later Gothic literature
and Frankenstein is such a good example
to hold up for it, this is a quote from
a guy called Manuel Aguirre
in the rules of Gothic grammar
and he's talking about the later Gothic
Gothic dwells on the liminality
of the human condition
its potential for change
change not only on the moral plane but also
and increasingly so as the genre develops
psychologically
change which in the 18th century debate on
cherished identity is all too often seen
as degrading or annihilating
caught in the threshold region
Gothic characters are if not destroyed then transformed
they acquire numinous features
and come to resemble such denizens of the limin
ghosts, monsters, demons
as exhibit a non-rational
compulsive, excessive, repetitive
mindless behaviour
so Frankenstein is a great example
of this, Frankenstein
is a character that stands in the liminal
he's not quite human but he is very much alive
and throughout that book
you know it's really hard
to remember what Frankenstein is about
there's a reason it's got the subtitle of modern Prometheus
because it's
been used in the Hamer horror
a guy going uh with the screws in his head
but the actual book is a beautiful
kind of treatise on what it is
to be alive, what life means, what it is
to be human
and this
I know we should be talking about Dracula more than Frankenstein
it's a vampire book but it is
it's an homage to that kind of era of
Gothic literature that really embraces the liminal
as this human being stuck in the middle
this brings us back around to your point about black and white
running through, this is Matthef, the whole idea of Granny
is that she is straddling that line
going way back to
right near the beginning
and something we talked about
at I think quite good length
in which is abroad
Granny flew high above the roaring treetops
under a half moon
and we talked about enjoying the half moon
and she distrusts the half moon
balancing so precariously
between light and dark it could do anything
and it goes into this thing about witches living on the edge of things
and very much always
being on the edge of things but you can think about being
on the outside looking in which is very true
but also it's this precipice
always ready to flip one way or the other
and there's a little bit
about Granny having one foot in shadow is there
yeah very much so and it goes into it
in much more in more depth
but if you think of it as
you know this idea of liminal spaces
that comes through in Gothic literature which it's
really embracing especially like I said
the existential aspect of it
you go into her little secrets
all the witches knows and would know
and would never say
one of the really dark moments of the book
like considering this is a book about vampires
one of the darkest moments is Granny
she had to make the decision around
whether the mother or child is going to live
and the midwife that was there saying
she should have let the father choose and Granny saying
why would I want to hurt him
why would I want to do that to him
it made me love Granny very much that he said
that like she was like no
the man has nothing to do with this
yeah this is not but I was very angry
watching any
any period drama really
or even some modern things
where the woman is in trouble in childbirth
and they're like to the father what should we do
should we save the child or the woman
save the fucking woman
if she's not conscious to answer
then the answer is
save her
it's such a big book
but what would happen it's accurate
it absolutely is it makes me cross
forget
I've told you I'm not sure if I've said on the podcast
one of my things I hate, hate, hate, hate watching
I hate watching it as women dying
in childbirth and on TV like it's my
I will turn the episode off I'll skip over it
that's my trigger warning thing I can't deal with that
yeah that's fair
this bit of the book
kind of gave me that same little
heart grippy moment except less
because Granny was in charge
so that was kind of cool it just reinforced
reinforced my love for the character I think
it's so so well done
and this is just in the first third of the book
to do this is a really subtle
homage to an iconic
genre that
is a weird genre that kind of ate itself
over and over because it kept resurging
but it was always a bit more tongue in cheek
or went over towards this
little existential because there's only
so many times you can run someone
running away in a medieval castle
Bluebeard kind of did that
that
that
sorry weird old fairy tale
woman marries a guy
he says you can go in every room in the castle
apart from that one so she goes in that one
and it's full of his dead wives
do I mean Bluebeard? yeah because Blackbeard was the pirate
oh no I
I never liked the trope of that
I didn't know Bluebeard was it
yeah I think that's the name of the story
which also I'm going to send
all the listeners to read the bloody chamber
by Angela Carter which is a kind of
updated very gothic take on
not quite fairy tales but old tales
old horror tales
things like there's her take on Bluebeard
in there
but yeah but in this book it
putting Granny in that position she is the one
who is
despite being a step back from the action
and on the edge of it in that way also putting her
literally standing half in light half in
shadow
when he did it in Witches Abroad it was
about there needs to be a good guy to offset
the bad guy she's the good one because
her sisters chose to be the bad guy
but think she's the good one
speaking of her sister actually I thought it was
quite nice that Oates had the little
moment with the mirror my practice
kind of pointing to the
well A making fun a little bit of religious
schisms but also pointing to the potential
dangers of a mirror
yeah I didn't go into the Omnion schism stuff
but it's very funny especially considering
we got to see the birth of modern
women in
in small gods
but Oates is quite an interesting character to put
across this because where Granny is never sure
that she is doing the right thing she is always
stuck in the middle of it
wondering if she's being human enough
and she's like I said she's doing it a really
different way to Witches Abroad he manages to
take
Granny's innate graniness and apply it
to the genre he's doing
like Witches Abroad was a story about fairy tales
this is a story about crumbling castles
like curtains
Lawson Ladies was very Gothic as well
but in a
in a more tropey way I think
it was more like early British
dark folklore
like King of Alphalons daughter that kind of
what's it
no there was a lot do you remember
we did a whole section on the Gothic literature parallels
oh yeah of course I suppose there was
all the running away in the castle
but it was kind of all even though
it was really tense like stressful moments
it was kind of obvious
yeah it hit the trope a bit harder
this is more like a long running thematic thing
of you can't write about vampires
and not do it like that
and if you're going to do it like that
then you're going to be a bit liminal
and wonder about the human condition
you're going to put Granny
in between the light and dark
and to do it by one of the first scenes
you have with her is her flying under the half moon
I just think it's
so beautifully done
nice yes
anyway that's enough of my unhinged
ranting Francine do you have
obscure reference finials
I do you'll be pleased to hear eventually
I found mine yes
so back to Sean Ogg
as we should always be
going back to Sean Ogg eventually
his Lancastrian army knife
is obviously not an obscure reference
towards the Swiss army knife
one reason for the slow progress on it was that
the king himself was taking active interest
in the country's only defence project
and Sean was receiving little notes up to three times
every day and Sean diplomatically
added some of them and lost as many as he could
and
I saw I can't remember
it wasn't annotated practice file I think it was one
of the other sites that has annotations
pointed out that
this could be a little bit of
a
throwback reference
to Prince Albert who was very
like that micromanagy of his military
stuff like in a really unhelpful way
always sending little suggestions
little notes really trying to be helpful and that
and like the military
I think took up his suggestion
on like helmets
design of helmets
and that was enough to keep him happy and they just kind of lost
all the rest of the suggestions and I thought yeah
that sounds possibly like this a little bit
I love it
I now can't remember if it's in this section
it's not a major spoiler for the other sections
but one of the tools on the Lancastrian army knife
is a small tool for winning ontological arguments
which
ah no not in this bit
but I liked
a device possibly quite small for finding things
that are lost
just recommend that for me
a device possibly quite small
the ontological arguments one seems more practical
let's see if we can do that
mallet
I haven't had an ontological argument for a while
I assume a mallet will do the job
right well I think
that's everything we
are going to say
on the first part of this book
there's much more I could say
we will be back next week with part two
two for joy
sorry battle the sorrow
let's start with page 130 on the quaggy paperback
with nanny scratched her nose
and ends
on page 254
with he slid gently to the ground
and then six inches above ground level
was carried off into the night
in the meantime
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and a recipe for something
which I will think of this month
I like the one you put off already
the caponata
thank you
and in the meantime
dear listener
don't let us detain you
magpirek victory
can we make something of that
give me a minute