45
“Stoolie” is sometimes an abbreviation for “stoolpigeon”, a police informant. Of course, a stool is also something you might find in an Ankh-Morpork street.
46
It has been pointed out — and I feel bound to inflict the thought on others — that Stoolie is technically a grassy gnoll. (And if
47
A reference to the shampoo ‘Wash and Go’, a trademark of Vidal Sassoon.
48
Another reference to the shampoo ‘Wash and Go’, a trademark of Vidal Sassoon.
49
According to legend, Dis is also the name of a city in Hell — particularly appropriate to a demon-powered organiser.
50
One of the most intractable disputes in the early Christian church was over the nature of Christ — to what extent he was God or man. In 325, the Council of Nicea tried to settle the question with the Nicean Creed, but the dispute immediately re-emerged over a single word of the creed: one school said that it was “homoousios” (of one substance), the other that it should be “homoiousios” (of similar substance). The difference in the words is a single iota — the smallest letter in the Greek alphabet — and the schism (between Eastern and Western churches) continues to this day.
51
“Shaving” is a method of marking cards by trimming a very, very thin slice from one edge, perceptible only if you know what to look for.
52
Caliph was the title of the leader of the Muslim world, from the death of the Prophet in 632 onward; although the title has been divided and weakened since the 10th century, it was only officially abolished by the newly-formed Republic of Turkey as recently as 1924.
53
Carl Philipp Gottfried von Clausewitz (1780–1831), a Prussian general who fought against Napoleon, wrote a standard textbook
54
When
55
Many British army regiments have, or had, nicknames of this sort, based either on some historical event or on some idiosyncrasy of their uniforms. The marching song is a famous old tongue-twister: “I'm not a pheasant plucker, I'm a pheasant plucker's mate/ I'm only plucking pheasants since the pheasant plucker's late.” (Another variant substitutes “son/come” for “mate/late”.)
56
Apparently there are “well-documented” cases of this sort of miraculous escape, but it has become a much- parodied staple of
57
Medieval Arab legend identifies the source of the Nile as being in “the Mountains of the Moon”.