Many men with false teeth find it impossible to eat the biscuits in their natural state, he notes six days later. Even when Wodehouse was imprisoned a second time, for a couple of months, in 1944, he worked on a novel. Second, Gussie has insulted Spode in a notebook, writing that Spode's mustache was "like the faint discoloured smear left by a squashed blackbeetle on the side of a kitchen sink", and that the way Spode eats asparagus "alters one's whole conception of Man as Nature's last word. [4] Spode adopted black shorts as a political uniform because, as Gussie Fink-Nottle says, "by the time Spode formed his association, there were no shirts left". Spode leaves the Black Shorts after gaining his title. Wodehouse, and hilariously portrayed in the 1990s TV adaptation starring Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry. It has the substance and the arguments. Spode is described by Wooster as looking "as if Nature had intended to make a gorilla, and had changed its mind at the last moment", which brings to mind the image of Johnson who broke his nose four times at Eton playing rugby and, only last year, shoulder-barged a ten year old to the ground during a street game in Tokyo. What the Voice of the People is saying is: "Look at that frightful ass Spode swanking about in footer bags! Rather than a tedious denunciation, Wodehouse gives us something more effective. [2] Bertie immediately thinks of Spode as "the Dictator" even before he learns of Spode's political ambitions. Although I yield to nobody in my admiration of Wodehouse's writing - he was unquestionably the greatest master of the English language of the last century, and in my book the funniest of all time - I was never entirely convinced by his champions' arguments. A wonderful day! he writes on August 14th, sure, but that was only a month in, and it was summer. In this conversation. [15] In other novels, Spode is knocked out three times: he is hit with a cosh by Bertie's Aunt Dahlia in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, he is punched by Harold Pinker in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, and Emerald Stoker smashes a china basin on his head in the same book. He died a month later. Second, Gussie has insulted Spode in a notebook, writing that Spode's mustache was "like the faint discoloured smear left by a squashed blackbeetle on the side of a kitchen sink", and that the way Spode eats asparagus "alters one's whole conception of Man as Nature's last word. That perfect perishers are once again disfiguring the London scene. We meet Spode at an antique shop; he accuses Wooster first of stealing an umbrella, then of stealing a precious antique. Roderick Spode is a character who makes appearances at odd times, making speeches to his couple dozen followers, blabbing on in the park and bamboozling nave passersby, blowing up at people, practicing his demagogic delivery style. Madeline accepts Spode's proposal. Fortunately Spode soon encounters a hostile meeting, and a shower of vegetables hurled at his head in enough to convince him that the non-elected Lords remains the better option. In 1967, Cool Britannia had yet to be invented, but Harold Wilson was just as keen as Mr Blair on painting a picture of these islands as the place where everything was happening, the nation where it was at. and you imagine it is the Voice of the People. However, this is not typically how people do deal with them. There are many reasons to love The Code of the Woosters by PG Wodehouse. Nobody could honestly call Wodehouse a fascist sympathiser. [11], In Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, which takes place at Aunt Dahlia's country house, Brinkley Court, Spode has recently become Lord Sidcup. Its a private notebook, after all. Roderick Spode Wiki - Everipedia As Spode's fiance, Madeline goes with him. Ad Choices. Sometimes the stakes are even higher: Anatole, the master chef, is being hired away from Aunt Dahlia. (I think that image may even come from a Wodehouse novel, but which one?) Spode is modelled after Sir Oswald Mosley,[17] leader of the British Union of Fascists (19321940), who were nicknamed the Blackshirts. I aspired to find the show funny, but didnt, really. This page is not available in other languages. And in their private lives, they are just like everyone else: they arent demigods or elites or superior in any sense. Mr Blair would like the world to think that this is a country full of Conran restaurants and cutting-edge artists who dissect cows and pickle them in formaldehyde. Roderick Spode is a character who makes appearances at odd times, making speeches to his couple dozen followers, blabbing on in the park and bamboozling nave passersby, blowing up at people, practicing his demagogic delivery style. Tamfang 08:17, 11 July 2007 (UTC)Reply[reply], In Much Obliged Jeeves (1971) Spode is roped in to support Bertie's friend Ginger Winship who is standing in a by-election. : 21: The Plot Thickens", "Classic Serial: The Code of The Woosters", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Roderick_Spode&oldid=1150150913, Fictional characters based on real people, Short description is different from Wikidata, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0, Fascist politician and designer of ladies' lingerie, later Earl of Sidcup, This page was last edited on 16 April 2023, at 16:01. Roderick Spode - 8th Earl of Sidcup : Yes. Refresh and try again. His resilient happiness, to me, remains heroic, and more essentially who he was. Like everyone else, I had assumed that it was because of his behaviour during the war that P G Wodehouse was kept waiting for his knighthood until a month before his death in 1975, at the age of 93. He perfectly captures the bluster, blather, and preposterous intellectual conceit of the interwar aspiring dictator. Roderick Spode Wikipedia Republished // WIKI 2 Though, as in the twist of one of his plots, not in the way one might have expected. And yet, across time, Wodehouses navet seems the less extraordinary of his qualities. He wrote articles and funny bits for the newspapers on the side. Or at least was in the room while they were on. 129.241.62.157 (talk) 17:05, 8 December 2010 (UTC)Reply[reply]. The Saviours of Britain, nicknamed the Black Shorts, is a fictional fascist group led by Roderick Spode. Spode, who does not want his followers to learn about his career as a designer of ladies' lingerie, is forced not to bother Bertie or Gussie. He quickly starts to think of Bertie as a thief, believing that Bertie was trying to steal Sir Watkyn's umbrella and also the silver cow-creamer from a shop. The sight of it seemed to take me into a different and dreadful world., It was as if Nature had intended to make a gorilla, and had changed its mind at the last moment.. Sir Patrick was strongly against it, not only on the grounds that it would revive the controversy about Wodehouse's broadcasts during the war, but for this reason: "It would also give currency to a Bertie Wooster image of the British character which we are doing our best to eradicate.". [18] This alludes to various radical groups: Mussolini's Blackshirts, Hitler's Brownshirts, the French Blueshirts and Greenshirts, the Irish Blueshirts and Greenshirts, the South African Greyshirts, Mexico's Gold shirts, and the American Silver Shirts. Spode leaves the Black Shorts after gaining his title. His general idea, if he doesnt get knocked on the head with a bottle in one of the frequent brawls in which he and his followers indulge, is to make himself a Dictator. Well, Im blowed! I was astounded at my keenness of perception. Bertie says in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves that before Spode succeeded to his title, he had been "one of those Dictators who were fairly common at one time in the metropolis", but "he gave it up when he became Lord Sidcup". When thinking of how genuine lovers of human liberty should deal with such settings, I always fall back on Ludwig von Mises from 1927. One of the many tragedies of our times is that we have taken so many perfect perishers so seriously instead of laughing them off the stage. So the required eugenic theory of his group naturally surrounded knees. Refresh and try again. The only privilege of which he availed himself was paying eighteen marks a month for a typewriter. But, later in the same entry: Instance of ingenuity in Camp. What the Voice of the People is saying is: 'Look at that frightful ass Spode swanking about in footer bags! Its a novel by one of the finest exponents of the English language at the very top of his game. "[10] With help from Jeeves and the Junior Ganymede club book, Bertie learns the word "Eulalie", and tells Spode that he knows all about it. By the time Spode formed his association, there were no shirts left. I no longer think so. Did you ever in your puff hear of a more perfect perisher? Like Mosley, Spode inherited a title upon the death of a relative; unlike Mosley, who inherited his baronetcy in 1928 (which entitled him to be called Sir) before forming his fascist group, Spode did not inherit his earldom (which made him Lord Sidcup) until after forming his group. Later in the story, Spode identifies a different pearl necklace, one belonging to the Liverpudlian socialite Mrs. Trotter, as fake. Bertie's Aunt Dahlia is a customer at Eulalie Soeurs and remarks that the shop is very popular and successful. One aims at the carelessly graceful break over the instep. After two years, he decided that he could make a living by his pen alone. The moment I had set eyes on Spode, if you remember, I had said to myself What ho! get it. Its a question of how best to deal with them. Connors address on the BBC began, I have come to tell you tonight of the story of a rich man trying to make his last and greatest salethat of his own country. Later, he described Wodehouse falling to his knees as Joseph Goebbels asks him to bow to the Fhrer. The crucial scene comes just over halfway through, after Bertie and his friend Gussie Fink-Nottle have endured 100 or so pages of intolerable bullying from the would-be fascist dictator Roderick Spode. He was grateful, because his professional pride had been wounded by grumblers saying there wasnt enough. Just a moment while we sign you in to your Goodreads account. The proposal for the broadcasts was part of a German plan. Roderick Spode is a character who makes appearances at odd times, making speeches to his couple dozen followers, blabbing on in the park and bamboozling nave passersby, blowing up at people, practicing his demagogic delivery style. [4] Spode adopted black shorts as a political uniform because, as Gussie Fink-Nottle says, "by the time Spode formed his association, there were no shirts left". Hayek emphasized in. But when I say 'cow', don't go running away with the idea of some decent, self-respecting cudster such as you may observe loading grass into itself in the nearest meadow. But here in 2016, it seems more vital than ever. Their eugenic theories are pseudo-science. After being elevated to the peerage, he sells Eulalie Soeurs. Opinion | Bertie Wooster v. Donald Trump - The New York Times The whole point of Wodehouse, of course, is that he described a fantasy world that never existed and never will. Error rating book. They were nativists, protectionists, longed for dictatorship, and believed that science had their back. The United States was not yet in the war, and we now know that the German Foreign Office saw the release of Wodehouse, who was beloved in America, as propaganda designed to keep the U.S. out of the war. ". Its the tragedy of real-world politics that we keep moving through these phases, trading one style of central plan for another, one type of despot for another, without understanding that none are necessary. Far from gruntled John Turner as Roderick Spode and Hugh Laurie as Bertie Wooster in ITVs Jeeves and Wooster. In the television series Endeavour (series five episode four "Colours"), there is a reference to "Spode and Webley" being shot as fascists. Sign up for the Books & Fiction newsletter. P.G. Wodehouse Knew The Right Way: Fight Fascism With Humor One of my favorite characters from 20th century pop fiction is Roderick Spode, also known as Lord Sidcup, from the 1930s series Jeeves and Wooster by P.G. Roderick Spode is the founder and head of the Saviours of Britain, a Fascist organization better known as the Black Shorts. He slept. Later, barber is seen crouching on his bed, holding lighted match under jam jar of water, soft soap and boot blacking. He has crossed a line that has to be held. That should inspire us to smile from time to time. He seemed to think that when they read Wodehouse's books, they would run away with the idea that life in Britain was as he described it: that this was a country full of half-witted toffs with brilliant manservants, their brains swollen by fish, a land of terrifying aunts and eccentric earls, gazing in rapt admiration at their prize pigs. "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Bertie delivers . You agreee with me that the situation is a lulu? I "[4], Like Bertie, Spode had been educated at Oxford; during his time there, he once stole a policeman's helmet. Gussie leaves Madeline for Emerald, and Spode proposes to Madeline. U.S. Attorney Jonathan Ross for the . She says that she must marry Bertie to reward his love for her, but Spode and Jeeves convince her that Bertie came to Totleigh to steal Sir Watkyn Bassett's black amber statuette, not out of love for her. Spode, seeing Gussie kiss Emerald Stoker, threatens to break Gussie's neck as well and calls him a libertine. Sir Oswald Mosley, 1930's leader of the British Union of Fascists. Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division traveled to Little Rock and Pine Bluff, Arkansas, on April 24 and 25 to continue the Civil Rights Division's tour to engage with stakeholders in underserved communities and reaffirm the department's commitment to protecting the civil rights of all Americans. He frequently writes about difficulties in his camp notebook, just never at much length. Humor is a great method for dealing with clowns like these, as Saturday Night Live has recently rediscovered. He perfectly captures the bluster, blather, and preposterous intellectual conceit of the . Such menacing is brought to an end thanks to a typically clever intervention from Jeeves and in one of the most satisfying speeches in the western canon, when Bertie declares: The trouble with you, Spode, is that just because you have succeeded in inducing a handful of half-wits to disfigure the London scene by going about in black shorts, you think youre someone. and you imagine it is the Voice of the People. Roderick Spode - 8th Earl of Sidcup : Yes. And, if he should ask why? He should obviously have been bedded out in the stables., Dont you ever read the papers? That meanness and cruelty so often accompany an inability to understand comedy. Sometimes Wooster dresses garishlyin a scarlet cummerbund, for example. Well, Im dashed! That not-losing-a-minute feeling remains. What would he be thinking by November? Ideally clowns like this would be ignored, left to sit alone at the bar or at the park with their handful of deluded acolytes. Spode is a friend of Sir Watkyn Bassett, being the nephew of Sir Watkyn's fiance Mrs. Wintergreen in The Code of the Woosters, though she is not mentioned again. [2] When he first sees Spode, Bertie describes him: About seven feet in height, and swathed in a plaid ulster which made him look about six feet across, he caught the eye and arrested it. "Norfolk shall make umbrellas and Suffolk . The trouble with you, Spode, is that just because you have succeeded in inducing a handful of half-wits to disfigure the London scene by going about in black shorts, you think you're someone. This was a sinister, leering, Underworld sort of animal, the kind that would spit out of the side of its mouth for twopence.. But the idea that by honouring their creator, the government would appear to be endorsing an image of Britain as a nation of Woosters and Aunt Agathas is just plain daft. Verified account Protected Tweets @; Suggested users What the Voice of the People is saying is: Look at that frightful ass Spode swanking about in footer bags! Bertie then hits Spode with a vase, but gets grabbed by Spode; Bertie frees himself by burning Spode with a cigarette. At one point, Wooster tells Sir Roderick: "The trouble with you, Spode, is that because you have succeeded in inducing a handful of halfwits to disfigure the London scene by going about in black shorts, you think you're someone. She says that she must marry Bertie to reward his love for her, but Spode and Jeeves convince her that Bertie came to Totleigh to steal Sir Watkyn Bassett's black amber statuette, not out of love for her. It was at least understandable, and particularly in the decade or two after the war, that successive British governments should have been reluctant to honour a man who, however innocently, had allowed himself to be used by the Germans. Roderick Spode - Wikipedia I frequently mentioned it to you. Yes, sir. And this one is even riper. It seems that by the time he started ordering uniforms for his followers, there were no more shirts left. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement and Your California Privacy Rights. and you imagine it is the Voice of the People. [18] This alludes to various radical groups: Mussolini's Blackshirts, Hitler's Brownshirts, the French Blueshirts and Greenshirts, the Irish Blueshirts and Greenshirts, the South African Greyshirts, Mexico's Gold shirts, and the American Silver Shirts. We could argue all day about the shades of grey, but when the question is as black and white as the fight against fascism, I would be mighty glad to link arms with someone with such a strong sense of fair play, such generous kindness, and so much warm feeling for his fellow humans. Aunt Dahlia ends up using a cosh she found on the ground to knock out Spode, which allows her to retrieve her fake necklace from a safe in order to hide it so it cannot be appraised. 92.15.12.165 (talk) 19:17, 4 July 2010 (UTC)Reply[reply], The TV series Spode can not in my opinion be described as Hitleresque, but rather "Mussolini-esque". Its one of Bertie Woosters funniest, silliest and most perfectly rendered adventures. That fantasy would never hold if we heard him tell his own tale. In the 1990s television series, Jeeves and Wooster, he is . "[10] With help from Jeeves and the Junior Ganymede club book, Bertie learns the word "Eulalie", and tells Spode that he knows all about it. In his other life, he is the owner, by virtue of family inheritance, of a shop that designs intimate clothing for women. After being elevated to the peerage, he sells Eulalie Soeurs. Jeeves gets Wooster out of tangles. Very few English people heard the broadcasts when they first aired. There is a strong liberal spirit running through the whole series. P.G. Wodehouse Knew the Way: Fight Fascism with Humor Wikipedia:WikiProject Fictional characters, Template:WikiProject Fictional characters, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Roderick_Spode&oldid=587296941, WikiProject Fictional characters articles, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0, This page was last edited on 22 December 2013, at 23:26. There is a strong liberal spirit running through the whole series. Spode's head goes through the painting, and while he is briefly stunned, Bertie envelops him in a sheet. John Turner: Spode - IMDb [12], In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, which takes place at Totleigh Towers, Spode is as protective of Madeline as ever and threatens to break Bertie's neck when he thinks that he has caused Madeline to cry (she was shedding a tear because she thought Bertie was lovesick and could not stay away from her). His manner was curt. My father, who was born in September, 1939, in the British-mandated Palestine, and grew up in a collective-farming community, and who by the goofy wheel of fortune was now teaching classes in fluid dynamics at the University of Oklahoma, in Normanmy dad thought Jeeves and Wooster was hilarious. Roderick Spode - 8th Earl of Sidcup : He knows why. If that passage is the work of a fascist sympathiser, then I am a pumpkin. He said he could have made it more by adding water, which would have spoiled it.. He lost nearly sixty pounds. The snail was on the wing and the lark on the thorn - or, rather, the other way around - and God was in His heaven and all right with the world. It is hard to know where to begin to explain what a crass judgment that was. What unites us, after all, is far greater than what divides us. , that the fascists and communists are really two sides of a split within the same movement, each of which aspires to control the population with a version of a central plan. Wooster relies on Jeeves to navigate the landscape, which at every moment threatens him with social embarrassment, at the least, and maybe with an engagement to a pretty woman he doesnt much like, at the most. Roderick Spode - The Black Shorts - LiquiSearch Spode is modelled after Sir Oswald Mosley,[17] leader of the British Union of Fascists (19321940), who were nicknamed the Blackshirts. 2023 Cond Nast. This was a sinister, leering, Underworld sort of animal, the kind that would spit out of the side of its mouth for twopence. And, if he should ask why? . He was introverted, and, with the exception of schoolboy camaraderie, preferred to be at home, working. A group of rare-book dealers and collectors explain their specialized language. He admitted as much himself, writing in May 1945: "I made an ass of myself and must pay the penalty." "[3] Bertie learns how accurate his initial impression of Spode was when Gussie tells him that Spode is the leader of a fascist group called the Saviours of Britain, also known as the Black Shorts. It was about four inches high and six long. My own was to buy a villa in Le Touquet on the coast of France and stay there till the Germans came along., Wodehouse didnt do the broadcasts in exchange for being released. Wodehouse said that there was also a less creditable motive. Wartime for Wodehouse | The New Yorker Spode threatens everything: two engagements, Woosters bodily well-being, the literary magazine. Error rating book. A week after Wodehouse was released, the journalist William Connor, writing under the pseudonym Cassandra, suggested in the Daily Mirror that Wodehouses early release had been part of an unsavory deal. Tell him I'm going to break his neck. Bertram (Bertie) Wooster is a hapless but sweet member of the English upper class; Jeeves is his laconic, dry, and brilliant valet. They are still engaged at the end of the novel. There are lots of political fools. Oh, how I wish that Wodehouse was still around to paint a pen-portrait of that frightful ass Sir Patrick, swanking about in his pin-stripes as he plotted to eradicate the Empress of Blandings. Jeeves & Wooster: Roderick Spode 1 - YouTube 0:00 / 2:53 Jeeves & Wooster: Roderick Spode 1 LIST Analysis 6.52K subscribers 235 46K views 15 years ago Roderick Spode, amateur. Bertie says in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves that before Spode succeeded to his title, he had been "one of those Dictators who were fairly common at one time in the metropolis", but "he gave it up when he became Lord Sidcup". Spode's head goes through the painting, and while he is briefly stunned, Bertie envelops him in a sheet. Spode, who does not want his followers to learn about his career as a designer of ladies' lingerie, is forced not to bother Bertie or Gussie. These must lead it to victory. Spode, we learn, is the head of the Black Shorts, a group clearly kin to Mussolinis Blackshirts, but hampered by a shortage of shirts. If you will recollect, we are now in Autumn season of mists and mellow fruitfulness., I couldn't have made a better shot, if I had been one of those detectives who see a chap walking along the street and deduce that he is a retired manufacturer of poppet valves named Robinson with rheumatism in one arm, living at Clapham., You cant fling the hands up in a passionate gesture when you are driving a car at fifty miles an hour. . This cycle continues to the point that the entire political landscape becomes deeply poisoned with hate and acts of vengeance. Camp was really great fun, the English comic novelist P.G.Wodehouse wrote to an old school friend. Did you ever in your puff see such a perfect perisher?, There is a fog, sir. One favorite plot hinges on a banjolele. In his memorandum to his masters in London, Sir Patrick showed that he saw no place in this arcadia of mini-skirts and psychedelic ties for the man who had given more pure pleasure to literate English-speakers throughout the world than any other writer then alive. Jeeves & Wooster: Roderick Spode 6 - YouTube And then there's Jeeves, the brilliant, hyper-competent valet, who wants his master Bertie to agree to go on an around-the-world cruise. Indeed, about 30 minutes into the second episode of Series 2 ("A Plan for Gussie"), spode is shown rehearsing his stance and gestures in front of a photograph of Benito Mussolini. Wodehouse had to write. I suppose even Dictators have their chummy moments, when they put their feet up and relax with the boys, but it was plain from the outset that if Roderick Spode had a sunnier side, he had not come with any idea of exhibiting it now. It was a point of honor with us not to whine. Wodehouse failed to understand how even a childrens bedtime story broadcast on Nazi radio could be a form of propaganda. Spode, based on Mosley, was exposed for his ownership of Eulallie Souers, ladies' underwear makers. I have taught the Wodehouse broadcasts for several years now, in a graduate writing seminar on comedy and calamity. The Jeeves-and-Wooster stories were made into a television series, which began airing on PBS in 1990. Liberalism has nothing to do with all this. The books are cozier than cozy mysteries, and, like a mystery, they help take ones mind off real calamities. The fantasy that theres a Jeeves who can resolve all problems is the necessary joy of these books. Why shorts? How about when you are asleep?, But when I say 'cow', dont go running away with the idea of some decent, self-respecting cudster such as you may observe loading grass into itself in the nearest meadow., I dont mind people talking rot in my presence, but it must not be utter rot., She was standing by the barometer, which, if it had had an ounce of sense in its head, would have been pointing to 'Stormy' instead of 'Set Fair, a chap who's supposed to stop chaps pinching things from chaps having a chap come along and pinch something from him., Scotties are smelly, even the best of them. Roderick Spode, 7th Earl of Sidcup, often known as Spode or Lord Sidcup, is a recurring fictional character from the Jeeves novels of British comic writer P. G. Wodehouse, being an "amateur dictator " and the leader of a fictional fascist group in London called The Black Shorts. Roderick Spode, 7th Earl of Sidcup, often known as Spode or Lord Sidcup, is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves novels of English comic writer P. G. Wodehouse. He does have the Mussolini portrait too, as you say; I think he is meant to be fusion figure showing different types of fascist influences. This was the Britain of the Beatles, Carnaby Street and the Swinging Sixties, where a modern nation was being forged in the "white heat of technology". Harold Pinker steps forward to protect Gussie, and after Spode hits Pinker on the nose, Pinker, an expert boxer, knocks him out. Roderick Spode is a character who makes appearances at odd times, making speeches to his couple dozen followers, blabbing on in the park and bamboozling nave passersby, blowing up at people, practicing his demagogic delivery style. One sensed the absence of the bonhomous note. They comprise the small, but enthusiastic, audience to whom Spode makes loud, dramatic speeches in which he announces bizarre statements of policy, such as giving each citizen at birth a British-made bicycle and umbrella . In June, 1941, Wodehouse was released. Just a moment while we sign you in to your Goodreads account. One of the squad has an apoplectic fit and keels over. Show more Jeeves & Wooster: Roderick Spode 1 46K views 15 years ago Jeeves and. What the Voice of the People is saying is: 'Look at that frightful ass Spode, swanking about in footer bags! I dont necessarily read them front to back, but pick them up more as someone would a whiskey-and-soda, or a hymnal. Madeline, who wanted to gain the title Lady Sidcup, breaks their engagement, and says she will marry Bertie instead. This seems to me a missed opportunity to improve the publics mental health. Her natural tough-mindedness was schooled and tempered by a fierce devotion to the Communist Party, and in particular to its work for civil rights and civil liberty. Wodehouse was four months shy. Gussie says of Spode, "His general idea, if he doesn't get knocked on the head with a bottle in one of the frequent brawls in which he and his followers indulge, is to make himself a Dictator.
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