The Tale of Men's Shirts
or
Tales of Men's Shirts, A
Story of Down Under
First broadcast on
December 31, 1959
Script by Spike Milligan
Produced by John Browell
Announced by Wallace Greenslade
Orchestra conducted by Wally Stott
This transcription is
based on the radio broadcast of this episode. However, this is
the LP version (B/W The Scarlet Capsule), which is a
different performance with a cut-down script. The revised
transcription here is based on this, and has the major parts cut
out marked with << and >>.
- Greenslade:
- This is the BBC. After the news
there'll be a talk on Early Christian Plastic Knees and
the first broadcast of a piece of knotted string. If you
would like a piece of knotted string, send three rust-proof
shillings to "Honest" Wal Greenslade of
Weybridge. Ta.
- Seagoon:
- Hello folks of world! Hello folks of
world! And in that order!
- Greenslade:
- Ta. That voice comes from inside a
short fat round blob, namely Neddie of Wales.
- Seagoon:
- Thank you, Jim Krint. My first
impression will be of Peter Sellers.
- Sellers:
- Hello folks.
- Grams:
- [Sudden burst of cheering]
- Seagoon:
- Stop! My next impression will be of
Spike Milligan saying "Thynne".
- Milligan:
- Thynne!
- Orhestra and Omnes:
- Thynne!
- Milligan:
- Thyyyynne!
- Orhestra and Omnes:
- Thyyyynne!
- Milligan:
- ThyyyyYYYYyyyynne!
- Orhestra and Omnes:
- ThyyyyYYYYyyyynne!
- Seagoon:
- That's Thynne enough! Thank you,
thank you. Remember, folks, saying "Thynne"
cures you of monkeys on the knees.
- Sellers:
- Yes, if you've got monkeys on the
knees, just say:
- Milligan:
- Thynne!
- Sellers:
- And they are only three and six a
box.
- Milligan:
- Yes, I swear by Thynne. One morning
I woke up and there they were monkeys on the knees!
- Grams:
- [At the word "monkeys"
add sound of monkeys in a temper]
- Milligan:
- Then I said the cure word, Thynne!
- Grams:
- [Speed up and fade record of the
monkeys at high speed]
- Milligan:
- And away they went!
- Greenslade:
- Ta. The monkeys were played by
professional apes.
- Seagoon:
- That was Wallace Greenslade saying
words.
- Greenslade:
- Mr. Seagoon, stand by to take part
in an adventure story entitled...
- Orchestra:
- [Timpani roll soft, held under
speech]
- Sellers:
- Tales of Men's Shirts,
a story of down under.
- Orchestra:
- [concluding chords]
- Grams:
- [Morse code comes out of the
music]
- Greenslade:
- Nineteen Thirty-Eight, but from the
continent come ominous rumblings.
- Grams:
- [Rumbling and bubbling cauldron]
- Bloodnok:
- Oho! Oh, this Spanish food! Oh!
Waiter! One brandy, and pronto!
- Spriggs:
- One brandy and pronto coming up!
- Greenslade:
- Those were the last words said at
peace. At that moment Germany declared war in all
directions.
- German (Milligan):
- Bang!
- Bloodnok:
- Bang? War! I must write me memoirs.
- FX:
- [Typewriter]
- Bloodnok:
- The day war broke, I said to
Allenbrooke, "You fool, don't you realize that..."
- Seagoon:
- England was mobilized!
- Sellers:
- Recruits were rushing to the
recruiting depots at the rate of one a year.
- Greenslade:
- We join the story... We join the
story in 1942, a critical year for Britain, with British
Generals slaving away at their autobiographies.
- Grams:
- [Dozens of typewriters]
- Hern (Sellers):
- While across the Channel, the German
High Command were welding a master plan, fylum.
- Grams:
- [Typewriters]
- German (Seacombe):
- Achtung, gentlemen! Be seated. We
must have a halt on our war memoirs and go to war! Our
scientists have just invented a liquid that will win der
war. This chemical, when applied to the tail of a miltary
soldier shirt, is tasteless, colourless, and odourless.
- Second German (Milligan):
- What good is that on the tail of a
shirt, hein?
- German:
- The moment the wearer sits down, the
heat from his body causes the chemical to hexplode. This
way, the soldier will be neutralized.
- Second German:
- He'll be worse than that.
- Third German (Sellers):
- Is einer wonderschon, Gerhimmeler!
- German:
- Speak English, you fool. There are
no sub-titles in this scene. Now zen, this is my plan of
attack.
- Second German:
- It looks like a nail.
- German:
- No, it's a tack. Ho ho ho ho. Thank
you. Who said we Germans haven't a sense of humour?
- Second German:
- Just about everybody, I tink.
- German:
- Oberlieutenant Schatz!
- Second German:
- Wha?
- German:
- You will take ten men, each one
carrying a spray-gun full of the exploding shirt-tail
fluid. You will be dropped near Leicester and there you
will gain entrance to the Great British Military Shirt
Factory. The rest is up to you. We shall call the plan
"Operation Burnbaum".
- Orchestra:
- [German chords]
- Greenslade:
- The effect of this deadly plan was
soon felt.
- FX:
- [explosion]
- Bloodnok:
- Ohooooohooooo!
- Greenslade:
- The first discovery was made at
Whitehall, where they were working at their memoirs.
- Grams:
- [Typewriters]
- Bloodnok:
- Halt! Now gentlemen, be seated.
- Grams:
- [Series of shirt-tail explosions
and shouts of rage]
- Bloodnok:
- Ohhhhhh! Quick, nurse! The screens,
nurse!!
- Greenslade:
- Portions of the charred shirt-tails
were soon at a Military Forensic Laboratory, where they
were forensicked.
- Seagoon:
- Mmmm, yes, there's been severe
combustion all right. Hard to say what type. What do you
think, sir?
- Willium:
- Ooo, I don' know, mate, I'm, uh, I'm
only the kleener around 'ere.
- Seagoon:
- Oh, I'm sorry. I thought you were
one of us.
- Willium:
- No, no. I'm one of them, mate.
- Seagoon:
- You don't look like one of them. I
mean, why are you dressed like an admiral?
- Willium:
- Well, I, er, I don't like people ter
think I'm just a kleener. I mean, I went to a good
school, mate, I went t'Eton.
- Seagoon:
- How long were you there?
- Willium:
- Oh, 'bout five minutes. I was
deliverin' the groceries.
- Seagoon:
- You were a greengrocer?
- Willium:
- Not quite green, more of a dirty
yellow colour... ha ha ha...
- Seagoon:
- Ha ha ha... Very good...
- Willium:
- [garbled] publish, sir...
- Seagoon:
- Good luck. Well, now... Very good,
now just step out of this thirteenth-storey window.
- Willium:
- No, thanks. I'm trying to give 'em
up, mate.
- Seagoon:
- I wish I could. Hup!
- Willium:
- [dramatic] So sayin', he
stepped aht, matie.
- Grams:
- [Long fading scream (very long
indeed)]
- Seagoon:
- [over end of scream] Yes, I
always travel by window, folks, it's the quickest way
down.
- Grams:
- [Seagoon cries out as he hits
bottom]
- Seagoon:
- I was on my way to the Quarter-Master-General,
Nick Nock Nocky Nick.
- Crun:
- Come in, Knick Knock Knocky Knick
Knowel.
- Seagoon:
- It's me, Lieutenant Seagoon, from
the body of the same name.
- Crun:
- Ah, Ned, let me take your window.
Did you hear they're sening up a rocket to photograph the
other side of you?
- Seagoon:
- All lies, all lies! I'm losing
weight -- I've dropped three stone.
- FX:
- [Lump of iron goes clang on the
ground]
- Seagoon:
- There's one now.
- Bannister:
- Hello, sailor.
- Seagoon:
- What's this, then?
- Bannister:
- What? My name is Bannister.
- Seagoon:
- Didn't I see you on the stairs?
- Bannister:
- What? Don't bother me...
- <<
- FX:
- [Typewriter]
- Bannister:
- "I was Churchill's Wet Nurse",
Chapter One. I was standing in Piccadilly when...
- >>
- Seagoon:
- Now, Mr. Crun, I want to borrow a
stock military shirt for an experiment.
- <<
- Seagoon:
- But first, Geldray, and his famed
Dutch Conk!
- Geldray:
- These are my wartime Conk memoirs.
Ploogie!
- Max Geldray & Orchestra:
- [musical interlude]
- Greenslade:
- Tales of Men's Shirts,
Part Two.
- >>
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic descending chords with
distant bugle and drum]
- Grams:
- [Crowd of men chatting and
typewriters]
- Sellers:
- [loud and soft voice] Eyes
front, ears to the side! Stand by your memoirs! Orderly
Officer...
- Grams:
- [Slur record of chatting down]
- Sellers:
- All correct and present, sir. Thynne!
- Seagoon:
- Thank you, and Thynne. Right. At
ease, men.
- Grams:
- [Immediate snoring. fade under,]
- Seagoon:
- Gentlemen, all of you officers have
been selected because of your high standard of
intelligence.
- Eccles:
- You sure of dat?
- Seagoon:
- Someone has blundered. Private
Eccles, I've got bad news.
- Eccles:
- Private? I'm a Captain.
- Seagoon:
- That's the bad news.
- Eccles:
- Oh!
- Seagoon:
- Now, just stand in this shallow
grave and wait for the next death.
- Eccles:
- Ta.
- Seagoon:
- Gentlemen, there has been an
outbreak of exploding shirt-tails in the British Army. We
suspect sabotage.
- Milligan:
- Oh! [gabbles a rubbishy question]?
- Seagoon:
- Not when the train is standing in
the station.
- Milligan:
- Blast!
- Seagoon:
- Now, gentlemen, this is a matter of
life and death. I want a volunteer to wear this shirt and
make notes on the way it behaves.
- Eccles:
- [off] Not a lot of room in
this grave...
- Seagoon:
- In fact, try everything to make that
shirt-tail explode. Who will volunteer?
- Omnes:
- [pause, light, nervous singing
and whistling starts, gets louder and louder]
- Orchestra:
- [All gradually join in the
singing]
- Seagoon:
- Stop this! I appreciate your love of
singing and cowardice, if you won't volunteer, we must
draw lots. Eccles?
- Eccles:
- Yeah?
- Seagoon:
- Write your name on a piece of paper
and put it in this hat.
- Eccles:
- Dere.
- Seagoon:
- Now draw it out and read it.
- Eccles:
- Mrs. Phyllis Quott.
- Seagoon:
- You imposter, you're not Mrs Quott!
- Eccles:
- [aside] Blast! [aloud]
Wait, I'll tell ya, I... [Milligan giggles] [to
audience] It's all free, folks... [to Neddy]
Wait, I know the ideal volunteer for you, he's had more
experience with shirt-tails than anybody, his name is...
- Orchestra:
- [Bloodnok Theme]
- FX:
- [Typewriter]
- Bloodnok:
- So I said to Winston, "Allenbrooke
and Montgomery are ideal lads..."
- Grams:
- [The shirt-tail explosion]
- Bloodnok:
- Oooooh oh! Abdul! Quick, a new shirt!
It's happened again.
- Seagoon:
- Nickity knock knock oh nock!
- Bloodnok:
- Nickity knock knock in nocks? That's
my private number! [calling] Come in, within!
- Seagoon:
- Thank you. Major Bloodnok?
- Bloodnok:
- I have been called worse. Yes? Now
what can I do for you? Better still, GET OUT!!!
- Seagoon:
- Major, I'm here to offer you money.
- Bloodnok:
- Ohoho! Ohhhh, come in Ned, warm
yourself by this woman. She's just coming to the boil.
- Grams:
- [kettle with steam whistle]
- Bloodnok:
- There she goes now! Yes...
- Seagoon:
- I've been told that you have more
experience with exploding shirt-tails than any man alive.
- Bloodnok:
- True, true. I feel no pain, you know.
But what of the rewards?
- Seagoon:
- Several plastic OBEs and a drip-dry
statue of Jane Mansfield <<Diana Dors>>
and a ticket to Hampstead Fairground.
- Bloodnok:
- Ohhhh, none but the brave deserve
the fair. I accept!
- Seagoon:
- Come, Bloodnok, on with this
military test shirt.
- Bloodnok:
- Let's drink to the success of the
venture, here's mud in yer eye.
- Seagoon:
- [puzzled] So saying, he threw
a plate of mud at me.
- FX:
- [splat!]
- Seagoon:
- Aheoahaiohai!
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic chords]
- Greenslade:
- Neddy's next move was to actually
get into Germany and try to find out the enemy's secret.
- Seagoon:
- At dawn, a ship hove to at
Portsmouth Ho.
- Grams:
- [Seagulls, Bosun's Whistle, Ship
making up steam]
- FX:
- [Typewriter]
- Moriarty:
- "How I Saved de Gaulle and Told
Mark Clarke Where to Get Off..." [sings] A
life on the ocean waaave, is the key to a watery grave.
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- Happy, Moriarty?
- Moriarty:
- Aye aye, Captain! I thought you'd
never get here.
- Seagoon:
- Ahoy there!
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- Ahoy, Ned!
- Moriarty:
- [over] Ahoy, Neddie!
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- Come aboard.
- Grams:
- [splash]
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- You must wait for the gangplank. Ups-a-daisy.
- Grams:
- [man pulled out of water]
- Seagoon:
- Oh! By Jove, that water was taller
than me!
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- It's older, that's why, Neddy. Ha ha
ha ha! Welcome to the Good Ship Lollipop.
- Seagoon:
- My name is Lieutenant Seagoon.
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- A better name for a twit I've yet to
hear. Ned, this man in the red football jersey and one
white sock is an old steaming French sailor.
- Moriarty:
- I've got the sea in my blood.
- Seagoon:
- [giggles] You can see where
it gets in.
- Moriarty:
- What? I must have it plugged! Mind
how you speak to me. Do you know who I am?
- Seagoon:
- Can't you remember?
- Moriarty:
- I am, remember, Comte della Robbia
de Sploon di Blippen! The Duke of Orange, an old naval
family.
- Seagoon:
- So, folks, he comes from a long line
of naval oranges! Ha ha ha ha. Laugh and the world laughs
with you, they say.
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- You've proved them wrong, haven't
you, Neddy?
- Spriggs:
- We're ready to sail, Jim, ready to
sailllllllll.
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- Thank you, Jimmmm! Cast off fore,
aft and ift.
- Omnes:
- [Sea shouts]
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic seascape music]
- Greenslade:
- A heavy sea mist descended,
demanding constant vigilance by seamen in the chart-room.
- Bluebottle:
- Ift by aft by fore and aft and ift...
Six bells and all's well on the dog. [sings]
Fiteen men on dehman's chest, ho ho ho and bottled rum.
Drink the devil and [garbled], ho ho ho and...
- Seagoon:
- Everything all right, Seaman Bottle?
- Bluebottle:
- Everything is Bristol fashion and
ship-sinky! 'Ere, I got an electric twit for Christmas.
Aye aye, matie!
- Seagoon:
- Aye aye.
- Bluebottle:
- Aye aye to you, sir. [sings]
Fiteen men on dehman's chest, ho ho ho and kobbled rum.
Drink t'de Devil and...
- Seagoon:
- What's that rough sailor song you
sing, Seaman?
- Bluebottle:
- I'm singing this map...[ad libs
tune] All those brown parts are the land, and the
blue bits with the little lines on are the seas! All the
green is where the forest is. Sherwood Forest a nine mile
long, doo dah, doo dah,...
- Seagoon:
- [singing with Bottle]
Sherwood Forest is nine miles long, oh de doo dah day! [bits
of the orchestra join in sporatically] Oh de doo dah
day, oh de doo dah day! Sherwood Forest is... [giggles]
Ha ha ha! Ahh, lad, they don't write maps like that any
more. I say, this fog is getting thick.
- Bluebottle:
- And I say, so it is!
- Grams:
- [Distant fog horn, Bloodnok's
"Ohhhhhh"]
- Seagoon:
- What's that?
- Bluebottle:
- Sounds like Major Bloodnok.
- Seagoon:
- It can't be, he's never had it that
bad... Is Eccles in the crow's nest?
- Bluebottle:
- Yes.
- Seagoon:
- Eccles?
- Eccles:
- Yer?
- Seagoon:
- Can you see ahead?
- Eccles:
- Yer, a big bald one.
- Seagoon:
- Is it one of ours?
- Eccles:
- It's... Oh! [sings to "Camptown
Races", as above, with fitful orchestral
accompaniament] It's Ray Ellington on the cardboard
bow! Rum tum biddy bump dum tum!
- <<
- Ellington:
- Man! I don't know how they get away
with it.
- The Ray Ellington Quartet:
- [Musical Interlude]
- Greenslade:
- That was Mr. Ray Ellington, who now
uses the blue whitener. Part Three of Tales of
Men's Shirts. Thynne!
- >>
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic return-to-story chords]
- Seagoon:
- At dawn we came to off the coast of
Germany. We prepared to swim ashore by electric plunging
drawers.
- FX:
- [electric plunging drawers sound,
then a thud]
- Seagoon!
- Aaah! A shot in my shorts!
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- No, you don't! Hands up, little Ned
of Wales.
- Seagoon:
- What's the meaning of this?
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- This means you're a
prisoner of the German Navy.
- Seagoon:
- So that's what "this"
means. I've often wondered. You traitor, Thynne.
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- My name is Horne.
- Seagoon:
- Traitor Horne! [Note: "Traitor-Horne"
is the name of a chain of stores in the UK, I think.]
- Orchestra:
- [Ta Raa cymbal]
- Seagoon:
- They don't come any older, folks! [off]
Calling folks of world!
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- Moriarty, clap this lot in irons.
- FX:
- [Typewriter]
- Grytpype-Thynne:
- Chapter Two: "How I Captured a
British Idiot in Drawers".
- Moriarty:
- Come on, you... spotty Herbert.
- Bluebottle:
- Take your hands off me! Do you think
you can take Bluebottle alive?
- Moriarty:
- [gabbles]
- Bluebottle:
- Fixes Moriarty with hypnotic gaze,
doot doot doot doot doot doot...
- Grams:
- [Old fashioned silent movie
piano, tension music]
- Bluebottle:
- My man, I was trained in Judo by the
Great Bert. Using the body as a counter-pivot to displace
the opponent, I use the Great Bert's method of throwing
the opponent to his death! Be warned, Moriarty, one false
move and you die by Bert's method!
- Moriarty:
- Take that!
- FX:
- [Thwack on Bottle's head]
- Bluebottle:
- Ohoooh! [Cries] Wait till I
see that twit Bert...
- Eccles:
- You hit my friend Bottle again and
see what happens!
- FX:
- [Terrific slapstick]
- Bluebottle:
- Ohoooh!
- Eccles:
- See? Dat's what happens.
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic descending chords]
- FX:
- [Typewriter]
- Greenslade:
- "The Greenslade War Memoirs",
Chapter One. I said to Allenbrooke, "How dare you."
And then I realized that...
- Grams:
- [Behind dialogue: silent film
piano, sad]
- Greenslade:
- ...the whole plot has misfired.
Lieutenant Seagoon has somehow been betrayed. The
destroyer transferred them to a U-boat that took them to
the pow camp at Rhinegold Castle, Fnutt.
- Milligan:
- The prison was full of British
Officers who had sworn to die rather than be
captured.
- Seagoon:
- It was winter when we arrived and
the snow lay heavy on the slopes of Brigitte Bardot.
- Von Arlone (Sellers):
- Nowzen, Englanders, my name is von
Arlone.
- Eccles:
- [sings (One Alone)] Von
Alooone ter be...
- FX:
- [Slapstick]
- Eccles:
- Owwww! You'll pay fer dat!
- FX:
- [Half a crown thrown down onto
the pavement]
- Eccles:
- Ta. Want another go?
- Seagoon:
- Shut up, Eccles. Now then, von
Arlone...
- Eccles:
- [sings, off] Von Arlooone...
- Seagoon:
- ...what do you intend to do with us?
- Von Arlone:
- You will be incarcerated.
- Seagoon:
- Ahemmmm. I hope I heard
right.
- Von Arlone:
- But, er, perhaps if you were to tell
us what your mission is, we could...
- Seagoon:
- Never, I won't tell you!
- Von Arlone:
- Do you know what happens to British
spies?
- Seagoon:
- No.
- Von Arlone:
- So, you won't even tell us that?
Throw them in Stalag Ten, Eleven, and Twelve!
Gerschmittenhemenzwitz!
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic chords]
- Grams:
- [Iron door slams. Heavy key in
lock. Pair of Gaolers footsteps walk away]
- Eccles:
- [sings "My Lovely Day"]
- Bluebottle:
- What you winging for?
- Eccles:
- What?
- Bluebottle:
- Got nothing to sing about...
- Eccles:
- I wasn't singing about anything...
- Bluebottle:
- I don't like this game. I don't like
all these hairy Germans. They hitted me. Hit, hit,
hittee, they went.
- Seagoon:
- Don't worry men. I have a plin of a
plon of a plan. When the German guard comes in with our
dinner, let him have it!
- Bluebottle:
- Den what are we going to eat?
- Seagoon:
- I mean, let him have this iron bar
on his nut. Then we'll change uniforms and pretend to be
Huns. Trouble is, I can't speak the language. Eccles,
how's your German?
- Eccles:
- He's fine, how's yours?
- Willium:
- [approaching, singing]
Deutschland uber the Allies, mate, Deutschland uber
Allies... [under:]
- Seagoon:
- Listen, a German speaking fluent
Cockney.
- FX:
- [Iron gate opening]
- Willium:
- Here's yer breakfast, mates.
- FX:
- [Great heavy rock thuds on the
floor]
- Willium:
- Boiled egg, I'll be bound, ha ha...
- FX:
- [Iron bar across his nut]
- Willium:
- Oh, I been sponned from the film of
the same name. Ohhhh.
- FX:
- [Feeble typewriter]
- Willium:
- [very feeble] Chapter One:
"How I was Sponned in Action". I says to
Allenbrooke, "You... you ol' twit," I says.
- Seagoon:
- Wait, wait! This isn't a German,
this is Sewerman Sam! What are you doing dressed as a
German General?
- Willium:
- I told yer, I don't like people to
know I does the sewers.
- Seagoon:
- You come with us. You may come in
useful -- you can say odd lines.
- Willium:
- Oddd Linessss! Odd Liness! Yer, I
can, yer!
- Orchestra:
- [Dramatic chords]
- Greenslade:
- Ned and his party made their way to
the great German Chemical Works at Schatz. By using the
short-wave cardboard secret horse-hair and mattress
telephone, they were able to contact London by speech.
- FX:
- [Typewriter on distort]
- Bloodnok:
- [distorted] Hello, hello...
Lieutenant Seagoon, about artillery...
- Seagoon:
- What about it?
- Bloodnok:
- One "l" or two?
- Seagoon:
- Two "l".
- Bloodnok:
- To 'ell with you as well.
- Seagoon:
- We've escaped from the German nick.
- Bloodnok:
- German Nick? That swine! He and
Belgian Tom! Oh, how well I remember. Ohoooh! Now listen,
we've discovered the name of the chemical that explodes
our shirt-tails. It's called Gerschattzer.
- Seagoon:
- Gerschattzer? How do you spell it?
- Bloodnok:
- I-T
- Seagoon:
- [over writing FX] I-T,
prounouced Gerschattzer... Thanks. Now, will you do us a
favour?
- Bloodnok:
- What's her name?
- Seagoon:
- Women -- women,women, women. Is that
all you think of?
- Bloodnok:
- [meditatively] By Jove, I do
believe it is. Oh, you naughty old Dennis.
- Seagoon:
- Listen, I remember in the First
World War that an English Officer hid in a cupboard from
the Germans. So could you have three cupboards dropped to
us?
- Bloodnok:
- At once.
- Grams:
- [Crash]
- Seagoon:
- Thank you. Now men, the moment you
see any Germans approaching, swallow your uniforms, get
inside the cupboards, and do an impression of a suit, the
shabbier the better.
- Bluebottle:
- Can I be a pin-stripe, Captain?
- Seagoon:
- No, I want the pin-stripe, I'm
senior.
- Eccles:
- I'll be a morning suit so I can have
the afternoon off. Can I get out of this grave?
- Bloodnok:
- I'll be a dinner jacket, I'm hungry.
- Seagoon:
- Bloodnok! Come out of that cupboard!
- Bloodnok:
- Has her husband gone, has he?
- Seagoon:
- This is not the time to think of
women.
- Bloodnok:
- Well, let me know when it is and
I'll be off again. Ooooooh!
- Grams:
- [Chickens clucking]
- Seagoon:
- Look, a patrol of Germans disguised
as chickens.
- Bloodnok:
- Nonsense, they're despised as
pigeons.
- Seagoon:
- So that's why we've all been spotted!
- Omnes:
- [much shushing under:]
- Bloodnok:
- Shh! Look, they're digging in behind
that tree. I... I hope they're digging in behind
that tree.
- Seagoon:
- Shhhh...Keep quiet. They know we're
here. I wonder why they're holding their fire.
- Eccles:
- Perhaps they haven't got a fireplace.
- FX:
- [Slapstick]
- Eccles:
- Owwww!
- German (Milligan):
- Listen, Englanders, we know you are
dere!
- Seagoon:
- Gad, it's Spike Milligan with a bad
German accent -- and a bad joke!
- German:
- Listen, [Milligan gigles] I
need the money! Listen, we make bargain, we let you all
go free if you hand over Major Bloodnok.
- Bloodnok:
- Never! You hear? We'd rather die
than hand him over.
- Seagoon:
- You speak for yourself.
- Bloodnok:
- I am. I'll make a bargain with you...
- German:
- Speak up, speak up!
- Bloodnok:
- I'll make a bargain with you! Take
all these lads and I'll let Major Bloodnok go free. What
do you say?
- German:
- Dis is our answer.
- FX:
- [Great outburst of firing]
- Bloodnok:
- Speak English, you swine!
- German:
- Bang!
- Grams:
- [American bugle call and approach
of cavalry. Shooting]
- Seagoon:
- Look! Saved by the American Fifth
Cavalry! It saved us! [dry] Let's face it, it
saved the television folks.
- Orchestra:
- [Ta Raa ]
- Greenslade:
- That was ending Number One. And now
here is happy ending Number Two.
- Orchestra:
- [Alto and Rhythm play "Laura"]
- FX:
- [Door opens]
- Seagoon:
- Cynthia? Cynthia darling, it's me,
Tom.
- Cynthia (Sellers):
- Tom darling! You're back!
- Seagoon:
- Yes, I brought it with me. Cynthia,
I've been a fool about you.
- Cynthia:
- Don't say that, darling.
- Seagoon:
- This parcel, it's... it's for you.
- Cynthia:
- Is it? What is it, darling?
- FX:
- [Unwrapping]
- Seagoon:
- Darling, this thing is bigger than
both of us.
- Cynthia:
- Oh, Tom, it's... it's an elephant!
- Seagoon:
- Yes. I'm not waiting any longer,
we're getting married tonight.
- Greenslade:
- And so, that night, Neddie Seagoon
married an elephant. Good night.
- Orchestra:
- [Old Comrades March]