What you always wanted to know about Elegance, but were afraid to ask!
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NJS
Tue Sep 13, 2011 2:32 pm
Rowly wrote:I generally dine at clubs with friends when in town - Reform, East India, Savile or O&C.
Is dining at clubs an experience limited to members...or is it possible to enjoy a clubby experience on an ad hoc basis? Thanks...
You need to be a member or a member's guest or have some brass neck.
F E Smith often used to walk past the Liberal Club and sometimes stopped off for a pee. Once he was challenged and told that it was the Liberal Club and open only to members, to which he replied that he had always thought that it was a public lavatory.
NJS
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Rowly
- Posts: 541
- Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 2:42 pm
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Tue Sep 13, 2011 3:32 pm
F E Smith often used to walk past the Liberal Club and sometimes stopped off for a pee. Once he was challenged and told that it was the Liberal Club and open only to members, to which he replied that he had always thought that it was a public lavatory.
NJS
That is the best laugh I've had today
Excellent
I really enjoyed this one too
But although worn now in both town and country, tweed remains resolutely informal. Lord Harris once tried to break with tradition by wearing a tweed suit into the Royal Enclosure at Ascot, in place of morning dress. 'Mornig, Harris', he was greeted by King Edward VII. 'Goin' rattin'?'
The pith of sense and pride of worth
Are higher rank than all that.
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