Read Bleak Expectations Online
Authors: Mark Evans
Appendix Two
And Then Humming And Hawing Thinking I Could Just Ask The Publishers To Take That Footnote Out But Then Deciding That No It Had To Be Done Because I Think It’s A Joke That At Least Shows Commitment And Then Trying To Write It All In One Go Anyway Nearly At The End Of This Ludicrously Long Name Which Isn’t Really A Name At All Now Is It Instead Having Become A Strange Discursive Ramble Through My Subconscious All For The Sake Of A Stupid Joke But Then Sometimes You Just Have To Commit To The Joke And Really See It Through Don’t You And I Jolly Well Am Going To Do That With This Just Keep Typing Until I Get There And Actually Looking At The Word Count I Have Very Nearly Done It So Here Goes Into The Last Few Words Nigelton Crumbarton Mintybitson Spilling Wangerator Tubripley Gonwester Highty Jinstamatic Nurker Habiston Beastworthy Fennelham Jones.
1806 | Philip Put-That-In-The Bin born to Thomas and Agnes Bin of Bin Manor, Little Itchingham, in the county of Kentlesex. |
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1806–27 | The events of this book take place. They shall not be spoiled here. Or, if you’ve already read it, they shall not be recapped here. |
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1828 | Mysteriously, no trace of Philip Bin’s activities exists for this year. Though in other events it is a leap year, the Duke of Wellington becomes Prime Minister, Andrew Jackson is elected President of the United States of America, Henrik Ibsen is born, London Zoo opens, Jöns Jakob Berzelius discovers the element thorium, Ányos Jedlik creates the world’s first electric motor, Mary Anning finds the first pterosaur fossil in Lyme Regis, the MCC changes the Laws of Cricket to allow round-arm bowling, Dresden University of Technology is founded and the Treaty of Turkmenchay is signed. |
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1829 | Wins All England Foreigner Baiting Competition for the first time, defeating ‘Rude’ Jem Sawbridge in the final. |
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1830–31 | Adventuring abroad and at home; conquers the West Pole and discovers the fabled North-West passage from London to Manchester. |
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1832 | Becomes Member of Parliament for the constituency of Poverty-St-Mary and Dreadfulness North. Refusing to join either Whig or Tory party, sets up his own combination of the two, the Twig party. |
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1833 | Marries second wife Miss Ripely Fecund, seventeenth daughter of Reverend Godly Fecund, nine times voted the Church of England’s most muscular Christian. |
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1834–47 | Has innumerable children, like the Victorians often did. |
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1834 | Knighted by Queen Victoria after rescuing her from kidnap by Mr Gently Benevolent – Bin’s former guardian. |
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1835 | First novel |
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1835½ | Bin sued by a Mr Gently Benevolent over portrayal in |
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1836 | Bin loses libel case against Mr Gently Benevolent. Forced to pay damages of £150,000, financially destroying him. |
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1837 | A sequel to |
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1838 | Sued for a second time by Mr Gently Benevolent over portrayal in |
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1839 | Publishes |
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1840 | Sued yet again by Mr Gently Benevolent, loses, huge damages, new book, sued again, loses again etc, etc, etc – this cycle continues for the next five years. |
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1845 | Bin spends all year sulking and writing rude letters to lawyers. |
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1846 | Mr Gently Benevolent attempts to take over world with help of evil undead army, Bin leads army to defeat him; on the basis that his attempt to conquer the world was a truer representation of his character, Mr Gently Benevolent’s libel victories are reversed and Sir Philip is awarded the money back with interest. |
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1847 | Now the richest man in history, Sir Philip retires from public life. |
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1848 | Bored, he reappears in public life. Publishes first true fiction book, |
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1849 | Publishes |
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1850 | Founds monthly magazine |
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1851 | Adds hourly magazine |
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1852 | Publishes out of character ‘entertainments’ |
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1853 | After Charles Dickens’s |
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1854 | Furious with Dickens for outselling him, Sir Philip retires from public life for the second time. |
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1855 | Returns to public life with series of readings from new novels |
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1856 | After drunken political evening in Downing Street, Sir Philip accidentally becomes Prime Minister for three hours, during which he declares war on France, makes cats illegal, replaces income tax with a reverse-lottery where the winners have to hand over all their money to the government, introduces the vote for farmyard animals but still not women, bans trousers in pubs and renames March Sirphilipruary. Reluctantly resigns with highest ratings of any Prime Minister ever. |
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1857 | Publishes three new books, all of which are entirely blank. Claims it is a joke on the literary mores of the time; later admits he’d just forgotten to write them. |
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1858 | Sir Philip took the year off, and did nothing. Absolutely nothing. Seriously. He just sat in a chair for a year, staring, broken only by a twelve hour sleep every night. |
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1859 | Reinvigorated by his year of rest, starts quest to destroy Charles Dickens for taking his place as Britain’s most loved novelist. In July is arrested for breaking into Dickens’ London home and balancing buckets of water on top of doors and giving him an apple pie bed. |
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1860 | Dickens moves out of London to Gad’s Hill Place near Rochester. Sir Philip gleefully claims responsibility. |
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1861 | On publicity trip to America accidentally starts US Civil War when visiting Fort Sumter and jokingly asking, ‘is this cannon loaded?’ It was. |
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1862 | Publishes final volume of autobiographical fiction, |
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1863 | Tours Antarctica giving series of readings to icebound explorers, penguins and massively lost polar bears. |
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1864 | Publishes seasonal tale |
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1865 | Bin causes railway accident at Staplehurst, believed to be attempt to nobble Dickens. |
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1866–70 | The ‘disguise years’. Spends bulk of fortune on makeup, costumes, false beards and hats to appear as different person at every public reading Dickens does and heckle viciously. |
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1871 | Is drunk for the whole year in guilty celebration of death of Dickens the year before. Publishes cheap cash-in book |
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1872–80 | Disappears from public life once more, with only occasional appearances to be rude about other writers. |
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1881 | Briefly reappears drunk and naked to claim he has invented a new type of cheese called Choddar. It turns out to be just Cheddar painted orange. |
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1882–91 | The lost years – including divorce, remarriage, redivorce, re-remarriage, re-training as a marriage guidance counsellor, addictions, depression, pessimism, weight gain and bitterness. So a normal writer’s life, then. |
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1892 | Death of second wife Ripely. After being seen publicly to shed a tear at her funeral is condemned for weakness by every male in the British Empire. But receives two million offers of marriage from women desperate for a man who might express at least a tiny bit of emotion. |
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1893 | Marries two million women in world’s largest ever wedding ceremony. |
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1894 | Divorces all two million new wives after eleven months and three weeks on realizing that imminent purchase of so many wedding anniversary presents will financially ruin him. |
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1895 | With late burst of creative energy, re-emerges into public life. Sets up the Post-Raphaelite Brotherhood, dedicated to showing the beauty of crayons and finger-painting in art. Also composes fifteen symphonies, writes eight plays, tickles two trout, and produces thin volume of sonnets and massively fat volume of abusive poems about Arthur Conan Doyle, George Gissing and Rudyard Kipling. |
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1896 | After publication of |
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1897 | Sets up home in Worcestershire with one-time mortal enemy Mr Gently Benevolent who is now well over a hundred years old but thanks to dabbling in the dark arts looks no older than forty-five or so. |
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1897–1914 | Further lost years – there is no trace of Sir Philip in any records of the time. He and Mr Benevolent are rumoured to have travelled the pan-dimensional universe, though they may just have stayed in Worcestershire really, really quietly without anyone noticing. |
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1915 | At the age of one hundred and nine, Sir Philip wins the Victoria Cross for leading a British charge against the German lines at the second battle of Ypres. He later admits he thought he was charging the French lines. |
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1916 | Sir Philip dies in an incident involving a swimming pool full of brandy and forty-eight semi-naked dancing girls: a post-mortem reveals that at the age of a hundred and ten in such circumstances he simply smiled himself to death. |
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