Over on MeWe, Mike Williamson posted this image:
It's a quote from the character Billy Sunday, played by Robert de Niro in the 2000 movie "Men of Honor".
It made me laugh, because when I did a South African officer's course in the mid-1970's, there was a textbook titled "An Officer And A Gentleman". It was heavily influenced by British colonial military customs, such as which knife and fork to use for what course in a meal, etiquette in the officers mess, and so on.
I never forgot the bit dealing with over-indulgence in alcohol. It said, very simply, in exactly these words:
An officer is never drunk. He is only pleasantly tired.
Yeah, riiiiiiight!!! I seem to recall an awful lot of "pleasantly tired" officers from time to time . . .
Peter
3 comments:
In the early 20th century, some regiments poster to the Hill Stations in the British Raj had printed "apology cards" for the officers' mess. It had blanks for the names of the offender and the offendee, and then a series of offenses with a little dash out beside them that the offender could tic off as needed to cover their behaviour when "pleasantly tired."
The version of this I ran into in the US Navy was, “A chief is never late; just unavoidably detained.” Said the chief who was late to the event he scheduled, in reply to one of the enlisted yelling out, “Yer late, chief!”
From the Officers' Training Manual at West Point, late 1800's: "Enlisted men are stupid, but cunning and bear constant watching..."
It is because of training such as this that most officers don't have keys to the clue locker...
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