Yellow Fang
Legendary Member
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I have been reading Great Expectations recently. In it young Pip is made to feel ashamed by Estella for calling jacks knaves in a game of cards. Knaves was apparently the posh name for jacks back then. Then there was that rhyme by Lewis Carroll that goes something like:
The Queen of Hearts,
She baked some tarts,
All on a Summer's day.
The Knave of Hearts,
He stole the tarts,
And took them clean away.
It's quite interesting we all call them Jacks then (or maybe it's not).
Then there'sSir Fred Goodwin. Radio 4 said that he is now not a knight, but one of an even more exclusive membership, a knave. Is this technically correct? I can't find anything on the interweb to say that a defrocked knight is called a knave.
The Queen of Hearts,
She baked some tarts,
All on a Summer's day.
The Knave of Hearts,
He stole the tarts,
And took them clean away.
It's quite interesting we all call them Jacks then (or maybe it's not).
Then there's