If only the remainder of the strip's run had shown such scriptwriting potential as this debut outing:


more Medievel mishaps and mirth from the beautifully-rendered WILLIE THE WOEFUL WIZARD:


all todays examples are dated 11 FEB 1967, [issue 108].
Moderator: AndyB




This does seem a pity, given that the original started out so promisingly and then went on to maintain that standard. Invisible Dick debuted as a text story in the very first issue of The Rover (Mar. 4 1922). When his sister May catches measles, Richard 'Dicky' Brett's parents send him to stay with his uncle, the eminent scientist, Professor Peter Knowles. Uncle Peter knows nothing about children but he does know a lot about fossils. One day he gets very excited on receiving a dull metal casket covered in strange pictures of birds and animals. The casket, he tells Dicky, comes from the tomb of a very learned doctor and magician who had died two thousand years before the Christian era started. He discovers the special catch on the carving that opens the box to reveal a small, stoppered bronze bottle. When the professor is called away suddenly to give a lecture he has forgotten about, Dicky investigates the bottle. On removing the stopper he sees that it is full of round, hard pellets which shine with a mysterious radiance and seem to change colour through the spectrum. He sniffs the strange perfume and very soon becomes aware of the unusual properties of the pellets when he realises that he can no longer see his hand. Shortly after that, he looks at himself in his uncle's mirror and is startled to discover that no reflection is looking back at him. Although the effects do not last for much more than half an hour, Dicky's life has taken a serious turn for the better. He 'confiscates' the bottle and replaces it with a similar one from a shelf in his uncle's fossil room. A burglar that night is scared off by an invisible Dicky Brett, but Uncle Peter is convinced that the only thing the burglar has stolen is his mysterious, new bottle. Dicky gets away with this substitution, or theft, depending on which way you look at it. Naturally, he gets up to a huge amount of mischief but, with it being the Twenties and The Rover being a DC Thomson paper, he is obviously not even going to think about going anywhere near girls' changing rooms.alanultron5 wrote:After Ep1 of Invisible Dick, it was downhill RAPIDLY!! All the way




Yeah, should would be pronounced as shood. Similar situation with Sparky and Beano character Pansy Potter the Strongman's Daughter - daughter and potter don't rhyme in my accent. But in Scotland, daughter probably sounds like dotter!Raven wrote:NEXT WEEK - Sparky , do you think you should, be in such a daredevil mood?
Does this only rhyme if you say it in a Scottish accent?
Well I'm glad I got shood right. In England, it's shud, and rhymes with could (cud) and would (wud). In fact, wood and would are pronounced the same.ISPYSHHHGUY wrote:how do you pronounce 'should' in England? In Scotland it sounds: 'shood'.
I lived in LONDON for 5 years, but I can't for the life of me work out how to write 'should' as it sounds in an English accent.