be a bit more nice and not be so serious and stern. Then, while he was waiting for the question, Howard suddenly winked at me, and, like a fool, I winked back. ‘#8216;For four pounds,’#8217; said Laddie. ‘#8216;This is in three parts and you’#8217;ve got to get them all right. Name the authors of the following three seventeenth-century books. Hesperides. Religio Medici. Tetrachordon.’#8217; I can’#8217;t show you how he pronounced these names, but he stuttered at them and stumbled over them and tried to make a bit of a joke of them with the audience. But Howard put him right on the way to pronounce them, and said: ‘#8216;Hesperides was the secular poems of Robert Herrick, 1591 to 1674. Religio Medici or A Doctor’#8217;s Religion was by Sir Thomas Browne, 1605 to 1682. Tetrachordon was a book on divorce written by John Milton.’#8217; He smiled in a thin-lipped way, then he said, ‘#8216;Sorry. 1608 to 1674.’#8217; Now, you could see the audience wasn’#8217;t too sure how to take all this, Howard