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・ Sir Arthur Gore, 2nd Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Harris, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Harris, 1st Baronet, of Stowford
・ Sir Arthur Heywood, 3rd Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Kaye, 3rd Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Lewis Community College
・ Sir Arthur Markham, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Monck, 7th Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Northcote, 2nd Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Onslow, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Otway, 3rd Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Pearson, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Pease, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Russell, 6th Baronet
・ Sir Arthur Steel-Maitland, 1st Baronet
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
・ Sir Arthur Wheeler, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Arthur William Mickle Ellis
・ Sir Arthur Young, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Artur McGregor Municipality
・ Sir Aubrey de Vere, 2nd Baronet
・ Sir Aubrey Dean Paul, 5th Baronet
・ Sir Austin Hudson, 1st Baronet
・ Sir Baboon McGoon
・ Sir Bagby
・ Sir Bagh
・ Sir Balan
・ Sir Baldwin Leighton, 7th Baronet
・ Sir Baldwyn Leighton, 8th Baronet
・ Sir Balin


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Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling : ウィキペディア英語版
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling is a fictional character played by British comedian Peter Cook throughout his career. Streeb-Greebling (or Greeb-Streebling, depending on Cook's mood) is a stereotype of the upper class English duffer, described as "narrow-minded" and occasionally a "heartless bastard".〔 John Cleese described him as one of Cook's range of "men, particularly English men, so trapped by their culture that they never knew how to live".〔
He was usually presented in the form of interviews with various comedians or journalists acting as the interviewer, including Chris Morris and Ludovic Kennedy.〔 The most common (and famous) interviewer was Cook's partner, Dudley Moore, in ''Beyond the Fringe'' and ''Not Only... But Also''.
==Biography==
Sir Arthur is the son of Lady Beryl Streeb-Greebling—a 'wonderful dancer' who was still dancing at 107 years of age, and who was capable of breaking a swan's wing with a blow of her nose—who inspired him to take up his life's work of teaching ravens to fly underwater. Sir Arthur claims "She came up to me in the conservatory—I was pruning some walnuts—and she said 'Arthur'—I wasn't Sir Arthur in those days—'if you don't get underwater and start teaching ravens to fly, I'll smash your stupid face off,' and I think it was this that sort of first started my interest in the whole business." However, his work is largely inconsequential. When Dudley's interviewer asks "Is it difficult to get ravens to fly underwater?" his honest response is "Well, I think the word difficult is an awfully good one here. Yes, it is. It's nigh impossible ... There they are sitting on my wrist. I say 'Fly! Fly you little devils!!' ... () they drown. Little black feathery figure topples off my wrist and spirals to a watery grave. We're knee deep in feathers off that part of the coast ... not a single success in the whole forty years of training." When a perplexed Dudley asks if this makes his life a miserable failure, Sir Arthur is forced to reply, "My life has been a miserable failure, yes."
Sir Arthur's 35 years as a restaurateur were nothing short of disastrous. His restaurant, ''The Frog and Peach'' was a catastrophic failure, owing to its location in the middle of a bog in the heart of the Yorkshire Moors, and its very limited menu—the "nauseating" ''Frog à la Pêche'' and the "positively revolting" ''Pêche à la Frog''.
It was Sir Arthur's father who inspired his life's other work: the study of worms. Sir Arthur's father claimed to have found the world's longest worm, at approximately three thousand miles. He came across the head in the Andes and spent five years tracing it back to the Azores. However, accusations were made that he had actually discovered the head of one worm in the Andes and the tail of another worm in the Azores. As a result, Streeb-Greebling spent a great deal of his life trying to encourage worms to speak to him, again to no avail.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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