Mark it seems Longhurst was very proud of that bon mot. He later wrote more than one essay on her. As the ladies championship started at the beginning of the week he persuaded the Evening Standard to run his report with the headline
'Sic transit Gloria Monday'. “I repeated it shamelessly for five years with only one variation. One year she defeated a young girl who was so nervous that she could scarcely focus on the ball. So when she was beaten next day the tag became “
Sic transit Gloria Tuesday”.
Dick you may have been reading a little too much into that.
Clearly he was smitten by her, not realising she was married (he wrote that came later), and made no effort to hide it. “A Slim, graceful girl, with delicate, sensitive features and figure divine. She had bumps, to quote Mr Damon Runyon’s rudely graphic description, where a doll is entitled to have bumps.” Written in 1940 “The Ladies’ Golf Union, aghast at her first appearance, issued a proclamation that they “deplored any departure from the traditional costume of the game,” but the last laugh was against them. Nearly half the field in women’s championships today turn out in trousers.
But none of them fit like Gloria Minoprio’s.”
He adds a self depreciating afterword in “The Best of HL”. “When I won a continental championship in 1936, I was gratified to receive a telegram of congratulations from her and replied accordingly. It was only 15 years later that I learnt it had been sent by General Critchley”.
Dick thank you for the encouragement, if I ever write it I will name the libidinous journalist character after you.