I did my
masters in English Literature long ago from Government College, Ludhiana. My
friend Ajit Prasad Jain and I shared the same bench in the class – in the last
row. One of our lecturers who taught us kept us engaged in a rather unusual manner.
He had a habit of repeating two words – ‘well’ and ‘you know’, almost in every
sentence.
We did not
have a counter at that time. Nor did we have a stop watch. But we gave
ourselves a task of keeping track of how many times the lecturer would repeat
the word ‘well’ and ‘you know’ during the period of 45 minutes. The wager was
simple. If the professor repeated ‘well’ more than ‘you know’ Ajit would pay
for our tea and samosa in the tuck-shop (college canteen) and in case ‘well’
left ‘you know’ behind, I would have to foot the bill.
It appeared
to be a never ending game; and it kept our interest high in the prose lecture
of our dear Professor. None of us or any other student in the class had the
guts to point out and say to him, “Sir, 15-20 per cent of what you speak in class
comprises just of two words – well and you know".
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