Thomas is mentioned in
Have His Carcase, a 1932 detective novel by
Dorothy L. Sayers. Thomas's custom of wearing a dress suit is cited as an apparent certainty that could fail unlike the
second law of thermodynamics, which appears to govern the case in a metaphorical way. In
Lord Peter Wimsey, the 1975
BBC One production of
Dorothy L. Sayers's 1931 novel
Five Red Herrings, Thomas is mentioned in a snatch of background dialogue. A Scottish railway porter bursts out in an angry tirade: "You call this a Socialist Government? Things are harder than ever for a working man, and as for Jimmy Thomas, he has sold himself, lock, stock and barrel, to the capitalists!" He is referred to in the comic song of 1932 by
Norman Long, "On the Day that Chelsea went and won the Cup". In a dream setting out the outlandish and impossible things that might happen on such an unusual day, the line is used "and
de Valera put a statue of Jim Thomas on his lawn, on the day that Chelsea went and won the cup". He is mentioned in
No Mean City by A. McArthur and H. Kingsley Long, "Now he insisted on reading extracts from a speech by J. H. Thomas, declaring, moreover, that the railwaymen had never had abler leader". In
Ngaio Marsh's
Tied Up in Tinsel (1972), a self-made man who clings to his cockney accent says defiantly, "They tell you George V took a shiner to Jimmy Thomas, don't they? Why? Because he
was Jimmy Thomas and no beg yer pardons. If 'e forgot 'imself and left an aitch in, 'e went back and dropped it. Fact!" == References ==