• "The Senior Wrangler" is a member of the
faculty of
Unseen University in
Terry Pratchett's
Discworld series of
novels. • Roger Hamley, a character in
Elizabeth Gaskell's
Wives and Daughters, achieved the rank of Senior Wrangler. • Vivie Warren, the headstrong heroine of George Bernard Shaw's ''
Mrs. Warren's Profession'' (1893) and daughter of the play's infamous madam, tied with the Third Wrangler, settling for that place because she recognized that "it was not worth [her] while to face the grind" because she did not intend an academic career for herself. • "Wrangler" is a
jargon term applied to
codebreakers in some of
John Le Carré's
spy novels, such as
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. • Thomas Jericho, the main character of
Robert Harris's book
Enigma, was Senior Wrangler in 1938. • In
Ford Madox Ford's ''
Parade's End'', reference is made to the fact that Christopher Tietjens left Cambridge as "a mere Second Wrangler". • In
Rumer Godden's
In This House of Brede, Dame Agnes is noted to have been Eighth Wrangler before entering the abbey. • In
C S Forester's book,
The General, a member of the main character's staff (the deputy assistant quartermaster-general, Spiller) is described as a Second Wrangler. • In
Bram Stoker's "
The Judge's House", the main character Malcom Malcomson is looking for a quiet place to stay whilst preparing his
Mathematical Tripos examinations. Mrs Witham, the inn's landlady, warns Malcom about the judge's house, but the charwoman, Mrs Dempster, dispels these fears – explaining she is not afraid of 'bogies' because they are only rats. Malcom replies: "Mrs. Dempster, [...] you know more than a Senior Wrangler! And let me say, that, as a mark of esteem for your indubitable soundness of head and heart, I shall, when I go, give you possession of this house, and let you stay here by yourself for the last two months of my tenancy, for four weeks will serve my purpose." ==See also==