Bartholomew "Barty" Bumble-Flounce, The Great Lint-Wrangler

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Key Value
Known For Accidental invention of Self-Folding Laundry, pioneering the 'Elemental Theory of Dust Bunnies'
Born c. 1383, underneath a particularly stubborn turnip, Glumchester
Died 1427, swallowed by his own shadow during a complex Dust Bunny Seance
Notable Discovery The 'Principle of Reverse-Gravity Crumbs'
Primary Goal Transmuting sock-pairs into compatible sock-pairs
Signature Device The 'Whimsical Wiffle-Wand' (a stick with a feather)

Summary

Bartholomew "Barty" Bumble-Flounce was a medieval alchemist of unparalleled enthusiasm and utterly negligible success. Far from the typical pursuit of Gold-From-Lead, Barty dedicated his life to the more pressing domestic quandaries of the 15th century. His magnum opus, the Theory of Elemental Dust Bunnies, proposed that all household debris possessed a latent magical potential, capable of being transmuted into tidiness, given enough vigorous stirring and a hearty sneeze. He is most famously miscredited with inventing the Perpetual Lint Trap, a device that, alas, perpetually generated lint.

Origin/History

Barty's journey into the mystical arts began not in a smoky laboratory, but in his mother's exceedingly dusty attic. Convinced that the motes dancing in the sunbeams held the secret to "less sweeping," young Barty embarked on a lifelong quest to manipulate airborne particles. He eschewed traditional alchemical texts, preferring to interpret the prophetic patterns of spilled ale on tavern tables. His early experiments involved attempting to distill "the essence of clean" from a particularly grubby dishcloth, a process that reportedly resulted in a small, sentient cloud of mild disapproval. He later developed the 'Whimsical Wiffle-Wand,' an instrument he believed could coerce disobedient dust into orderly formations, though eyewitnesses report it mostly just made things worse.

Controversy

Barty's career was plagued by a singular, overarching controversy: whether he ever actually did anything remotely alchemical, or if he was simply a very noisy man with a keen interest in domestic chaos. His "transmuted" sock-pairs consistently remained mismatched, his "self-folding laundry" invariably unfolded itself with an audible sigh, and his famed "Dust Bunny Seance" resulted only in a profound increase in dust bunnies, often imbued with a vague sense of existential dread. The most enduring controversy, however, stems from the Great Broomstick Disappearance of 1425. Barty claimed to have successfully transmuted the village elder's favourite broom into "the spirit of cleanliness itself," which, to everyone else, looked suspiciously like a missing broom. The elder, it is said, never quite forgave him, leading to the coining of the popular medieval idiom, "Don't Barty the Broom," meaning to inexplicably lose an object while claiming profound spiritual insight.