The Ferret should have got some kind of
award for forty-two years of attempting to dash the glass from my
lips. Negotiations for a cease supping have been going on at
Skidmore Parva for the thick end of half a century. They reached
their apogee on that fateful birthday, which was followed by five
years in desert conditions. Oddly enough the treaty broke down during
a coach trip down the Loire. I was alarmed to discover that also on
the coach was an ex-girl friend. When a trip was mooted to a vineyard
I bravely opted for the alternative which was a visit to a church.
“I think I'll go with you,” said
the ex. The ferret is very relaxed in these matters. When I am moved
to sparkle at a pretty girl she laughs derisively but I know my
limits. I hastily beat a retreat to the vineyard where I could not
resist a proffered Sancerre, the flinty taste of which was
appreciated by my favourite writer Hemingway. I sipped daintily at no
more than a couple of bottles as a Homage to Hem. Flown with wine
and impertinence, I was bold enough to add a clause to the contract
permitting me to drink when abroad.
As luck would have it Rod Henshal, my
partner in a programme I did for Australian radio, proposed a visit
and the question of entertaining him came up. Fortunately I
remembered a builder I knew called Shone who divided his time between
a villa in Portugal and a rather nice manor house in Chester. When
his marriage broke up he kept hold of the Cheshire house by declaring
it Portuguese territory.
My ancestors were Norman so I declared
our house, Aberbraint, part of France. It must have appealed to my
wife's highly developed sense of the absurd because she agreed.
We left our riverside manor house,
built by One Leg Paget, Wellington's cavalry commander at
Waterloo,when my wife inherited a Fenland stately bungalow over which
I have no property rights. It was some years before I got her to
agree to champagne with our fish and chips on Friday and libations
for the rest of the weekend. Because she is posh I naturally took
that to mean Friday to Monday but was voted down. Friday was OK
because she likes champagne with her fish and chips but Monday is
dry.
She won in the end because I have lost
the taste for alcohol.
It was a Nexus7 tablet.
I should have swallowed it. The guide to this fiendish machine was printed online, an innovation praised by one purchaser who crowed his joy that Nexus had dispensed with printed guides: “Grandfatherly concepts have no place in the 21st century.” But by the time this great-grandfather has read the instruction online and gone back to the item awaiting change he has forgotten what the instructions were. So I sought aid from some nice people to whom I have become close. They are the Indian gentlemen from Amazon.
This was their reply:
“If a Kindle application is not installed on your Nexus 7, please install it.
“Kindle for Android can be installed
on Android devices running OS 2.2 or greater.
To see what version your Android device
has, tap the Menu button from the home screen, choose 'Settings',
then tap on 'About tablet'. The version number can be found under
Firmware version.
To install Kindle for Android through
the Android Market, tap the 'Market' icon and search for Kindle. Tap
on Kindle for Android to open the application’s detail page and
follow the instructions to install. Android devices that do not have
the Google Play Store pre-installed may not be supported.
“If you are running Android OS 2.1,
you will still have the option to download Kindle for Android version
3.2 from the Google Play Store.
Please note, Android devices that do
not have the Google Play Store pre-installed may not be compatible
with the Kindle for Android app. If you encounter an issue installing
Kindle for Android, please confirm your device has the Google Play
Store app pre-installed before troubleshooting further.”
Tomorrow I will set the dog on the postman.
****************************************************
It has been a funny sort of week.
We had an email this
morning purporting to be from an old chum saying he was broke and
desperate for a loan after being mugged on holiday. It was
unlikely. He has just sold the business which he created from
scratch for £115 million. I sent him this:
“To get such
a letter from a distinguished member of the Rich List over so
many years is both flattering and humbling. I can offer 50 pence
or a luncheon voucher plus a small collection of centimes
involuntarily collected on a day trip to Calais. Any use?
Ian
P.S. Celia can
offer half a loaf of stale bred for your race horses if you can
tell us where in Newmarket they are stabled.”
He replied:
“It is
always possible to fall on hard times! Centimes, Euros, Yen, $,
they all come in handy! Your offers are therefore hugely welcome
and should be sent to the nearest branch of the Bank of Nigeria -
don't delay, it may be closed before you get there.
“Likewise
Celia's offer of bread for the horses (not cake!) will go down a
treat once it gets to the horses in......... where they are now
on starvation diets ( a likely story).
“The lesson
to be learned from being scammed is don't tell anyone your
greatest secrets (notably email passwords), but if you do, the
compensation is that hundreds of people enquire after your well
being which can be very pleasant. It is good to know that people
care. It is something that runs countercurrent to what so many
would have us believe.”
|
My fiery friend Alastair McQueen, proud
father of an Argyll wounded in Afghanistan, favoured me with the
following despatch:
“If
His Lordship, at the risk of appearing curmudgeonly, would refer to
an email I sent last night with pictures from the Olympics of
Servicemen he will see that a special new Tactical Recognition Flash
is being sported by our Gallant soldiery. It is an Olympic TRF,
believe it or not. Who the hell is paying for this? The
soon-to-be-disbanded Argylls can be seen wearing it on the left
shoulder rather than on the right where they proudly sport the TRF of
their predecessors in the 91st & 93rd of Foot - The Thin Red
Line.
You
may wish to sound off about this next week.”
Your
wish is my command.
The
first games of the modern Olympics took place in Athens in 1896.
Forty-six years earlier, in 1850, a local surgeon William
Penny-Brookes who introduced physical education into British schools,
had inspired the fore-runner for the "promotion
of moral, physical and intellectual improvement"
and although the Games' venue is now decided by international
committee rather than by the Wenlock Olympian Society, it still holds
its own Olympics every July - "The
old woman's"
race for a pound of tea may yet be re-introduced!
Baron
de Coubertin was inspired to create the global event after a visit to
the games in Much Wenlock., Shropshire. The
influential and wealthy Frenchman was suitably inspired and shared
Brookes' dream of a modern, international games.
Since
the ersatz IOC fines shop keepers who copy its logo should not the
Wenlock Olympiad demand a hefty fine from the plagiarist IOC for
copying the entire games?
The
opening concert? I enjoyed the tableaux but hope they will do a
reprise in English. McCartney called “Hey, Jude” but answer came
there none. He is far too old to be out so late. I couldn't abide the
singer of Abide With Me. The BBC saved money by having one girl
commentating but there was interference from two men that added
nothing.
Was
the ceremony worth £25 million? No. The money would be better spent
re-opening the libraries, lavatories and all the other amenities that
have recently been cut to save money.
P.S.
We are a two-hour drive from the nearest Olympic venue. Our gardener
Paul broke down on a motorway near here at 2 pm on Friday. He
summoned assistance. It arrived at 11 pm. “ It's the Olympics,”
the mechanic explained.
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