Saturday, 29 March 2008

IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUCCEED

I have conducted my life in obedience to two maxims passed on to me by my

Noble Friend

The first;

“ It only costs a little more to travel first class”

The second ;

“The best is barely good enough”

In Biblical times codes of conduct were, it is alleged, dramatically handed down

witten on stone to an eager Moses. Nowadays the internet performs the function. Two

stories I collected from the ether also contain valuable lessons on getting to

grips with life (preferably round the throat);

The first;


A philosophy professor filled a jar with rocks, His students agreed it was full..

He poured pebbles into the jar and they rolled into the open areas between the

rocks. The students again agreed it was full. The professor poured sand into the

jar and it filled every space. "Now," said the professor, "I want you to recognize

that this is your life."

"The rocks are the important things -- your family,your spouse, your health, your

children -- things that if everything else was lost and only they remained, your life would still be full."

"The pebbles are the other things that matter like your job, your house, your car.

The sand is everything else. The small stuff.

If you put the sand into the jar first, there is no room for the pebbles or the

rocks."

"The same goes for your life. If you spend all your time and energy on the small

stuff, you will never have room for the things that are important to you."

"Pay attention to the things that are critical to your happiness. Play with your

children. Take time to get medical checkups. Take your partner out dancing.There

will always be time to go to work, clean the house, give a dinner party and do the

garden. Take care of the rocks first -- the things that really matter. Set your

priorities. The rest is just sand."

A student took the jar and poured in a glass of beer which filled the remaining

spaces.

Which proves: that no matter how full your life is, there is always room for a beer.

The second;

A husband and wife were dining at a restaurant when this absolutely

stunning young woman gives the husband a big open mouthed kiss. The

wife says, "Who the hell was that?"

"Oh, "she's my mistress."

"Well, that's the last straw, I want a divorce!" "I can understand

that," replies her husband, "but remember, if we get a divorce it will

mean no more shopping trips to Paris, no more wintering in Barbados, no

more summers in Tuscany. no more yacht club. ."

A mutual friend enters the restaurant with a curvaceous blonde

"Who's that woman with Jim?" asks the wife.

“His mistress," says her husband.

"Ours is prettier," she replies



Being a Night News Editor was easy, just so long as you managed to stay awake. I kept sleep at bay by spending most of my shift in the pub.,
On this one night though in the eraslry days of the Sunday Mirror in Manchester,I ws intrigued by a series of paragraphs our free-lances
Were phoning in from all over Yorkshire.
Freelance economics dictated that they send over tempting paragraphs rather than complete stories, because the news desks would always ring back for more details and that meant they were paid for them whether the stories were used by the papers or not, whereas a submitted story was only paid for if it was used.
These paragraphs were all sightings of Charlie Chaplin in various towns in the county.
The Chief Sub Editor was a Scot called Bob Johnstone, a veteran of the China Post and a kind of genius, the only man I knew who drank whisky by osmosis. If he stood next to a bottle it emptied miraculously.
The paper had booked him into a hotel near the office but he went there so rarely, when he did go the proprietor’s dog, confused by this stranger, bit him.
From then on when his shirt was dirty he sent a messenger out to buy a new one and threw the old one into a waste paper basket.
Clutching the paragaphs he came over to the news desk. He said
“ Chaplin is obviously visiting the theatres he knew as an unknown comic. Logically the next one will be Doncaster. When we are finished here lets take a taxi over to Doncaster and do a feature for the Daily Mirror.
We called a cab and pausing only to buy Bob two bottles of whisky for the journey ( two because he might have dropped one) we set off for the Danum Hotel in Doncaster. The journey took two and a half hours and we arrived at around 2.30 am to find an American reporter already waiting. He told us that Chaplin was only going to give on interview the next morning and he had booked it.
Bob said to me “ Go and find a bed and leave this Yank to me”
The hotel was full but I tipped the night porter and he found me an empty bath where I slept fitfully.
Bob meantime plied the American reporter with so much whisky, he passed out. Whereupon Bob woke me and I took the American’s place at breakfast with Mr Chaplin who was charming.
Between the whisky and the fitful night it wasn’t the best interview I have ever done but I rembembere when I said “ But you haven’t any luggage with you” he pulled out a well filled wallet.”
“ In life,” he said “ that is the only luggage you need”
Which is another lesson I have carried with me over the years…

FROM MY DANGEROUS CUTTINGS BOOK

From Last week’s Times
“ Sir,
It was never possible to travel from Bradford to Blackpool entirely by tram (letters March 17) The journey would have involved three breaks between tram termini totaling more than 20 miles (Hebden Bridge-Summit, Blackburn-Preston and Preston-Lytham)
With just one eight mile break (Hebden-Bridge to Summit) it was however possible to travel from Wakefield to Liverpool
Yrs etc
John Cundill,
London SW15 “

Saturday, 22 March 2008

Touchline torment and frenzied bird feeders

I was glad I was not living in Wales in rugby winning week. Even in North Wales which is not greatly given to rugby. Most north Walians support Manchester City, whilst allegedly disliking the English.
Apart from the BBC and the Taffia, the faux middle class graduates, I never experienced this legendary hatred from anyone. I think it was because I was a drunk and drunkenness is a nationality.

Certainly there is no sense to the anti-English feeling. I am told that it dates from the invasion of Wales by Edward I. That is very odd because, although he led an army of 15,000 when he invaded North Wales, 11,000 of them were Welshmen. South Walians at that. And they really hate each other.

When I first went to Wales I thought that “Gog” and “Honddu” were swear words, the way they were spat out. In fact it’s the Welsh for North and South Wales. Another odd thing is that most of the dyed-in-the-wool Welshmen I met hated Welsh Nationalists. Welsh speakers and patriots to a man (or woman), they could not understand the Welsh language of the bills they got from the Utilities, nor the official Welsh of broadcasting, which had been forced on the country by academics.

Brynsiencyn, the Anglesey village in which I spent so many happy years, was a daily joy. It could not have been more Welsh. A friend, a retired preacher, spent his days translating Tacitus, the Roman historian, from Latin into Welsh and another chum, a retired diplomat called Cedric Maybe, translated the great Chinese poets, Li Po and Tu Fu, into Welsh and such splendid Welsh poets as Dafydd ap Gwyllim into Mandarin. Not to be read by anyone. Just for the joy of it.

My neighbour Glyn was half Welsh and half Indian and was known as Glyndustani. Another neighbour could never believe I worked for the BBC after I proved unable to repair his portable radio.

There was a youngster in the village who had a Blue in eating. I know of five houses where he went regularly for his Christmas dinner. One year when the prisons were full, his brother, a frequent offender, was locked up in the cells under Wrexham police station. I thought it would be nice if our guest wished his absent kin a Merry Christmas. So I rang the custody sergeant and asked him to bring Trefor to the phone.

He was furious. “Have you no sense,“ he said, “ringing up like this? He’s not had his pudding yet. Ring back in an hour.”

I took the Coronation Street writer John Stevenson to dinner on the mainland. On the way back I stopped to ring Glyn, our local bobby. I thought John was going to explode when I explained I was a bit p’’’’ed and was going to ask Glyn to collect me. He made me put the phone down, but when I told Glyn, he was furious. “It’s people like that who cause accidents,” he said.

******************************************************
Our postman has brought me a whole bundle of my favourite reading, the mail order catalogue. I especially enjoyed the offer of a birdy whirler feeder, although bird terrifier might be a more accurate description. I am going off birds. I water and feed them all year long; all they do in return is eat my seeds. So I cannot wait to install the feeder on which this happens:

”As the bird lands on one of the four feeding baskets the feeder rotates slowly to give a windmill effect.........”

You don’t have to be David Attenborough to know what that would do to the neighbourhood sparrow. You would be the talk of every tree for miles.

“God knows what he’s soaking his bird seed in these days. One beakful and the whole damned feeder starts to go round....I reckon it’s Indian hemp. I’ve a good mind to report him.......”

Stand on me. Chuckling into his drawing board somewhere is an animal-hating inventor. Would you believe, the same magazine is offering a lockable cat flap? Lockable? I could never train our Draculacat not to dispose of mice on my bed let alone get her to use a key. Anyway, she would be sure to forget it when she went out and she’d be hammering on the locked cat flap at all hours of the night.

Not even fish are safe from the demented drawing board:

“...An attractive and realistic Mallard duck and drake in rugged plastic to give life to your garden pool.........”

You can imagine it, can’t you?

“What the hell is that he’s put up there on the surface? Oh hell, it’s ducks. Quick! Get under that stone.”

Three months later....

“Haven’t they gone yet? I can’t stay here for ever, I’ve got pins and needles in my fin.”

Just the thing to send your goldfish screaming for their psychiatrist.

And you will be going with them if you are tempted by the key ring that reacts to your voice. According to the magazine, if you call out “Where are you, ring?” it whistles to you.

I can just see the Head Ferret reaching for the two doctors. ”I’m a bit worried about my hubby. He has taken to hiding his key ring under the cushions on the sofa. Then he goes round the room talking to it.”

Thinking back to the cat flap makes me wonder, would the key ring react to miaows, do you think?


From My Dangerous Cuttings Book:

A Vicar walked out of a course for Church of England clergy when he was asked to hold a conversation with a bread roll. Martin Dudley and his 17 colleagues attending a “Workshop on Worship” aimed at improving their services sat round a communion roll.

Mr Dudley said: “We were asked ‘Is there anything you would like to say to the bread? Or do you want to give it a voice? Do you want to hear the bread speak?’ Someone asked, ‘Does it hurt when you are broken?’
The bread protests. ‘I am not only the humdrum and the ordinary. I am special. What have you to do with me?’”

Mr Dudley said that one woman, a diocesan official, threw a £10 note at the bread, asked about the money that had been paid for it and asked about the symbolism of bread in a cash economy.

Other extraordinary activities at the course, organised by clergy in the Oxford diocese, included asking participants to draw around their feet, colour in the shoes and then write on them their feelings about the week.

Friday, 14 March 2008

PUBLISHED AND BE BANJAXED

I have not found it easy to hate Napoleon since I learned he shot a publisher. Chap named Palme and I must say I found the symbolism of an outstretched palm, peculiarly apt.

Stitching words onto paper has been a lifetime activity for me and with very rare exceptions I have not warmed to the publishing industry (which is the last word I should use to describe them). One publisher took ten years to publish a book he had commissioned; another has been six years and I am still waiting.

The worst moment was when I wrote for a publishing house run by two partners. One said of my manuscript, “I thought the first half was vivid and exciting but the last half completely lost me. Can you have another go at it?” His partner wrote in the same post, “I thought the conclusion of your book was dramatic and superb but I am afraid the first half needs extensively rewriting.”
I had my copy retyped without alteration and sent it to them and they both congratulated me on a much improved narrative.

When I started writing books nearly half a century ago the thing publishers did best was have lunch. At that they were expert. Usually their lunches lasted for four hours. One publisher would read his mail before lunch and answer it in the brief space between returning from lunch and going home. By that time he had forgotten what the original letter was about so his replies never made sense.

I have had two publishers sell my books to American publishers without telling me. Another took my books on a sales trip to the U.S. When he returned he rang me to say what hell it had all been: meetings, meetings, meetings. Unfortunately his wife was a well known newspaper columnist and I had just read her column in which she talked of the twenty-seven parties they had attended in a three-day visit to the States.

There used to be a tradition in the industry of paper accounting, a term which described the figures you got scrawled on the back of an envelope when you asked about royalties, and as works of fiction qualified for the Booker Prize. Much more sophisticated nowadays. Random House owes me royalties on books of mine which they put on tape and published in the States. They say they cannot pay me until I get an import certificate. I cannot get an import certificate without a valid passport and I do not have a passport in case my wife tries to lure me abroad.

Apart from nepotism, the best qualification for getting a book published is celebrity. I had no difficulty getting twenty-two of my books published but now that I am no longer a celebrity I have acquired a bushel or so of rejection slips for the last four, which include two of the best books I have ever written.

There has only been one exception.

Twenty-five years ago I wrote a comic biography “Forgive Us Our Press Passes”. It was a literary success. I read it on Radio 4 and BBC Wales; it was twice repeated on the World Service and had the highest listening figure of any book read on air that year. The Daily Post said flatteringly that I was the successor to Tom Sharpe and my friend and favourite actor Ian Carmichael described it as a comic masterpiece. You can buy a copy on the internet. A friend tells me that one is offered at £17.99, the next £74.86, another £75.07 and the last one £76.06.

Under the circumstances I would have thought the publishers, Gomer Press, could have managed to sell more than 200 copies.
Bored out of my skull a year ago, I asked my chum Revel Barker, for many years a Head Honcho in the Mirror Group and a fine reporter, how to launch a blog. In gratitude for his help I sent him a copy of “Forgive Us” and the mss of its sequel “Forgive Us More Press Passes” which had been rejected by several publishers.

Something of a polymath and, I fancy, a little bored with retirement in Malta, he suggested he might have a go at publishing the two books in an omnibus edition. That was in December. This Friday, barely three months later, the book was published and I am prouder of it than any I have ever done. New and splendid art work, designed by his wife Paula; very professional publicity material, with pictures, sent to every media outlet in Chester, Liverpool, Leeds, North Wales and East Anglia. A wonder to behold. I expect any day now Revel will mount a takeover for Random House.

I must say that Age Concern was right when it urged pensioners to put down their memories as a pleasant task in old age. My life has been a series of comic disasters with a star cast including Hugh Cudlipp, Charlie Chaplin, President Eisenhower, Harold Macmillan, the Queen and a number of my Lordly Friends. It includes my inglorious military memoirs, my downwards hurl, the Drowning of Flook as recounted by my chum the Great Vince Mulchrone.

Revel has even fixed the booksellers. You can buy it for £9.95 (and that includes the one that would otherwise cost you up to £70). He has even given me the Waterstones website and they are offering it post free.
http://www.waterstones.com/waterstonesweb/displayProductDetails.do?sku=6190890



My Noble Friend had some interesting relations, in one of whom I refused to believe. His Lordship said he had a cousin who was a Show Girl on the West End stage in the Twenties. During the run of one show she was conscious of the same man, in the same seat of the orchestra stalls, at every performance. Eventually at a party she met him.

“What a coincidence,” she said.

“No coincidence,” he told her. “I have been going to every party in London where I might conceivably meet you.”

“Why?” she asked.

“Because I am madly in love with you and I want to marry you.”

“Marry me? You don’t know me.”

“Doesn’t matter. But there is no hurry. Will you at least have lunch with me? I will send my car.”

On the appointed day a chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce drew up at her flat. Her swain handed her in but she noticed with alarm they were speeding out of London.

“Where are we going?” she cried in alarm.

“To my home, of course. Where else would I entertain my future bride?”

They drew up outside an imposing country house. The staff was lined up before the Portico and her host introduced her.
“This is the lady who will one day be your mistress,“ he said.

During an exquisite luncheon, served by the butler, her host proposed three times. “Oh all right,” she said finally, “I will marry you if you buy me an aeroplane.”

He didn’t propose again and the girl thought that was the end of it. But in her dressing room that evening there appeared a bouquet of roses and the keys to a light aircraft.

Years later I was a guest at the Lord’s second wedding in Buckingham Palace Gate. “There is someone I want you to meet,” he said.

It was the show girl. Alas, the world of high society and highballs had dealt hardly with her. She still looked like a Queen. But it was Tenniel’s Queen of Spades.

End

My Dangerous Cuttings

(Not mine but collected by Donald Sinden from the Whitley Bay Guardian about a British Rail clerk who failed in love and death).

“At 7.30 I had a drink and walked into the sea, but it was so wet I turned my back, went home and by 9.15 I had wired up an easy chair to the mains. However, each time I threw the switch the power fused. Following this I broke my mirror and tried to cut my wrists, yet somehow the slashes were not deep enough. After that I tried to hang myself from the banisters, unfortunately the knot was improperly tied. Finally I surrounded myself with cushions and set them on fire. This method was too hot. So I jumped out of the window and telephoned the Samaritans but they were constantly engaged……………………”

Sunday, 9 March 2008

START THE NEXT WAR WITHOUT ME AND WIN

The army was nothing if not determined. Despite my bravura display of incompetence in losing bespectacled soldiers they persisted in the childlike belief that I had in me the golden qualities of an officer. This was despite an incident in which a squad of men I was drilling too quietly did not hear my command to “halt” and marched right off the barrack square, narrowly missing a captain quartermaster who ever after snickered nervously when he saw me. On the outdoor shooting range I not only missed the bull; I came within inches of hitting a cow.

They were deaf to reason...

They had tried to post me to a camp in Elgin, Morayshire, which trained potential officers for the Highland Division. I arrived at 6pm and at 8pm after a hurried meal I was on my way to Aldershot and a new posting to a unit which trained officers for the Royal Army Service Corps. I have always assumed the Kilted Ones must have heard of my cavalier way with valuable soldiers and lost their collected nerve. I further assume the Service Corps was very short of officers.

The Service Corps foolishly sent me to a War Office Selection Board designed to spot putative generals. It was even held in Saighton Camp in Chester, the scene of my earlier incompetence. Like Caesar, they ignored the augurs.

In those class-conscious days potential officers had to be socially acceptable. So there was a reception in the officers' mess where The Board assessed our social skills. At meal times a careful watch was kept on the way we handled knives and forks. I was criticised by another cadet, the son of a general, for holding my knife like a pen, I must stress that Hackett was a very decent chap who wanted to make sure I did not lose marks over it. Had he known that I came from a background where the underpant was the garment of cissies, I doubt he would have spoken to me. I know he was troubled that I went for a bAth rather than a BaRth. I have never felt more alien than I did amongst those public school boys, though I am bound to say that to a man they treated me as a friend.

But if the social mores were alien, the tests the board devised were from another galaxy. We were marched into an examination room and confronted with trays on which were round pegs and boards with square, triangular and round holes and a puzzling collection of Bakelite, metal and wire, which was obviously electrical.

“Right,” said a brisk major. “Assemble me a domestic light fitting from the parts before you.”

I had this sudden picture of a battlefield and myself commanding the remains of a platoon which had been under constant fire for days. A staff officer appears and draws a rudimentary map in the sand. Grimly he points:

“To the left of us are units of the Seventh Panzer Division. In the hills to the right is a division of Italian mountain troops. Immediately ahead, a battery of heavy artillery and a squadron of tanks is blocking off our rear.”

Through tightened lips, his eyes mere slits, he says, “There is only one thing to do.”

“What is that, noble officer and commander?” we chorus.

“Assemble me a domestic light fitting.”

From that moment in that classroom I found it very difficult to take the army seriously. As the years went by it became increasingly my attitude to life.


The odd thing was that I always got on well with officers, especially the aristocratic ones. Indeed, as a member of the working class since the 17th century when my ancestors slipped down the social ladder I always found the aristocrat easier to get on with than the old middle class which has everything to lose and clings pathetically to its world of residential grammar schools. I think that is because in the working class we have nothing to lose and in the upper class they have nothing to gain. The Middle Class clings to a position it never seems quite sure it should be maintaining. The Kwa Hais, as they were known in India.

My oldest friend, the 9th Baron Langford, was my commanding officer on the Air Lift, days he recalls with a well bred shudder which he first used when I set up a comfortable home in a giant packing case that had brought an aero engine to the base at Fassberg.

The Colonel has two precepts, “It Only Costs a Little More to Travel First Class” and “The Best Is Barely Good Enough”, and it was he who observed at 90, after beating cancer and sundry other ills, “Growing Old Is Not for Cissies”.

He is certainly not a cissy. When Singapore fell he escaped the Japanese by sailing a battered
dhow across the Bay of Bengal to Ceylon. It took a month and involved sailing through the Japanese Invasion Fleet.

More recently he was taking me on a tour of his stables at his home near Rhyl when a stallion bit him. Almost by reflex, he bit it back. And when I once drove him exuberantly into the path of an oncoming lorry he could only manage to reprove me with, “Do think of the death duties.”
.
He was hacking through a village in the Cwm near his home. A motorist who had been delayed in overtaking him called, “Anyone would think you owned this village.”

“As a matter of fact, madam, I do,” he said, raising his hat.

Being superior came early to him. As a young man he was complaining about an item he bought in Fortnum and Masons, grocers to the gentry. An elegant giant in faultless morning dress bore down on him. “Is something amiss, sir?” it enquired.

“And who might you be?” asked the Colonel.

“I am in charge of this floor,” the giant replied.

“Then I should get it swept. It’s filthy,” he was told.


FROM MY DANGEROUS CUTTINGS BOOK

Cambridgeshire fire brigade is at a loss to know what to do about a freelance fireman who has been turning up to emergencies with his own fire engine.
Ian Bowler bought his fire tender, complete with flashing lights, after completing a community fireman’s course run by the local council.
“A group of us felt we had been sat on the shelf after training so we formed our own unit,” he says. Bowler and his eight fellow amateur fire fighters have now promised that they will not attend any fires until asked by the authorities, but this may not be enough to satisfy the local fire brigade, which describes the matter as “a very strange case which we are still investigating.”

Saturday, 1 March 2008

It is NOT the thought that counts

I was delighted when the Independent gave away booklets explaining in simple language the theories of the world’s philosophers. The only philosopher I had met was Bertrand Russell and he was barking mad. Now I can confirm what I have long suspected; philosophers talk rubbish. Plato and Locke have both suggested forms of government they believed would increase human happiness. Both have been tried in the last century with disastrous results.

Plato’s Republic was made manifest in Fascism with a seasoning of Nietzsche; its iron discipline was realised in Hitler and Pol Pot. The quest for racial purity inspired the Holocaust. Locke believed we should elect a monarch and hand to him absolute power. That gave us Stalin and Attila the Hun.

The only philosophy which has been used universally is Muddle. My chum Bengy Carey Evans is Lloyd George’s grandson. As a boy he met all the leading statesmen of Europe. He told me they were pretty second rate: surprisingly ordinary men and not all that bright. Any reading of our history over the past century confirms that.

Most of our troubles stem from the mess we made when the Ottoman Empire fell and Britain and France sought to grab Arabia. “Statesmen” led us into the totally unnecessary World War One which began the destruction of Western civilisation and into its continuation in Spain, Ethiopia and World War 2. That Second World War was made inevitable by the reparations demanded in Versailles at what has been called “The Peace that Passeth All Understanding”. When, incidentally, America stepped shyly onto the world stage with its “14 points”.


But that is all Olde Worlde. In the Brave New World of the 21st century America has taken the helm more confidently. Americans see themselves as new Romans and have copied their political structures and architecture from that greedy Empire, of which Dr Johnson said, “When they were poor they robbed each other and when rich looted the world.”

America has failed as a World Leader. She makes costly and embarrassing mistakes and, heavily in debt to her enemies, she is pursued by a new band of Apocalyptic Horsemen: Brazil, Russia., India and China.

They have resisted the temptation to patch up their economies by introducing credit cards - those poisonous blooms only flower in the profligate West. Worse than that, they are supplying the goods we are buying with our cards. Between them, those four countries hold 3.6 trillion dollars of foreign currency reserves, two thirds of the global total, and they account for half of the world’s GDP.
It is some years since Gore Vidal warned that America was in hock to China. The Chinese government bought huge quantities of dollar assets - about $200 billion worth in 2004, and possibly as much as $300 billion worth this year. This is economically perverse. China, a poor country where capital is still scarce by Western standards, is lending vast sums at low interest rates to the United States.
These dollar purchases by China and other foreign governments have temporarily insulated the U.S. economy from the effects of huge budget deficits. Money flowing in from abroad has kept U.S. interest rates low despite the enormous government borrowing required to cover the budget deficit.
And how is America spending its borrowed money?
According to the Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglist, the Iraq War has cost America three trillion dollars, which is 200 times more than Bush said it would cost. One sixth of that figure would fund social security in the U.S. for 75 years.
America is spending 12 million dollars a month on the war. It gives Africa 5 billion dollars a year in aid, which is the cost of 8 days’ fighting in Iraq. China is pouring resources into that dark continent.
For me, the worst statistic to surface from this economic cesspool is that for the cost of two weeks’ fighting in Iraq we could banish illiteracy from the planet.
Talking of expense, I have been upset by the news that G.P.s were paid over a hundred thousand pounds salary per year. Then my practice nurse explained that out of that they have to pay the cost of the surgery and its contents, the running costs of the practice, the wages of the staff and all other expenses. They are also subject to constant re-examination of their work.
A recent peer, the lowest kind apart from life renters,, recently criticised nurses. My nurse tells me that one of the practice district nurses recently burst into tears in the staff room because she could not keep up with her appointments. That day she had 42.


A reader doubts that I could have been asked to leave the Black Watch (RHR) twice. Indeed I was - and the second time I was a civilian.

Ancient readers will remember that in the early fifties National Service soldiers were required to return to their regiments for further training.
Unwisely the Black Watch (RHR) called me to the colours at Fochabers, in Morayshire, a tented camp for a territorial battalion.

Unfortunately I was not able to make it on the day they suggested and, when I did go, I thought I might as well break my journey in Edinburgh to see my Uncle Jimmy, who was my family favourite by a mile.

When I finally reached Fochabers, I was somewhat shocked to discover they had started training without me. An act of ill manners the C.O. compounded by putting me on a charge, which was a sad way to mark the return of a prodigal son.

Alas, that meant I missed the C.O.’s Parade with which he started the proceedings. On reflection, that might have been why he was so upset.
Actually he should have been grateful because he did not exactly cover himself with glory.

Officers in Highland regiments can easily make themselves look ridiculous but this one had a special talent. He carried a cromach (a shepherd’s crook) which senior officers often affected. This was puzzling because it is unlikely there would be unruly sheep on a battlefield.

To make matters worse, the cromach was the burlier of the two and the C.O. looked rather like a standard lamp, the shade of which had slipped to the middle. His kilt lacked only a fringe.

His choice of image was not of the happiest.

“Chaps,” he began, and 1400 hundred Glasgow keelies looked at him in disbelief. “Chaps” were what cowboys wore and they wondered if they were improperly dressed.

“Some of you,” he went on, “will resent being torn from civilian life. But do not feel that way. Look on this as a return to your Club.”

Again the keelies knew only of one kind of club. That was used for defensive purposes in the Gorbals and had been left at home in the belief the army supplied weapons. Was this omission a chargeable offence, wondered the more nervous?

But the C.O. went on. “Perhaps you will meet old friends. Soldiers you have not seen since St Valery.”

St Valery was a battle in World War Two but, to the eighteen-year-olds assembled, the name had a Papist whiff and Protestants in the ranks were deeply offended. It was Hearts ‘v’ Hibs, Celtic ‘v’ Rangers all over again, and blood wobbled dangerously on the edge of spilling.

Then the C.O.made his Grand Gesture, clearly the result of long rehearsal.

He stepped forward until he was level with the front rank. Peering down from his immense height, he smiled at the nearest squaddie, a small and excessively dirty soldier who had only been in the battalion for a day but had already cut his tam–o-shanter down so that it looked like a sailor’s hat and stuck in it an Indian Red Hackle of enormous size, also against dress regulations. His trousers were folded over his gaiters, weighed down with the heavy metal chains which could readily be turned into weapons. His fists were turned up at the wrists. All the marks of a hard man and the wrong man for the C.O. to greet with, “For instance, I seem to recognise your face.”

The little man looked up from his 5ft 3 ins, the maximum allowed for living in Glasgow. “Ah’ve nivir seen ye in ma bliddy life, Jock,” he said.

The week went from bad to worse and I fear I behaved as badly as anyone. Foolishly the C.O. sentenced all who misbehaved to extra days in the camp after the battalion had gone home.

We heard the pipe band playing the “Black Bear” and getting fainter and fainter. “Right wee men,” one of our number said, “that’s us for the toon.”

I thought the officer who had been left in charge was going to cry. So we crept away and left him to his misery.

A few days after I returned home I got a letter from the C.O. suggesting that I might be happier in another regiment. I wrote back saying I had decided against joining any regiment and that was the last I heard. So in the next war they are on their own.
*******************************************

My Dangerous Cuttings Book

First hand experience of the trials and tribulations experienced by a pea when it is frozen will soon be on offer to visitors in the Science Museum it was announced yesterday.
The chance to pass through a pea freezer, modified for use on humans, will be available in a new permanent gallery due to open at the museum this autumn.
“We are going to let visitors feel what it is like inside a blast freezer and imagine what it is like to be a pea,” Miss Jane Bywaters, project manager, said.

Ends

Saturday, 23 February 2008

OF CABBAGES AND KINGS AND HOW TO TELL THEM APART

Robert Burns regretted that God did not give him the power to see himself as others saw him. In fact God has given us a much more dangerous gift. The power to make other people see us in the way we want. Leadership, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.
Louis X1V was in no doubt about his position. The Sun King was a job description. After a series of military defeats he stormed. “Sometimes I think God forgets what I have done for him.”

To keep his quarrelsome courtiers in order he insisted they all live in Versailles where he devised a system of etiquette of precedence so byzantine – it even dictated the number of steps to a door which a host should take depending on the seniority of his guest - that the courtiers were so involved in keeping their place in the pecking order they had no time for mutinies.

The basis of all power is a cheap confidence trick. If you bet on horses or cards and lose, hard luck. If you bet on banks who lend money to people who cannot pay it back, the government swallows your losses because our perception of a shareholder differs from that of earthier gamblers. They are our superiors.

A bespectacled old lady in a glass hat, unsuitably wearing an evening gown in the middle of the day, plays a charade of instructing parliament in its duties for the next session. Her speech has been written for her by her First Minister, who is in fact her employer. She dare not alter it by so much as a comma. Yet we see the Queen, magnificently robed and bejewelled, giving Her orders to Her parliament; demonstrating that leadership is a concession awarded by the led. Misreading, surely, Locke’s dictum that the masses should give absolute power to an individual and then obey him.

Other members of the Royal Family, male and female, are garlanded with gold crosses, festooned with crescents, the traditional emblems of the brave and the noble, which, unearned, have been handed to them like after dinner mints.

I could be just as brave as Royalty in the eyes of the world were I allowed to wear, as they do, decorations won by my father, uncles and father-in-law.

The Wizard of Oz got it right when he made the lion brave by giving him a medal, the straw man wise by awarding him a diploma and the tin man romantic by giving him a heart. The wizard knew that qualities were unnecessary. It was the label that counted.

Quentin Crisp wisely pointed out that our feral young express their individuality by all dressing exactly the same. They adopt the shared uniform by which we recognise difference; shaved heads which speak of fighting strength, hoods so that children suffering from terminal acne can terrify old people who fought at Arnhem.

In fact any street fighter will tell you that it is surprise that wins fights: victory invariably goes to the man who hits first.

I am by nature a timid man of quiet pursuits. Yet when I wore the kilt I was perennially on the look out for a fight. In the red sash of a Provost Sgt, I terrified drunks who could have eaten me were it not for the power they wrongly perceived I held.

As – briefly - an officer cadet, I saw how one man in the squad was always the first to volunteer, the first to leap into a river or climb a height, in order to be thought “officer potential”, when wiser heads thought he was an idiot.

These uncharitable thoughts come from reading Wendy Berry’s book, banned in this country, about the private life at Highgrove of the petulant ‘Prince of Wails’ and the beautiful basket case he married. Lorries regularly brought gifts from manufacturers of everything from kitchens to hats which were regularly burned because of fears that the goods would be stolen and marketed on E Bay as royal property. Apparently it occurred to no-one to tell the manufacturers not to send them. That and other books by royal servants leave one with a poor opinion of every member of that unhappy dynasty, with the exception Prince Edward and the Queen, both of whom are praised for their consideration and good manners.

I cynically remember a friend, no stranger to command, who always made sure his adjutants were martinets. It enabled him to be easy going and thus popular.

I have known two VCs. One was awarded for bravery in repulsing an oncoming Chinese horde by throwing beer bottles at them. A useless gesture which one assumes only made them angrier. He had been thrown out of our regiment and a lowland regiment. After the award, the lowland regiment called him back and promoted him to RSM.
******************************************


One of the many mistakes the Army made about me was to assume I had leadership potential. They were not alone. A similar misjudgement by a headmaster made me a disastrous form captain and I can only assume that when the Editor of the Mirror appointed me as night news editor, a mistake subsequently made by three other editors, he must have been barking mad.

But there I was. Two days a soldier and a designated O.R.1, potential officer. So it was natural when a group of us had to be fitted with W.D. spectacles, steel, other ranks for the use of, I was put in charge of the party.

Fourteen of us mustered for the journey from High Legh Camp at Knutsford to Saighton Military Hospital, twenty miles away in Chester. And a pleasant enough journey it was. That is until we climbed down from the lorry at the gates of the camp and wandered, chatting pleasantly, to report at the guard room.

We never made it. A very small sergeant with the voice of a much taller man shouted implications about our families that I am sure he came to regret in quieter moments. He then demanded to know who was “In charge of this shower…”

To a man, my squad of Judases pointed at me.

“Then get them fell in, in three ranks,” he barked. Alas, he didn’t tell me how so I had to whisper to them to get in some sort of line, which they
unobligingly did.

We had our tests, were promised our spectacles and began the journey home. Unfortunately I discovered, in the in the excitement of the morning when we got back to Chester General Railway station, that I had left the travel warrants in Saighton Camp.

I pointed to the least belligerent looking member of the party. “Nip off back to the camp and collect the warrants.”

“F …. Off,” he advised me.

“I’m in charge. You said I was,” I replied.

“Only when we are being shouted at, “he explained.

So I had to go back for the warrants. I told the party to wait for me at the station but none of them did. And because the lorry had gone by this time I had to catch two buses - and in doing so missed three trains. I travelled back to High Legh, accompanied by 14 travel warrants but without a single soldier.

“Good God,” said the orderly officer when I told him what had happened,
“we didn’t lose that many on D Day.”



From My Dangerous Cuttings Book

Polite society should evolve a new code of etiquette for the mobile phone brigade.
The Deputy Editor of the Daily Telegraph Ian Watson, dining at the Savoy Hotel, was interrupted by the cloak room attendant with the words: “Excuse me sir, but your overcoat is ringing.”

Sunday, 17 February 2008

A SEPTIC ISLE,SET IN A SILVER SEA..........

I am not entirely convinced that if I fly to the Isle of Man bits of the English coastline will drop off the edge of the planet. Nor that Iceland will become a Land of Milk and Honey, and the desert will bloom with an abundance of orchids, if I so much as light a bonfire in the garden.

Climate change has dictated Earth’s history and will continue to do so. We are profligate with her bounty but governments which fly emissaries to the far corners of the world to junket and preen will never take the measures necessary to change our excess.

Any natural happening is pressed into evidence that warming is man caused. Global warming and wind change have even been blamed for the appearance of giant turtles on the Welsh coast. Turtles have been washed onto our Welsh coast with almost monotonous regularity for years. Wales is washed by the Gulf Stream which is their natural habitat. There is even a poem about it written by Robert Graves.

I am far more worried about the vast underwater island of plastic, the size of America, which broods off the coast of Hawaii poisoning marine life and feeding toxins to the minute organisms which are the first elements in the food chain. It is certainly responsible for the death of turtles and many other forms of marine life.

There is a hope. In a letter to the Independent, David Sevier, of Aqueous Logic Ltd, pointed out that nature has washed and sorted thousands of tons of a valuable resource and moved it near to several of the world’s markets.

Plastic, he says, is a good feedstock for many products including plastic wood. This, he claims, is an excellent building material since it does not rot or need painting. Apparently, the problem generally has been the cost of collecting and washing it. But the sea has done this for us. It has given us a truly huge business opportunity, a large, fairly concentrated raw material, near highly developed markets, which can be collected free, since it is in international waters. Naturally, since this important news is not doom-laden, it has not been taken up by the rest of the media,

Instead, I have been invited to "Earth Hour" on Saturday, March 29 at 8:00pm. "Lights off for only one hour, wherever you are in the WORLD!"

To see more details and RSVP, follow the link below:
http://wm.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=8240986531

In half the world, of course, it will be broad daylight. But I suppose it is the thought that counts.

On Tuesday we went to Cambridge to watch a student production of “The Pirates of Penzance”, which was by a country mile the finest I have seen; indeed it was one of the finest productions of any kind I have seen.

Hardened G and S watchers like me will be familiar with near geriatric chorus lines, three little maids with a combined displacement of an ocean liner and the other horrors we gladly undergo for the music and the wit of the lyrics. This chorus was made up of manly and athletic pirates and a bevy of Major General’s daughters who were pretty, young and talented.

The British reaction to G and S is one of the great puzzles of life. As a body of work, any other country would be proud of it. There would be festivals of G and S. They would be worshipped as the Strausses are worshipped, statues erected, G and S souvenirs in every shop. Here D’Oyly Carte were kicked out of their home, refused an Arts Council grant and patronised by our artistic establishment.

There is a similar, though less obvious, reaction to Elgar. Goodness knows what would have happened to his reputation had he not written the Enigma Variations and Jacqueline du Pre had not recorded the Cello Concerto.

On the way home from the theatre, across the treacherous Fens, fog made driving a hazard and brought back memories of the post-war years when fogs were so thick that the only way to get home was to tailgate a bolder spirit and hope. Several times this led me into Ladybarn Park (Manchester), across the road from my home, when the lead driver took a wrong turning.

On one occasion, the lead driver jumped from his car and ran past the convoy screaming. We caught him, and calmed him, and asked whatever was the matter.

“I nearly knocked over an elephant,” he sobbed.

He had.

I remembered, just in time to prevent a stampede, that Fossett’s circus, another greater English institution, was visiting and had hobbled its elephants in the park.
********************************************

I used to earn an honest crust from Vernon’s Pools, going to winners who had marked the cross for no publicity and attempting to persuade them to change their mind. I had to give it up because it was turning me off the human race.

There was the man who earned his living scrubbing the inside of the tanks of railway engines and told me that, despite winning a fortune, he was not giving up his day job. Then there was the man who told me off for waking him up in the afternoon to tell him he had won £40,000. And the publican who told me to whisper how much he had won because he didn’t want his customers to know. The bar was empty at the time.

Only once was I offered a drink and that was by an elderly widow who had won £2,000 and gave me a sherry she said she had been saving in case she ever won the pools.

But the queen of them all was Nellie McGrail. She was a lady from Hyde, Cheshire, who was the first big winner of what was then riches beyond the dreams of avarice.

I was running the Mirror news desk in Manchester at the time, and I sent a reporter called Chris Reynolds to see her and take her to the amusement park at Belle Vue to get pictures of her and her children on one of the rides.

He rang several times to ask if he could come back to the office because he was running out of money. She made him pay for ice creams, lunch, candy floss and all the rides.

“Stick with her,” I said, “you’ll be bound to get a drink out of it when you take her home.”

So he took her home, paying for the taxi, and rang me again.

“That’s it,” he said. “You can sack me but I am coming back to the office. I have paid for everything all day. Carried whining kids and tried to cheer up Nellie. We’ve just got home and she said, ‘I expect you could do with a drink?’ I said I could. ‘Right,’ she said, ‘I’ll put the kettle on.’”

There was a sequel. When the news of Nellie’s great win broke, a taxi driver reading of it in his Daily Mirror said to his wife “I used to go out with her” and became very thoughtful.

Some months later I covered his wedding to the pools winner at the village hall in Heaton Moor. Happily on this occasion we drank champagne; indeed my abiding picture is of four policemen detailed to keep back the crowds drinking it from the bottle, long before that disgusting habit became fashionable. Though thankfully they did not shake it and spray it in the vulgar manner of racing drivers.
**********************************************

My Dangerous Cuttings Book

Seen in a Post Office window in Barmouth was this postcard:

“Dear Geoff, Audrey and Martin,
“Having a lovely time. The weather is good. The children are all enjoying themselves. See you soon,
Olive, Gwyn and the children.”

Written in the address section under a 9p stamp is:
“Forgot your address”