I hesitate to disparage fiction that is essentially competent. As someone who occasionally has a bash at fiction, I know how hard it is to write. This collection of short stories is entertaining enough but it is shallow, in my view. I quite want a bit of revelation, a sense that existence somehow has either become stranger through reading or suddenly some aspect of it makes slightly better sense. For me, this book didn't deliver a single phrase that resonated nor a single moment of epiphany. Worse, I found myself irritated by the assumptions made from time to time about the reader's attitudes - the story called Lorna and Tom and the one called Mrs Bennet most especially come to mind in this regard. Lorna and Tom didn't even make psychological sense to me.
DIY was quite a nice ghostly sort of story. In fact, they were all okay, but in an awfully pat kind of way, everything in a little package, no resonances, just that old-fashioned set up of situation and then a twist (that mostly you could see coming from a long way off), all accompanied by a slightly cliched use of language. I was left without any sense that the characters, situations - and indeed the stories themselves - would expand in my memory, long after I'd put down the book. Instead, I came away with a slight sense that I'd just read a whole lot of creative writing exercises.
I suppose the writer who occupies the same sort of fictional world - middle class England, essentially - is Jane Gardam. I'm afraid Penelope Lively comes off a very, very distant runner up beside Gardam, who is observant and compassionate and writes superbly. Perhaps the comparison is unfair, as I regard Gardam as one of the best writers of fiction about English life in existence today, (if you haven't read anything by her, you are missing out). On the other hand, I used to like Lively too - I found her when I was living in Belgrade and took The Road to Lichfield out of the British Council Library on Kneza Mihailovica, if that was the name of the walking street.
Let us have a minute's silence for all those wonderful British Council Libraries that provided a lifeline for so many in foreign countries for so long. The one in Budapest is shut up now. I bet the one in Belgrade is too. Libraries are so much more than repositories of books. The effect of shutting a library is never positive, no matter where it is done. But I digress. How unusual
In conclusion, The Purple Swamp Hen is reasonably diverting but not an illuminating collection - at least not so far as I was concerned.
Sunday, 30 July 2017
Thursday, 27 July 2017
At the Movies - Dunkirk
I was apprehensive about going to see the new film called Dunkirk. A Dutchman coming out at the end of the screening I went to said to one of his companions, "It was a guys' film, it was not a girls' film," and that was exactly what I expected. However, he was wrong.
One of the women the Dutchman was with, replied, "Oh no, I liked it, except that I didn't think it was bloody enough". One of the men in their party said, "I thought there was too much of a happy ending, especially for that pilot." Given that it appeared that "that pilot", (spoiler alert), was being taken away as a prisoner of the Germans, I would say that my view of a happy ending is fairly unlike that gent's.
I've written more about what I thought about the film here. The salient point, I guess, is that, unexpectedly, I enjoyed it quite a lot.
One of the women the Dutchman was with, replied, "Oh no, I liked it, except that I didn't think it was bloody enough". One of the men in their party said, "I thought there was too much of a happy ending, especially for that pilot." Given that it appeared that "that pilot", (spoiler alert), was being taken away as a prisoner of the Germans, I would say that my view of a happy ending is fairly unlike that gent's.
I've written more about what I thought about the film here. The salient point, I guess, is that, unexpectedly, I enjoyed it quite a lot.
Wednesday, 19 July 2017
Something I Read - King Leopold's Ghost by Adam Hochschild
I highly recommend this book, which traces the involvement of King Leopold and the Belgians in the Congo. It is an almost unbearable story, prompting questions about humanity's capacity for sadism and, if one really wants to tackle the insoluble, the problem of cruelty and what function it can possibly serve, if we are to believe in a Darwinian view of history and the world.
Before the appalling tale of depravity gets under way, there is a bit of grim comedy associated with King Leopold's marriage, which was allegedly not even consummated until Britain's Queen Victoria and her husband Albert explained to the couple what they needed to do.
Grimmer still, yet from this distance also faintly comic, is the death of the couple's resultant son, who "fell into a pond, caught pneumonia and died". The child's mother, Marie Henriette then "found solace with her beloved horses ... befriended the minister of war, and at manoeuvres, to the astonishment of military attachés, he sometimes invited her to lead cavalry charges."
More cruel humour arises from the fate of the king's younger sister, who married Maximilian Hapsburg and went mad following her husband's execution by rebels in Mexico:
"She became convinced that an organ grinder on the street was a Mexican colonel in disguise, and that spies of every sort were trying to poison her. As a precaution she ate only oranges and nuts, checking the peels and shells for signs of tampering. She made her coachman stop at Rome's Trevi fountain so that she could fill a crystal pitcher with water, certain not to be poisoned. In her hotel suite she kept a small charcoal stove and, tied to table legs, several chickens, to be slaughtered and cooked only in her sight. With her obedient staff in despair, her rooms slowly filled with feathers and chicken droppings."
Once we plunge into the horror of King Leopold's administration of the Congo, there is no more humour though - indeed, barely a glimmer of light. What there is comes from learning about the amazing Edmund Dene Morel who, as Hochschild says, "Brought face to face with evil ... does not turn away." Better still he doesn't join in, as so many others seem to have done, but fights against the atrocities that are being carried out against his fellow humans, courageously and for the rest of his life.
I could go into detail about what exactly happened in the Congo, but I prefer to emulate the interpreters a friend of mine took to interview women who'd been raped during the Bosnian war. To my friend's great annoyance, the interpreters listened and listened and then turned to her, saying, "These people have been through terrible experiences and seen terrible things, and you would not want to hear about them."
What I will do is include this photograph of a detail of the statue of King Leopold facing the sea at Ostend. Someone, alluding to a widespread and dreadful practice of the king's administration in the Congo, has gone to quite a lot of trouble to cut off the African figure on the left's hand:
But it isn't actually that I think no-one should want to hear about these things that prevents me from going into detail. I just think Hochschild tells it better than I can. The book is a terrible and sobering revelation and, while I don't think it is perfect, (see below - I agree with most of the points the reviewer from the LRB makes), I still think it is very, very well worth reading.
Further reading:
An Outpost of Progress by Joseph Conrad. A haunting story.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Review of the book from the LRB - 1999
Before the appalling tale of depravity gets under way, there is a bit of grim comedy associated with King Leopold's marriage, which was allegedly not even consummated until Britain's Queen Victoria and her husband Albert explained to the couple what they needed to do.
Grimmer still, yet from this distance also faintly comic, is the death of the couple's resultant son, who "fell into a pond, caught pneumonia and died". The child's mother, Marie Henriette then "found solace with her beloved horses ... befriended the minister of war, and at manoeuvres, to the astonishment of military attachés, he sometimes invited her to lead cavalry charges."
More cruel humour arises from the fate of the king's younger sister, who married Maximilian Hapsburg and went mad following her husband's execution by rebels in Mexico:
"She became convinced that an organ grinder on the street was a Mexican colonel in disguise, and that spies of every sort were trying to poison her. As a precaution she ate only oranges and nuts, checking the peels and shells for signs of tampering. She made her coachman stop at Rome's Trevi fountain so that she could fill a crystal pitcher with water, certain not to be poisoned. In her hotel suite she kept a small charcoal stove and, tied to table legs, several chickens, to be slaughtered and cooked only in her sight. With her obedient staff in despair, her rooms slowly filled with feathers and chicken droppings."
Once we plunge into the horror of King Leopold's administration of the Congo, there is no more humour though - indeed, barely a glimmer of light. What there is comes from learning about the amazing Edmund Dene Morel who, as Hochschild says, "Brought face to face with evil ... does not turn away." Better still he doesn't join in, as so many others seem to have done, but fights against the atrocities that are being carried out against his fellow humans, courageously and for the rest of his life.
I could go into detail about what exactly happened in the Congo, but I prefer to emulate the interpreters a friend of mine took to interview women who'd been raped during the Bosnian war. To my friend's great annoyance, the interpreters listened and listened and then turned to her, saying, "These people have been through terrible experiences and seen terrible things, and you would not want to hear about them."
What I will do is include this photograph of a detail of the statue of King Leopold facing the sea at Ostend. Someone, alluding to a widespread and dreadful practice of the king's administration in the Congo, has gone to quite a lot of trouble to cut off the African figure on the left's hand:
But it isn't actually that I think no-one should want to hear about these things that prevents me from going into detail. I just think Hochschild tells it better than I can. The book is a terrible and sobering revelation and, while I don't think it is perfect, (see below - I agree with most of the points the reviewer from the LRB makes), I still think it is very, very well worth reading.
Further reading:
An Outpost of Progress by Joseph Conrad. A haunting story.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Review of the book from the LRB - 1999
Arch-Appropriator
Dan Jacobson
- King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Central Africa by Adam Hochschild
Macmillan, 366 pp, £22.50, April 1999, ISBN 0 333 66126 5
Leopold II is best known as the founder and owner of the ill-famed Congo Free State. To most English-speaking readers his name evokes ‘Red Rubber’ and a world of plunder and atrocity: the Congo Reform Association which campaigned against his ruthless exploitation of the Free State has left behind it a notion of an aged, snow-bearded Satan who used black slavery to get money, and money to buy the favours of young girls.
The quotation is from Neal Ascherson’s The King Incorporated, published more than thirty years ago. Many stories deserve retelling for each generation; and the tale of Leopold’s duplicity, lubriciousness and greed, and of the cruelties and depredations with which his hirelings in the Congo Free State fed his appetites and their own, is certainly one of them. Adam Hochschild has taken most of the material for his new book from published sources; but about that I have no inclination to complain. Far from it. The findings of specialist historians have constantly to be ‘translated’ for the benefit of general readers, and Hochschild has done a valuable job in combining a biography of Leopold with a coherent, comprehensible account of how he realised his dream of a vast and ultimately profitable empire in the middle of Africa. Imagine a pathologically avaricious fraudster who is also a monomaniac, a man who never loses sight of his single aim yet never declares it, and you will be on the way to understanding something of Leopold’s character. You will also have a sense of the difficulties facing a writer who seeks to follow his devious footsteps. Hochschild compares the scale of the ‘holocaust’ produced by Leopold’s reign in the Congo with those for which Hitler and Stalin were responsible; if he is to be compared with either of them, I would say that he resembled Stalin rather than Hitler in always cloaking his intentions and deeds with an appearance of public benignity, of fatherly concern for his people, whether at home or in his great colonial possession.
Unfortunately the book has faults which run almost as deep as its merits. Hochschild’s naive zeal for cliché (news ‘flashed over the telegraph wires’, someone’s ‘hurt pride’ is ‘like an open wound’, society women are ‘bejewelled’ and generals ‘bemedalled’) is accompanied by lunges into a general metaphoric confusion (‘In Europe, the thirst for African land had become nearly palpable ... Stanley had ignited the great African land rush, but even he felt uneasy about the greed in the air’). Then there is his insistence that what happened in the Congo between about 1880 and 1910 has long been forgotten, even suppressed. Well, it hasn’t. The fact that he himself has been able to rely so heavily on published sources, some new, some old, in itself reveals how dubious the claim is. Anyone with the least interest in the ‘scramble for Africa’ knows that something terrible and protracted took place in the Congo basin at that time; and so, too, vaguely yet more vividly perhaps, do the ‘millions of readers’ (Hochschild’s phrase) who have encountered the place and period through ‘the most widely printed short novel in the English language’ – Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. Hochschild devotes an inconclusive chapter to discussing yet another possible ‘original’ for Mr Kurtz (his candidate is an unsavoury murderer and would-be man of science by the name of Léon Rom); but dismisses the informative power of the novel by baldly asserting that European and American readers have ‘cast it loose from its historical moorings’ – and then producing himself as star witness for his case. When he read it as an undergraduate, he tells us, he ‘mentally filed away the book as fiction not fact’. So what did he imagine those chained porters, those dying ‘black shadows of disease and emaciation’, to be – decor?
This is not the only place in the book where Hochschild’s assertions tell us more about him than about his subject. He rebukes the Victorians for their overweening contempt for African society and culture, but it never occurs to him that his attitude to the Victorians might be tainted by an analogous philistinism and incomprehension. He refers slightingly to ‘European maps’ of the period which showed the interior of Africa as ‘blank’ – as if there were African maps or Moghul maps or Chinese maps which did any better. He displays a properly enlightened scorn for the claims of 19th-century explorers to have ‘discovered’ major features of the African continent when the people living at varying distances from them had always known them to be there. But when Livingstone, say, ‘discovered’ the Victoria Falls to be situated approximately at latitude 18°S and longitude 28°E, he forever changed them as a mental and social fact, and hence as a physical fact too. (Go to the Falls today and you will see what I mean: the waters cascade as majestically as ever; but they are surrounded by huge tourist hotels, by bungee-jumpers, para-gliders, helicopter flights and booze-cruises.) He writes disapprovingly of Henry Stanley’s ‘act of appropriation’ in ‘forever measuring and tabulating ... temperatures, miles travelled, lake depths, latitude, longitude and altitude ... almost as if he were a surveyor mapping the continent for its prospective owners’; yet feels no moral misgivings in ‘appropriating’ the findings of such men, and others like them, whenever it suits his narrative to do so. You want to know the height of the drop from Kinshasa to sea-level? How many millions of square miles the Congo River drains? What its hydroelectric potential might be? How much longer than the Rhine is the Kasai River? Why the flow of water at the mouth of the Congo does not vary seasonally? This book will unblushingly tell you.
Newton said that he saw as far as he did because he stood on the shoulders of giants. Here we have the spectacle of someone standing on the shoulders of giants and kicking them for their pains. It might be argued that this is no less than Stanley deserves, for he was an unscrupulous brute: a flogger, a killer, a liar, a suitable instrument in every way for someone as machiavellian as Leopold. But the counter-example of the equally obsessed Livingstone shows that there were other, less violent ways in which an explorer could go about his task. Both Stanley and Livingstone succeeded in mapping great tracts of Africa. It is childish to suppose that we are now entitled to look down on the private ambitions and public expectations which drove them to be ‘forever measuring and tabulating’; or that in writing about them (and about the culture from which they emerged) our first concern should be to show ourselves as members of a different, ‘non-appropriative’ species.
Which brings me back to the arch-appropriator, Leopold. What emerges convincingly from Hochschild’s account of him is that he was as dislikable a human specimen as could be found; the portrait presented here is enough to make one warm to his great British rival in the south, Cecil Rhodes. At least Rhodes lived in Africa, and in his own fashion came to love those parts of the continent he knew – and not only because he wished to dominate them. Rhodes also put himself in mortal danger at least twice in his life: once at the end of the ‘Matabele Rebellion’ in present-day Zimbabwe, and once when he incarcerated himself in the town of Kimberley just as it was about to be besieged by the Boers. Leopold, on the other hand, never set foot in Africa, apart from a few brief visits to Egypt during his youth. His imperial ambitions remained abstract and indiscriminate throughout his life; so did his notion of the countries he coveted – not to speak of their unfortunate inhabitants, to whose sufferings he always remained totally indifferent. As a young man he had dreamed of ‘purchasing a small kingdom in Abyssinia for 30,000 francs’; also of buying parts of the Nile Delta; the Argentine province of Entre Rios; the whole of Fiji (‘one should not let such a fine prey escape’); bits of Formosa; the Canary Isles; a 99-year lease on the Philippines. Many years later he was investing in railways and buying small parcels of land in mainland China, while eyeing various other ‘cutlets’ that might become available to him there. As these samples of his language reveal, he did not hide from himself or his closest subordinates that his intentions were focused nakedly and unwaveringly on power, and on the spoils of power, never anything else.
In public, of course, he was another person. Some of Hochschild’s most biting pages are devoted to exploring the gap between his protestations and his deeds. No one ever presented himself as possessed of higher motives than Leopold II, or claimed to offer his services to the cause of human betterment in a more selfless spirit. Nor did anyone enter the ‘scramble for Africa’ in quite so oblique a fashion. In 1876 he called a grand conference of African explorers, geographers, missionaries, businessmen and anti-slavers to come together in Brussels; he did not chair the conference but made sure that it would set up an International African Association (of which he was elected chairman) along with various ‘national committees’. None of the latter ever met; the International Committee convened just once, a year later, re-elected Leopold, and disappeared. Not long afterwards, Henry Stanley, more celebrated than ever after crossing the African continent via the Congo River, was in Leopold’s employ – or rather, in the employ of yet another body with another fine name, the Committee for Studies of the Upper Congo. That Committee in turn gave way to the International Association of the Congo which, according to an article anonymously contributed by Leopold to the London Times, was a sort of ‘Society of the Red Cross; it has been formed with the noble aim of rendering lasting and disinterested services to the cause of progress’. His instructions to Stanley struck a different note, however. Stanley was to go back to the Congo and make ‘treaties’ with all the native chiefs he came across. ‘The treaties,’ the King wrote, ‘must be as brief as possible and give us everything.’
Treaties in hand, Leopold’s agents then persuaded the President of the United States to give diplomatic recognition to an entity which had a flag to fly – a gold star on a blue field – but no recognisable name. (The American declaration of recognition actually referred to it by two different titles.) To one audience Leopold declared that he was setting up ‘a confederation of free negro republics’ in the Congo, and to another that his aim was to establish a group of cities on the Hanseatic model – of all unlikely precedents. These independent ‘cities’ or ‘republics’ were then magicked into a single ‘state’, which early in 1885, just nine years after the calling of Leopold’s first conference in Brussels, declared itself to be the Free State of the Congo (l’Etat Indépendant du Congo). Leopold, who had funded the entire operation, and had been the sole subscriber to the International Association in its last known form, naturally became head of state and owner of the entire property. (‘As a private citizen,’ he wrote to Stanley.) After some reflection he styled himself ‘King-Sovereign’ of his acquisition. It was, Hochschild tells us, bigger than England, France, Germany, Spain and Italy combined. Some years later, in return for a huge loan from a reluctant Belgian Parliament, Leopold wrote out a will in which, just like a generous private citizen disposing of his assets, he formally bequeathed it to his ‘beloved fatherland’.
Even by the standards of the day the Congo Free State was a peculiar affair; and not only because it was so much of a one-man holding. All vacant lands in the territory were declared to belong to the Crown; naturally the Crown itself decided which lands were vacant. No attempt was made to develop the colony in any way that did not bear directly on the brutal business of extorting ivory and (subsequently) wild rubber from the desperate indigènes. These activities were carried out on a commission basis by the administrators of the state, or by concessionary companies in which the state usually held a substantial share. As if the act of turning officials into profiteers was not in itself sufficient encouragement to cruelty and recklessness, the African population was denied the right to handle money. Instead they were paid in kind – cloth, beads, rations – or in lengths of brass rods which were declared to be a form of currency appropriate for them. The Africans thus had every motive to withhold their labour, if they could, and Leopold’s agents to obtain it by the cheapest means open to them: by way of raids, press-gangs, floggings, the taking of hostages (women and children especially), the destruction of villages and cultivated fields, the wholesale murder and mutilation of those who attempted to flee from or rebel against the regime. To such effect were these policies carried out that Hochschild’s sources estimate that 25 years after the coming into existence of the Free State, its population had dropped by some ten million – i.e. to a half of what it had originally been. Readers may or may not be sceptical about the accuracy of this figure, which depends largely on guesswork as to the size of the Congo’s population before colonisation, together with an acceptance at face-value of the figures yielded by the first formal Belgian census. What is certain is that by 1908, when Leopold finally surrendered his territory to the Belgian state, disease, starvation and mass killings had resulted in the virtual denudation, humanly speaking, of immense stretches of Central Africa. That the territory’s natural resources of ivory and wild rubber had also been wiped out goes without saying.
Contrary to his original intention, Leopold was forced to hand over the Congo to his ‘beloved fatherland’ before his death, not after it. By then the true nature of his reign had been exposed to the world by a handful of courageous and extraordinarily effective campaigners. Of these E.D. Morel of the Congo Reform Society and Roger Casement, first British consul to the Congo Free State, are much the most famous. Hochschild also writes generously of the labours of several other, less well-known campaigners, among them two pioneering, eccentric American blacks, George Washington Williams and William Sheppard. The intensity of international opprobrium heaped on their king was just one of the factors which led the Belgian Parliament to insist on annexing his empire. For bestowing on Parliament this enforced ‘donation’ (Leopold’s term for it), he demanded – and got – many millions of francs. He also made sure that the massive Congolese profits he was already holding were transferred into a series of secretive, interlocking foundations, trusts and limited companies of which he maintained control.
He died less than two years later. On his death-bed he married Caroline Lacroix, the most enduring of the innumerable mistresses and call-girls with whom he had indulged himself over the years. Some time previously he had done as much as was permitted under Belgian law to disinherit his three daughters, of whom only the despised youngest was available to pay her last respects to her dying papa. (Their mother, who had hated him quite as much he hated her, had long predeceased him.) Given the King’s wealth and cunning, his vindictiveness and habits of secrecy, it is not surprising that many years passed before his estate was finally unravelled by the country’s Parliament and legal institutions. He had spent huge sums on the aggrandisement of parts of Brussels and Ostend, and on his palace at Laeken, and these remain, as he had intended them to be, Europe’s most visible monuments to him. In Africa the present-day borders of the Congo, established by incessant diplomatic manoeuvring on Leopold’s part and campaigning in the field by his agents, must be considered his most significant memorial. I would not like to guess which will last longer – the borders in Africa or the buildings in Belgium.
The rulers of the Congo today can either struggle to overcome the past or choose to remain its home-grown accomplices and perpetuators. Having opened with a quotation from Neal Ascherson’s The King Incorporated, I might as well end with one too. The ‘system’ he speaks of was Leopold’s: but how would one distinguish it from Mobutu’s or Kabila’s?
The Congolese system was too viciously wasteful, too recklessly short-term in its conception, to deserve even the term of exploitation. It was no more than a prolonged raid for plunder.
Tuesday, 18 July 2017
What's Wrong with Brussels (Sprouts)
Nothing, in my view - there is absolutely nothing wrong with Brussels sprouts.
However, this afternoon, when I showed a bloke I know my new find, purple Brussels sprouts, he wrinkled up his nose.
Apparently, he hates all forms of Brussels sprout, regardless of their colour.
I tried to tell him how lovely they can be, and he told me his daughter said the same, but he wasn't budging.
"It might be the way my mother cooked them that put me off," he admitted eventually.
"How was that?" I asked.
"She boiled them till the saucepan went soft", he explained.
However, this afternoon, when I showed a bloke I know my new find, purple Brussels sprouts, he wrinkled up his nose.
Apparently, he hates all forms of Brussels sprout, regardless of their colour.
I tried to tell him how lovely they can be, and he told me his daughter said the same, but he wasn't budging.
"It might be the way my mother cooked them that put me off," he admitted eventually.
"How was that?" I asked.
"She boiled them till the saucepan went soft", he explained.
Monday, 17 July 2017
Something I Read - The Dry by Jane Harper
I picked The Dry up to read on a plane journey. I chose it because I was pleased to see a best seller with an Australian setting. The story is supposed to take place in an unnamed Victorian town at the height of summer during a long drought.
A man who spent his childhood in the town - but has moved away to Melbourne to work as an investigator of financial crime in the police force - returns for the funeral of his childhood friend. Soon it becomes clear that the friend's death is not what it seems and the man must stay on to solve a crime. Meanwhile, in the background, is the memory of the death of another school friend long ago.
The plot is pretty good and consequently I did read to the end, to find out what happened. I was disappointed though as the characters are very sketchy and thin, and the writer doesn't seem to really know Australia - or at least country Australia. To take just one of many examples, farmers are described as "the farmers" as if they were "the cattle" and reportedly say to each other, "It'll rain soon", which farmers in Australia in a drought never do. They have learned the hard way.
More importantly, most Australian country towns are rather beautiful, if they are as old as this one is supposed to be - but there is not a glimpse of an architectural detail, no hint of what an Australian country town looks like in the book. Nor is there more than the barest hint of what Australia smells like, (it is, in the nicest possible way, a smelly place - that is, it is easily evoked by smell, especially in summer: of heat, of dust, of distant sheep, of the bush; but the only smell mentioned is "eucalyptus" [what kind of Pommie nonsense is that - we call it gum, don't you know] and it is referred to as a "tang", which seems far too sharp and lemony to me; gums are almost smoky in their scent.
I. may be expecting too much depth from a best seller - but detective novels are meant to be a solid literary form, not just potboilers. On a stylistic level, The Dry doesn't match up to many competing contemporary crime novels; the writing is hackneyed and the characterisation and description lacks any depth.
I don't suppose most people pick up the book to find out what rural society is like in Australia but, for those who might, I'd recommend The Idea of Perfection, Kate Grenville's wonderful, funny, poignant evocation of small town life instead. That is a really good book. The Dry is a thin entertainment. The most intriguing thing about it is the choice of Whitlam for a character's name.
A man who spent his childhood in the town - but has moved away to Melbourne to work as an investigator of financial crime in the police force - returns for the funeral of his childhood friend. Soon it becomes clear that the friend's death is not what it seems and the man must stay on to solve a crime. Meanwhile, in the background, is the memory of the death of another school friend long ago.
The plot is pretty good and consequently I did read to the end, to find out what happened. I was disappointed though as the characters are very sketchy and thin, and the writer doesn't seem to really know Australia - or at least country Australia. To take just one of many examples, farmers are described as "the farmers" as if they were "the cattle" and reportedly say to each other, "It'll rain soon", which farmers in Australia in a drought never do. They have learned the hard way.
More importantly, most Australian country towns are rather beautiful, if they are as old as this one is supposed to be - but there is not a glimpse of an architectural detail, no hint of what an Australian country town looks like in the book. Nor is there more than the barest hint of what Australia smells like, (it is, in the nicest possible way, a smelly place - that is, it is easily evoked by smell, especially in summer: of heat, of dust, of distant sheep, of the bush; but the only smell mentioned is "eucalyptus" [what kind of Pommie nonsense is that - we call it gum, don't you know] and it is referred to as a "tang", which seems far too sharp and lemony to me; gums are almost smoky in their scent.
I. may be expecting too much depth from a best seller - but detective novels are meant to be a solid literary form, not just potboilers. On a stylistic level, The Dry doesn't match up to many competing contemporary crime novels; the writing is hackneyed and the characterisation and description lacks any depth.
I don't suppose most people pick up the book to find out what rural society is like in Australia but, for those who might, I'd recommend The Idea of Perfection, Kate Grenville's wonderful, funny, poignant evocation of small town life instead. That is a really good book. The Dry is a thin entertainment. The most intriguing thing about it is the choice of Whitlam for a character's name.
Friday, 14 July 2017
A Question that Needed to Be Asked
There is a comedian on BBC Radio 4 who my brother and I would listen to whenever he appeared - were he to have read out the instructions on assembling a piece of flat pack furniture, we would have tuned in.
The comedian's name is John Finnemore and today I found on Radio 4 Extra that his very first sketch series, which I'd not heard - or indeed heard of - before, is being repeated. Sadly, I suspect my brother never heard it. He would have particularly loved Finnemore's attempt to tackle the really big question of the modern age, a question that only he has been brave enough to raise publicly, so far as I know:
The comedian's name is John Finnemore and today I found on Radio 4 Extra that his very first sketch series, which I'd not heard - or indeed heard of - before, is being repeated. Sadly, I suspect my brother never heard it. He would have particularly loved Finnemore's attempt to tackle the really big question of the modern age, a question that only he has been brave enough to raise publicly, so far as I know:
Tuesday, 11 July 2017
Words and Phrases of an Abhorrent Variety
I am reading a book called How to Sit (stop sniggering) in one of my occasional doomed attempts to stop being so inclined to get worked up about things that don't really matter. The book recommends sitting, observing your breathing and saying to yourself, "My body is mindfulness itself", but I fall at the first hurdle, as I keep realising I'm saying to myself, "My body is mindlessness itself", which is probably more truthful than the authorised version and sends me off into distracted amusement, from whence my mind wanders back into its usual frenzied paths.
My latest object of frenzied seething is a phrase I never heard until at most 18 months ago. Now it is everywhere - people say it to me in conversation, they write it in emails, it appears in articles and, to my mind, it adds absolutely nothing to the content of any of those forms of communication.
The phrase I'm referring to is "Here's the thing."
The thing? What thing? Where? Here? Where is here?
The thing about "here's the thing" is - or rather "here's the thing" about "here's the thing - that I have never seen it preface anything positive and nice. In my experience, no-one ever says something like, "Here's the thing - I'd love to help you", "Here's the thing - I'd like to invite you round to tea". No, "Here's the thing", goes with, "I'd love to help you, but I'm afraid I cannot", "I'd like to invite you round to tea, but I'm not going to."
I think, in fact, "Here's the thing" is a holding pattern phrase for when someone is scrabbling around in their mind for an excuse for not doing something they perhaps ought to. Or have I got it wrong - is the phrase less unpleasant in its meaning than I've been imagining? I'm never ever going to start using it but could it be that "the thing" in "here's the thing" (and my inability to grasp the meaning of that principal noun is part of my objection to the phrase, as every single time I encounter it my mind gets stuck on trying to work out what "the thing" means) is just shorthand for the now outmoded (hurray) cliche, "Elephant in the room"?
My latest object of frenzied seething is a phrase I never heard until at most 18 months ago. Now it is everywhere - people say it to me in conversation, they write it in emails, it appears in articles and, to my mind, it adds absolutely nothing to the content of any of those forms of communication.
The phrase I'm referring to is "Here's the thing."
The thing? What thing? Where? Here? Where is here?
The thing about "here's the thing" is - or rather "here's the thing" about "here's the thing - that I have never seen it preface anything positive and nice. In my experience, no-one ever says something like, "Here's the thing - I'd love to help you", "Here's the thing - I'd like to invite you round to tea". No, "Here's the thing", goes with, "I'd love to help you, but I'm afraid I cannot", "I'd like to invite you round to tea, but I'm not going to."
I think, in fact, "Here's the thing" is a holding pattern phrase for when someone is scrabbling around in their mind for an excuse for not doing something they perhaps ought to. Or have I got it wrong - is the phrase less unpleasant in its meaning than I've been imagining? I'm never ever going to start using it but could it be that "the thing" in "here's the thing" (and my inability to grasp the meaning of that principal noun is part of my objection to the phrase, as every single time I encounter it my mind gets stuck on trying to work out what "the thing" means) is just shorthand for the now outmoded (hurray) cliche, "Elephant in the room"?
Sunday, 9 July 2017
Quaking No More
I suppose it is not a coincidence that when an idea begins to beset you, you see echoes of it everywhere you look. Certainly, following my repeated epiphanies about modern life and the importance of kindness as a major element in everything that is done in a society, I seem to see reflections of this preoccupation wherever I look.
For instance, I picked up the 20 April, 2017 London Review of Books yesterday and began to read an article in it, written by James Meek. I thought the article was going to be about Poland. It was, in a way, but it was more about Europe - and more still about the way business is done these days across the globe.
In the article, Meek examines the decision by Cadbury's to send all the jobs in Somerdale - a town just east of Bristol that was set up by the company for its employees in 1923 - to Poland. To explore this subject, Meek has to go back to the past and explain how things were done in earlier days.
He begins, in fact, with the original decision to move to Somerdale, which was made almost one hundred years ago. Like the Cadbury company's other famous move, to Bournville, and Joseph Rowntree's production shift from York to Haxby, the move to Somerdale was not a matter of
"mere efficiency and tech upgrades ... The Cadbury, Fry and Rowntree families were successful capitalist industrialists, but they were also Quakers, bound to care for the welfare of their employees. In the high Victorian age it was still possible to see a potential harmony between Quaker ideals of simplicity, temperance, pacifism and charity and the handsome profits made by Quaker companies like Barclay's and Lloyd's banks ... for decades the Cadbury, Fry and Rowntree families seemed to achieve a particularly successful synthesis of profitable capitalism and private, paternalistic welfare. At Haxby Road, Bournville and later Somerdale, there was subsidised housing, healthcare and sports facilities ... The Quaker chocolate magnates wanted their factories to be handsome as well as functional. They wanted them to be surrounded by green spaces. They cared how their works appeared to God, their workers, their peers and their neighbours. Their ideology of practical, aesthetic social justice, formed at the confluence of fundamentalist Protestantism, capitalism, socialism and the Victorian fascination with an idealised medieval England, was both contradictory and, to many contemporaries, inspiring."
Sadly, Meek goes on to say that not only did prosperity encourage Cadbury's Quaker leaders to abandon some of their observances, leading in the end to the flotation of Cadbury-Fry on the stock market in 1962, which resulted in the business no longer being a Quaker venture, but also that, in a peculiar way, the enterprise's moral elements contained the seeds of their own destruction - or at least the moral elements were first admired and then separated from their religious underpinnings and taken up by politicians, leading to a depersonalisation, once individual conscience was no longer involved:
"As much as worldly success, however it was the success of their ideals that sped the decline of the crusading wing of Quaker capitalism. Many of the liberal and socialist ideas the Rowntrees, Cadburys and Fry campaigned for, and tried to implement on a small scale, were taken up by the unions, by the Labour movement, and eventually implemented by the state. This was good and necessary, but had its downside. The counterpart to the great privatisation of the British economy of the past forty years is the great nationalisation of culture that occurred much earlier, when swathes of life that had been covered patchily, erratically, unfairly and archaically by religion, private employers, local custom, charities, local committees of worthies and the unreliable benevolence of the rich - education, healthcare, pensions, safety at work, women and children's rights - began to be provided universally by government. It was a triumph. But it also marked a critical stage in the depersonalisation of institutional culture. It made it easier for companies whose owners have no interest in the cultural weight of the enterprises they control - who see such ideas as history, place, community, aesthetics and paternalism and outmoded obstacles to efficiency - to act as if they operate in a space outside culture, even as their decisions radically transform it."
Meek goes on to outline how Cadbury's is now run with an eye on absolutely nothing but profit and the aim of increasing that further and further. He mentions a non-executive director who left Cadbury with £40 million in pay, pension and cashed in shares, after the company was swallowed up by a multinational, and he describes how the decision to move the Somerdale operation was taken when "the board was coming under fierce pressure from Cadbury's big shareholders, particularly the hedge fund partner Nelson Peltz and his Qatar sovereign wealth fund investors, to deliver fatter returns on their investment". He goes into far more detail than I will here (the article is worth reading for that added detail, if you have the time) and admits that:
"in this case, the EU had let the people of Keynsham [the town closest to Somerdale] down badly. 'How many billion pounds did it cost us?' Radford [the Unite union representative at Somerdale] asked of the new factory in Skarbimierz [the place in Poland it was shifted to], 'Because it's in the middle of nowhere. They had to do all the roads, all the infrastructure, and that was all paid for through our donations.' ... In the end, by one route or another, much of the money came from the EU, and although the biggest share would have come from Germany, as the EU's biggest net donor, the next largest would have come from Britain ... not only did the EU pay for much of the infrastructure that enabled Cadbury to shut down its English factory and move it to Poland; it signed off on a massive financial inducement for Cadbury to go.'"
Meek himself would have liked the Remain vote to win in the EU referendum but recognises that these kinds of transactions give the EU a very bad name.
I don't want to get into that argument right now. My current preoccupation is with improving the way humans behave towards each other more generally. In that context, what strikes me most about Meek's story is the desire for profit at any cost, with no thought for moral or social consequences, and the role in events of shadowy figures divorced entirely from the people their decisions affect - hedge fund partners, wealth fund investors. The passage that resonates above all, the one that contains the kernel of where we have gone wrong, I think, is this one:
"It [where "it" is the shift of a sense of duty and moral responsibility for the care of workers from individual businesses and business people to the impersonal entity that is government] made it easier for companies whose owners have no interest in the cultural weight of the enterprises they control - who see such ideas as history, place, community, aesthetics and paternalism as outmoded obstacles to efficiency - to act as if they operate in a space outside culture, even as their decisions radically transform it."
It seems to me that we very, very urgently need a worldwide movement that mirrors the erstwhile "crusading wing of Quaker capitalism" and a reintroduction (or, in most cases, just an introduction) of the attitude of that group's members among business leaders everywhere:
"They cared how their works appeared to God, their workers, their peers and their neighbours. Their ideology of practical, aesthetic social justice, formed at the confluence of fundamentalist Protestantism, capitalism, socialism and the Victorian fascination with an idealised medieval England, was both contradictory and, to many contemporaries, inspiring."
The fascination with an idealised medieval England could probably be left out of the recipe, but in other respects I think we could do worse. It is absolutely wrong that the lives of many blameless people in Britain have been profoundly altered - and not for the better - by a combination of a "lumbering supranational bureaucracy" and the greed of wealthy investors in Qatar. Unless there is a radical change in perspective and philosophy, so that wealth is not admired or regarded as a mark of success unless it is accompanied by a strong and incontestable commitment social justice, European civilisation - or whatever tattered remnants remain of it - is doomed.
For instance, I picked up the 20 April, 2017 London Review of Books yesterday and began to read an article in it, written by James Meek. I thought the article was going to be about Poland. It was, in a way, but it was more about Europe - and more still about the way business is done these days across the globe.
In the article, Meek examines the decision by Cadbury's to send all the jobs in Somerdale - a town just east of Bristol that was set up by the company for its employees in 1923 - to Poland. To explore this subject, Meek has to go back to the past and explain how things were done in earlier days.
He begins, in fact, with the original decision to move to Somerdale, which was made almost one hundred years ago. Like the Cadbury company's other famous move, to Bournville, and Joseph Rowntree's production shift from York to Haxby, the move to Somerdale was not a matter of
"mere efficiency and tech upgrades ... The Cadbury, Fry and Rowntree families were successful capitalist industrialists, but they were also Quakers, bound to care for the welfare of their employees. In the high Victorian age it was still possible to see a potential harmony between Quaker ideals of simplicity, temperance, pacifism and charity and the handsome profits made by Quaker companies like Barclay's and Lloyd's banks ... for decades the Cadbury, Fry and Rowntree families seemed to achieve a particularly successful synthesis of profitable capitalism and private, paternalistic welfare. At Haxby Road, Bournville and later Somerdale, there was subsidised housing, healthcare and sports facilities ... The Quaker chocolate magnates wanted their factories to be handsome as well as functional. They wanted them to be surrounded by green spaces. They cared how their works appeared to God, their workers, their peers and their neighbours. Their ideology of practical, aesthetic social justice, formed at the confluence of fundamentalist Protestantism, capitalism, socialism and the Victorian fascination with an idealised medieval England, was both contradictory and, to many contemporaries, inspiring."
Sadly, Meek goes on to say that not only did prosperity encourage Cadbury's Quaker leaders to abandon some of their observances, leading in the end to the flotation of Cadbury-Fry on the stock market in 1962, which resulted in the business no longer being a Quaker venture, but also that, in a peculiar way, the enterprise's moral elements contained the seeds of their own destruction - or at least the moral elements were first admired and then separated from their religious underpinnings and taken up by politicians, leading to a depersonalisation, once individual conscience was no longer involved:
"As much as worldly success, however it was the success of their ideals that sped the decline of the crusading wing of Quaker capitalism. Many of the liberal and socialist ideas the Rowntrees, Cadburys and Fry campaigned for, and tried to implement on a small scale, were taken up by the unions, by the Labour movement, and eventually implemented by the state. This was good and necessary, but had its downside. The counterpart to the great privatisation of the British economy of the past forty years is the great nationalisation of culture that occurred much earlier, when swathes of life that had been covered patchily, erratically, unfairly and archaically by religion, private employers, local custom, charities, local committees of worthies and the unreliable benevolence of the rich - education, healthcare, pensions, safety at work, women and children's rights - began to be provided universally by government. It was a triumph. But it also marked a critical stage in the depersonalisation of institutional culture. It made it easier for companies whose owners have no interest in the cultural weight of the enterprises they control - who see such ideas as history, place, community, aesthetics and paternalism and outmoded obstacles to efficiency - to act as if they operate in a space outside culture, even as their decisions radically transform it."
Meek goes on to outline how Cadbury's is now run with an eye on absolutely nothing but profit and the aim of increasing that further and further. He mentions a non-executive director who left Cadbury with £40 million in pay, pension and cashed in shares, after the company was swallowed up by a multinational, and he describes how the decision to move the Somerdale operation was taken when "the board was coming under fierce pressure from Cadbury's big shareholders, particularly the hedge fund partner Nelson Peltz and his Qatar sovereign wealth fund investors, to deliver fatter returns on their investment". He goes into far more detail than I will here (the article is worth reading for that added detail, if you have the time) and admits that:
"in this case, the EU had let the people of Keynsham [the town closest to Somerdale] down badly. 'How many billion pounds did it cost us?' Radford [the Unite union representative at Somerdale] asked of the new factory in Skarbimierz [the place in Poland it was shifted to], 'Because it's in the middle of nowhere. They had to do all the roads, all the infrastructure, and that was all paid for through our donations.' ... In the end, by one route or another, much of the money came from the EU, and although the biggest share would have come from Germany, as the EU's biggest net donor, the next largest would have come from Britain ... not only did the EU pay for much of the infrastructure that enabled Cadbury to shut down its English factory and move it to Poland; it signed off on a massive financial inducement for Cadbury to go.'"
Meek himself would have liked the Remain vote to win in the EU referendum but recognises that these kinds of transactions give the EU a very bad name.
I don't want to get into that argument right now. My current preoccupation is with improving the way humans behave towards each other more generally. In that context, what strikes me most about Meek's story is the desire for profit at any cost, with no thought for moral or social consequences, and the role in events of shadowy figures divorced entirely from the people their decisions affect - hedge fund partners, wealth fund investors. The passage that resonates above all, the one that contains the kernel of where we have gone wrong, I think, is this one:
"It [where "it" is the shift of a sense of duty and moral responsibility for the care of workers from individual businesses and business people to the impersonal entity that is government] made it easier for companies whose owners have no interest in the cultural weight of the enterprises they control - who see such ideas as history, place, community, aesthetics and paternalism as outmoded obstacles to efficiency - to act as if they operate in a space outside culture, even as their decisions radically transform it."
It seems to me that we very, very urgently need a worldwide movement that mirrors the erstwhile "crusading wing of Quaker capitalism" and a reintroduction (or, in most cases, just an introduction) of the attitude of that group's members among business leaders everywhere:
"They cared how their works appeared to God, their workers, their peers and their neighbours. Their ideology of practical, aesthetic social justice, formed at the confluence of fundamentalist Protestantism, capitalism, socialism and the Victorian fascination with an idealised medieval England, was both contradictory and, to many contemporaries, inspiring."
The fascination with an idealised medieval England could probably be left out of the recipe, but in other respects I think we could do worse. It is absolutely wrong that the lives of many blameless people in Britain have been profoundly altered - and not for the better - by a combination of a "lumbering supranational bureaucracy" and the greed of wealthy investors in Qatar. Unless there is a radical change in perspective and philosophy, so that wealth is not admired or regarded as a mark of success unless it is accompanied by a strong and incontestable commitment social justice, European civilisation - or whatever tattered remnants remain of it - is doomed.
Sunday, 2 July 2017
Helping People
Howard Jacobson was on Point of View on Radio 4, talking about Manchester and the night when a young man blew himself up there, killing and injuring lots of people. I was driving through Hertfordshire, listening to him. This is what he was saying:
"When I heard of taxi drivers offering their services gratis on the night of the atrocity, ferrying parents and children home from the event, helping the distraught search for missing friends, I thought of my late father, who drove a black cab in Manchester for many years and would have acted in exactly the same spirit. He saw his taxi as something between a fire engine, an ambulance, a police car and an advice centre. Had I offered to admire his finely evolved sense of social responsibility, he'd have accused me of using unnecessarily long words. He was someone who just liked helping people out. Being useful defined him as a man. In this he was of his time but also of his place. It isn't to sentimentalise Mancunians to say, well, that they have a finely evolved sense of social responsibility. Put more simply, they seem nicer up there than down south. There isn't that angry scramble to make money and get ahead that you feel in London. It isn't dog eat dog; it's dog help dog."
I didn't hear much after that, as I managed to hit a bollard and my tyre immediately went completely flat. I parked outside a shop. It was a Sunday evening and I was in a very small town where no one was around and very little appeared to be open.
I knew that in theory my insurance company was supposed to supply me with roadside assistance but when I rang them, after I recovered from the shock of discovering that, as I'm insured in Belgium, I had the choice of talking either in Flemish or French, but not English, (derr, Zoe, what did you expect - it is not a trilingual but a bilingual country) and after me and the woman at the other end of the line had negotiated our way through whether I had a trailer - as I didn't recognise the word, she had to go through a long explanation about a thing you pull behind the car sometimes, if you need to load up rubbish or furniture; ditto with the concept of a roof rack, another piece of vocabulary I've never needed until now - it became clear from her questions about whether there was a hotel nearby, (no), and whether I had a credit card on me, should I actually manage to find a hotel nearby with an empty room, that I might be in for a long, long wait.
But at that moment I noticed movement outside my window. A very young man was gesticulating, in what I thought was probably a friendly manner, through the glass. Ignoring childhood strictures about not talking to strangers, I wound down the window. He grinned at me. "Would you like some help" he asked.
He then proceeded to change my tyre for me while his girlfriend told me how they'd met in the air scouts and how she'd just finished her GCSEs and he'd done them last year and was now working as a mechanic, (or possibly a trainee mechanic). The only way I was of any assistance was in accessing the internet to locate where my spare tyre actually was - I didn't even know I had one - and how to retrieve it. His explanation, as I thanked him over and over again, was simple. "I like helping people", he said.
I got his girlfriend to give me an address and I posted them each a box of Belgian chocolates, which unfortunately arrived in England during the recent heatwave. I hope they reached my benefactors and were not too ruined. It seemed a very small gesture, compared to what he in particular had done for me. Which was:
a. to prove that Jacobson is wrong about the South of England, which contains people as 'dog help dog' as anywhere in the North
b. to cheer me up about the state of Britain, (perhaps even the world), by demonstrating that it contains people who like helping people so much that they go out of their way on a Sunday evening, wasting quite a lot of time and energy, when they could just whizz on home
c. to inspire me to lead a life that is a great deal less selfish
A week after that I flew back to Australia to see my mother. On my first day home I persuaded myself to go to the fruit and vegetable market, even though I didn't feel much like doing so. Thank heavens I did. For it turned out it would be my very last opportunity to encounter another beacon of kindness, a shop assistant called Robyn, who has worked there for years and who I have loved since the first moment I saw her. That day was her very last day working - "It's my legs", she explained, "I am 71 and they just hurt with all the standing - but I am a bit nervous as I'll miss all the people I meet".
Robyn has cheered me up with her warmth and sympathetic nature for years and years, but what I hadn't realised until I went there the other day is that I am not the only person she has been cheering. There were hordes of people lining up to say goodbye to her, some in tears, all sad to see her going. By just standing at a till and being friendly and interested, Robyn has been improving the existences of dozens and dozens of people over several decades.
I may be a bit slow on the uptake, but I think possibly the universe is trying to tell me something important with these small reminders - something about how making a community and a good society can be the work of individuals, each of us using kindness, warmth and generosity as the building blocks. You don't have to go to Manchester to find these qualities but, instead of some of the things that education, the media, practically every outside influence currently puts emphasis on, these are the elements we all need to cultivate within ourselves.
Me especially.
"When I heard of taxi drivers offering their services gratis on the night of the atrocity, ferrying parents and children home from the event, helping the distraught search for missing friends, I thought of my late father, who drove a black cab in Manchester for many years and would have acted in exactly the same spirit. He saw his taxi as something between a fire engine, an ambulance, a police car and an advice centre. Had I offered to admire his finely evolved sense of social responsibility, he'd have accused me of using unnecessarily long words. He was someone who just liked helping people out. Being useful defined him as a man. In this he was of his time but also of his place. It isn't to sentimentalise Mancunians to say, well, that they have a finely evolved sense of social responsibility. Put more simply, they seem nicer up there than down south. There isn't that angry scramble to make money and get ahead that you feel in London. It isn't dog eat dog; it's dog help dog."
I didn't hear much after that, as I managed to hit a bollard and my tyre immediately went completely flat. I parked outside a shop. It was a Sunday evening and I was in a very small town where no one was around and very little appeared to be open.
I knew that in theory my insurance company was supposed to supply me with roadside assistance but when I rang them, after I recovered from the shock of discovering that, as I'm insured in Belgium, I had the choice of talking either in Flemish or French, but not English, (derr, Zoe, what did you expect - it is not a trilingual but a bilingual country) and after me and the woman at the other end of the line had negotiated our way through whether I had a trailer - as I didn't recognise the word, she had to go through a long explanation about a thing you pull behind the car sometimes, if you need to load up rubbish or furniture; ditto with the concept of a roof rack, another piece of vocabulary I've never needed until now - it became clear from her questions about whether there was a hotel nearby, (no), and whether I had a credit card on me, should I actually manage to find a hotel nearby with an empty room, that I might be in for a long, long wait.
But at that moment I noticed movement outside my window. A very young man was gesticulating, in what I thought was probably a friendly manner, through the glass. Ignoring childhood strictures about not talking to strangers, I wound down the window. He grinned at me. "Would you like some help" he asked.
He then proceeded to change my tyre for me while his girlfriend told me how they'd met in the air scouts and how she'd just finished her GCSEs and he'd done them last year and was now working as a mechanic, (or possibly a trainee mechanic). The only way I was of any assistance was in accessing the internet to locate where my spare tyre actually was - I didn't even know I had one - and how to retrieve it. His explanation, as I thanked him over and over again, was simple. "I like helping people", he said.
I got his girlfriend to give me an address and I posted them each a box of Belgian chocolates, which unfortunately arrived in England during the recent heatwave. I hope they reached my benefactors and were not too ruined. It seemed a very small gesture, compared to what he in particular had done for me. Which was:
a. to prove that Jacobson is wrong about the South of England, which contains people as 'dog help dog' as anywhere in the North
b. to cheer me up about the state of Britain, (perhaps even the world), by demonstrating that it contains people who like helping people so much that they go out of their way on a Sunday evening, wasting quite a lot of time and energy, when they could just whizz on home
c. to inspire me to lead a life that is a great deal less selfish
A week after that I flew back to Australia to see my mother. On my first day home I persuaded myself to go to the fruit and vegetable market, even though I didn't feel much like doing so. Thank heavens I did. For it turned out it would be my very last opportunity to encounter another beacon of kindness, a shop assistant called Robyn, who has worked there for years and who I have loved since the first moment I saw her. That day was her very last day working - "It's my legs", she explained, "I am 71 and they just hurt with all the standing - but I am a bit nervous as I'll miss all the people I meet".
Robyn has cheered me up with her warmth and sympathetic nature for years and years, but what I hadn't realised until I went there the other day is that I am not the only person she has been cheering. There were hordes of people lining up to say goodbye to her, some in tears, all sad to see her going. By just standing at a till and being friendly and interested, Robyn has been improving the existences of dozens and dozens of people over several decades.
I may be a bit slow on the uptake, but I think possibly the universe is trying to tell me something important with these small reminders - something about how making a community and a good society can be the work of individuals, each of us using kindness, warmth and generosity as the building blocks. You don't have to go to Manchester to find these qualities but, instead of some of the things that education, the media, practically every outside influence currently puts emphasis on, these are the elements we all need to cultivate within ourselves.
Me especially.
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