Friday, 21 January 2011

The Church Organist

Lunchtime in the pub there could be three or four domino schools on the go and a constant drone of banter, gossip. He was invariably there in the winter as we always had a big fire, but he was tolerated by the other players, not liked. They were all of a similar age, but somehow the others looked younger, more hearty, robust and alive. There was the verger and two or three active members of the church and sometimes the vicar would drop in for drink so they knew him well. It was the vicar’s wife who told me that they had moved to the village in the same year, 1953.

I understood their reservations for although he was always extremely polite, and neatly dressed, he was not a man you could warm to for he had a cadaverous, blue veined face with a long pointed, sniffy nose and rheumy eyes. The nails on his long bony fingers were scrupulously clean and meticulously manicured. He had been widowed for twenty three years lived alone and seemed to have no family or friends and seldom had much to say. For sixteen years he had played the organ in the church across the road.

When I became landlord of the pub I inherited the domino players, three dart teams, the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffalos and the 1914 -18 Hot Pot Dinner. This dinner, a tradition handed down since the 1920’s, was for local men who fought in the Great War., those who made it home. It was held every year on or near the eleventh and paid for by the brewery. In my first year 1970, we served twenty three men, some of them domino players, three years on we were down to fifteen. The organist never attended.

In the four years that I had been serving his beer we had only exchanged polite, banal platitudes, but then one February lunchtime in 1974 it all changed. There was a customary lull at the tables for a pee break and he came to the bar, as he always did, on his own. The others bought their drinks in rounds, but he always got his own and would painstakingly count out correct change from a small purse, which I always found irritating. That day there were two young guys standing at the bar discussing a documentary on 20th century warfare that they had seen the previous night. Aware that he must have heard some of their conversation and feeling the need say something as I pulled his pint I said, ‘What do you make of all this talk of war?’ I was not expecting a reply.

‘Oh,’ he said slowly, ‘I don’t much like to think about that sort of thing,’ and then he paused and said slowly, ‘I‘ve been living on borrowed time these last fifty years.’

He paid and went back to his dominos and I was busy with other customers but something about the pause, fifty years, it intrigued me. He didn’t sup fast, so it was probably the best part of forty minutes before he came back for another pint.

‘Fifty odd years is a long time,’ I said as he counted out his change, ‘you’d be a lot younger then.’

As he was about to hand me his money, he hesitated as if deciding whether this required an answer, and then he said, ‘ I were, nineteen when I joined Liverpool Scottish,’ another pause, ‘and I were at the Marne and it were the first time I saw men killed and it weren’t good.’ He returned to his game.

That conversation, such as it was, took place on a Friday and I had a busy weekend but the words lodged in my mind. I looked up the Battle of the Marne and surprised how early it was, September 1914. He was there at the beginning, long before conscription.

Monday lunch came around and he was back in and when he came to the bar I had to ask, ‘How come you were there so early on?’

‘Oh’, he stopped, I can only think living on his own made him speak so slowly, and then he said, ‘I were with ‘territorials’, we were some of the first to go to France, we went over with General Haig.

Over a period of weeks I learned more, as part of BEF he was involved in some serious early action and though he never said it, he must have had some bloody horrendous times. Sometime later he told me…..

‘It were September 1915 when I got my first home leave, and first thing I wanted to do was to go pub to see my mates, but I felt a bit daft going down in uniform so I got changed. I suppose it were cos I were in civvies the young lasses stopped me’, and here there was a longer pause than normal as if reliving the incident, and he said simply, ‘they gave me two white feathers.’

‘What did you say to them?’ I felt outraged and I had also begun to feel a little ashamed I had totally misread this man, ‘books and covers’ came to mind.

‘Oh’, he sighed, ‘I weren’t going to bandy words with them’, he said, and then, ‘I’ve still got ‘em, silly business really, but they weren’t to know.’

Over the next few months I learned that he served four years in the trenches, the, Somme, Passchendaele, right through to the 11th hour of the 11th day and that his best mate, who’d joined up at the same time, was killed in 1918 on the 10th. That’s why never came to the memorial supper, he said it was best forgot, that he just did not want to remember.

On his way home from church he would sometimes call in for a pint and one Sunday he had his bible and there between the pages were two white feathers. It was as much as I could do to choke back the tears. I made an excuse went down the cellar and I cried, for him, all the names on the Menin Gate, and my ignorance.

He died a year later, there were five people at his funeral. There was no mention of WW1 in the short obituary in the local paper.

Sic transit gloria

Monday, 4 February 2008

Lighter mornings

Imperceptible but oh so welcome the dawn is creeping backwards, here in Shropshire daffodils are out, snowdrops fading and new buds on the honeysuckle.

It is a wonderful world when you have time to stop and look, it's just a pain having to rush around trying to make a living. Or to listen to the news of countries tearing themselves apart, suicide bombers and economic collapse, and

The profligate spending of the rich and vacuous ‘celebrities’ . You can’t help thinking that there has to be reckoning for the human race all six billion and rising. Tom Lehrer wrote a song in sixties about the bomb when we would all go together and fry all 3 billion of us. In forty years the population of the world has doubled, if that’s exponential growth.

How long before nature/Gaia/the planet shrugs its shoulders and says enough of this disgusting two legged parasite that fouls and spoils this beautiful earth.

When I sailed across the oceans in the sixties there were whales, flying fish, sharks and turtles, when sailed across from The Canaries to the West Indies and New York to Falmouth in the nineties, there was plastic, polystyrene and other detritus and no sign of marine life.

The Mediterranean is a sewer the coral around beautiful islands is bleached white and dead Don Henly got it right when he sang, ‘Call somewhere paradise kiss it goodbye’.


Pandemic, or super volcano, climate change or maybe a rogue rock I figure there will an 'adjustment', and make no mistake about it, we are to blame

Stained Glass

The means of creating stained glass was

itself a kind of miracle needing the skills

of both alchemist and artist. The tool

for cutting the glass for example, had

to be cooled in ‘the urine of a three-year-old

goat fed only on ferns or, if that was really

unavailable, the urine of a small red-headed-boy’.

Here stand the complexities of the 16th century mind.

The Kings Glass – A Story of Tudor Power

and Secret Art by Caroline Hicks Chatto £18.99

Sustainability Blog: Recycling and Global Warming

Sustainability Blog: Recycling and Global Warming

Monday, 14 January 2008

Obscurity and Yevtushenko

Just reading a book written about 1700 called a History of Myddle, a village near us. I love the phraseology and these things could happen to any of us eg:
He died soon after he went to Shrewsbury, and as his life was extravagant so his end was strange, for as he sat in an alehouse cellar upon the stands that holds the barrels, and whilst another was drawing drink by him, he was taken with an apoplexy and fell down dead . . .
. . . This Richard Wycherley never married, and therefore he adopted Richard Wycherley (son of his brother Thomas Wycherley of Cockshutt) to be his heir, and put him to school to Mr Suger of Broughton, at what time I was a scholar there. He was very dull at learning, which caused Mr Suger to say very often he had no guts in his brains, but it seems he had gear in his breeches, for he got one of his uncle's servant maids with child, and thereupon his uncle sent him to London and bound him an apprentice there to a person that used some small trade about stuff and jerseys. Before his time was fully expired he married his maid .
The thought of all those lives lived in obscurity, but hey that does not mean obscurity is uninteresting. Yevteshenko wrote, (I'll have to translate from the Russian!).

No people are uninteresting.
Their fate is like the chronicle of planets

Nothing in them is not particular,
and planet is dissimilar from planet

And If a man live in obscurity
making his friends in that obscurity
Obscurity is not uninteresting.

To each his world is private,
and in that world one excellent minute.

And in that world one tragic minute.
These are private.

In any man who dies there dies with him
His first snow and first kiss and fight.
It goes with him.

They are left books and bridges
And painted canvas and machinery.

Whose fate it is to survive.
But what has gone is also not nothing:

By the rule of the game something has gone.
Not people die but worlds die in them.

Whom we knew as faulty, the earth’s creatures.
Of whom, essentially, what did we know?

Brother of a brother? Friend of friends?
Lover of lover?

We who knew our fathers
In everything, in nothing.

They perish. They cannot be brought back.
The secret worlds are not regenerated.

And time again and again
I make my lament against destruction.

Yevtushenko

Ogden Nash

I would live all my life in nonchalance and insouciance, Were it not for making a living, which is rather a nouciance. Ogden Nash