Saturday, January 23, 2021

People and Things

 My wife, Margreet, who has been checking my rather extensive autobiography, says that she would like to know more about the people in it. That failing is because I am more at home and comfortable with inanimate things rather than people. With things, situations, and places, I know more or less what to do or not to do, or make note of. With people I am not so sure and do not like to offend. Moreover, they are extremely complex.

So I got to thinking about some of the people who have influenced my life in major or minor ways. 

Arthur Keep was gardener to my grandfather and later worked on our Silchester chicken farm. 

When grandfather bought a car, he asked "Keep" if he would abandon gardening to become the chauffeur. Arthur Keep drove the car to the end of the rather long drive, didn't like it, dismounted, and remained gardener.

He and I, though he was much older, got on well. So from him, and my father in a different way, I learned the ways of the country and countryfolk.

Arthur Keep recalled later that as a small boy I would go to his dwelling and ask for "half a nana", and I presume was given it. And when he retired to a small cottage near Aldermaston, and where I would sometimes stay when painting landscape in the district, he taught me how to eat a tomato in the hands by making a hole in the skin, sucking out some pulp, replacing it with vinegar salt and plenty of pepper and consuming it with bread and butter. And outside in the sunshine, with the tomato warm and straight from the vine, it was quite delicious.

In his old age he would take a great delight in watching black and white children's television.

It was probably that having taken me rather under his wing that I was happy catching newts with the village boys (bad form) and drinking nettle tea with our lengthman - a man in charge of the surface and drainage of road (also bad form). But on his advice I avoided the Tadley gypsies (good form). I did once visit Tadley to meet our maid's family. When the door opened, there, hanging from the wall, was a large black pig, dead and cold, ready for butchery (one remembers these things).

Sights like that were normal, as was the baking of bread in most villages. This bread was baked in such ways that other peoples bread was always different and seemed to taste better than our own. It was something to relish, as was the bread and butter consumed at Arthur Keep's cottage with ripe tomatoes. 

With WW 2 well under way (I'm sure it should be "weigh"), I disembarked from a liner in Montreal, in Canada, as a pubescent 15 year old refugee. I was being possibly the only member of my family to survive the imminent Nazi invasion of the UK. 

My kind hosts, the Killorins, collected me and we drove down to Watertown, Connecticut where my host worked with a brass factory and my hostess in the very smart Taft School. I soon came to realise that I had landed in a very foreign country and that I was a misfit in it.

Because of my adopted family's connections with the school I was enrolled there, where I excelled only in sport. So I was sent by bus each day to a Trade School in Torrington, Connecticut. There I learned to draw cog wheels and had difficulty with the over-befriending headmaster who thought I might be a good match for his plain daughter.

With no money, except for the magazine subscriptions that I sold locally, life was a bit bleak.

That was, until I met a person called Souther Buttrick, a fellow, but American misfit.

Souther did not fit in with the almost ritualistic American way of life. Older than me by several years, he lived alone above his parents' garage as a wood sculptor, clarinet player, furniture mender, Bull Durham smoker and whisky drinker. His chaotic eyrie smelled of smoke, freshly-cut wood and Bourbon. There was a most pleasant haze about it.

Souther didn't speak a lot and got on with his creative processes. 

In the room where I lived I designed and made a musical instrument, helped in the garden, and dug us out of the enormous snow-drifts that piled up outside each winter. 

In Souther's place I was happy and felt at home. And what I learned there about wood and wood sculpture has stood me in good stead ever since.

Unbeknown to Souther, he did me a most useful service by giving me too much Bourbon one evening. I lived a short distance away from his hideaway, and to cover the distance on this occasion I recall resorting to all fours. Regaining my room, the bed tried to tip me on to the floor as the walls around moved in all directions. I have been in many a tipsy state since but never one like that. The lesson learned had been a  memorable one. 

When once I returned to America it was important to me that I locate Souther to say how much I had appreciated his company during early wartime before returning to fly in the RAF, and to tell him how he had influenced my future.

I did find him, living alone in the countryside, mending antique wooden furniture.

He had forgotten me.

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

The Hand - Written Word


My age alone entitles me to be a Luddite. I'm of a period where pencils, pens, inkwells, and ledgers were once the normal. I should embrace the electronic age, but I don't. And in not doing so I take great pleasure in seeing those who rely almost entirely on their collection of magical, electronic gadgets suddenly find that all their personal and business details have been swallowed up by the machinery. Or thieves, cleverer than them, may have caused ruination, when just a backup with pen on paper with passwords and "how it was done" information might have saved a lot of anguish.

The world has moved on and I have been standing still, painting, blogging (actually using a Windows 95 as a word-processor), and handing on my words to Margreet who bounces them off satellites to be harvested by those who are interested and have the means to capture them.

To even imagine abolishing electronics is quite ridiculous, even for a Luddite like me, as most people on earth now depend on them for their very livelihoods.

The time-saving in using the internet for gleaning information is astounding and wonderful. Yet the time and money wasted in using them and trying to get them to work, updated or repaired, is also enormous - as  is their consumption of paper.

Even I would find life to be much duller without access to Margreet's electronic expertise.

I had started writing this piece when executing my annual, post-Christmas letters, replying to friends from far afield, seldom met, and who have sent cards.

At least, Christmas cards now generally have a piece that is hand-written inside along with the printed greetings. That is nice, and hopeful, inasmuch as I see pen put to card - though I would rather receive the written bit without the expensive, wasteful cards with their often bland and meaningless, non-Christmassy decoration. And cards with printed greetings that are signed with only "Bill and Sue" are also almost as insulting as having their names printed as well. Who are Bill and Sue anyway?

A pen and ink communication indicates to me that someone has taken time (and now almost skill) to do it. A letter or even a newsy postcard arriving through the letterbox is a sort of return to fundamental values.

I might shout: "Luddites unite". No chance, because here I am, actually relying on computers to tell you, more or less, what I am thinking.