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Mortality 101 – or; Catullus at the graveside

The Oldie runs my poem for the Armistice commemorations.


For The Oldie

I ink, therefore I am

On the choice and acquisition of my one and only tattoo.


For The Oldie

NEWS AT A GLANCE

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The average salary of professors at Dublin University is £530.

The Nelson Evening Mail, March 14 1907
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The persecution of Christians is now worse than at any time in history.

Toto’s ‘Africa’ is one of Myleene Klass’s all-time favourites.

The Hillsborough disaster is still in the news.

Simon Bolivar, a Venezuelan military and political leader, liberated Colombia.

The quern performs best when the grindstone has been pitted.

Not everything in life is a $20 jerk-job.

In the ten years of the ‘Cultural Revolution’, the Chinese population increased by 200 million.

Kevin Spacey has always been gay.

Quite a few forests have no trees to speak of.

Orlando is a thoroughly disconnected short novel by the famously unreadable and wildly overrated Virginia Woolf, whose long-suffering husband was a colonial civil servant in Ceylon.

The odds on a white Christmas have been slashed to 2/1.

Nobody ever sits in a badly-lit cellar holding the day’s newspaper for a camera without feeling fear.

Legoland Windsor is full.
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NEWS AT A GLANCE

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The Queen won a first prize for bantams at the King’s Lynn Fur and Feather Society’s show.

The Nelson Evening Mail, January 6 1909
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In LA there is a chess set designed for the East India Company, featuring Sikh soldiers vs Afghans.

Among a certain kind of people, being ‘passionate about Israel/Palestine’ is usually a substitute for having any actual political thought.

During WWII, in Germany, a Django Reinhardt record was worth 2kgs of butter on the black market.

A sailor has a tattoo of a swallow for every 5,000 nautical miles he has travelled.

Sam Lewis Craft has been named the Rain Men Player of the Year.

Alfred the Great of England believed that a thorough grounding in the liberal arts was essential for those called to exercise judgement and authority.

A South Benfleet millionaire has revealed how she earns £1,472/hr.

A town in Iceland has painted 3D zebra crossings in an attempt to slow down speeding cars.

Bobby Kennedy had an affair with Marilyn Monroe, then had her killed by Communists.

Truth is harder to bear than ignorance, and so ignorance is valued more.

Brett Dean’s new opera, Hamlet, contains precisely zero tunes.

The Fuegian word ‘mamihlapintafoi’ means ‘(two people) looking at each other, hoping that either will offer to do something which both parties desire but are unwilling to do’.

In 2017 over half the people living in absolute poverty work for a living.
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NEWS AT A GLANCE

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All over China temples have been turned into schools with surprising alacrity.

The Nelson Evening Mail, July 26 1906
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The owl of Minerva flies only at dusk.

Though rare, there have been exactly 201 documented cases of spontaneous combustion.

J Sainbury plc is cutting 2000 Human Resources employees.

The collective noun for brown anchovies is a ‘finish’.

Typing and playing the piano can wear your fingerprints away.

Actors cheers each other up by exchanging bad reviews.

When a ship sinks, the crew are released from their oath of loyalty to the captain.

Translator and poet Paul Celan committed suicide in 1970.

It’s Van Month this October at Renault.

Just because it’s in the Guardian doesn’t mean it’s wrong.

The men of Crete are mostly fair, very tall, sometimes gigantic.

It looks very much as if Everton will be looking for a new manager in the morning.

Without George W Bush there would have been no President Trump.
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Chinese food (after Jung Chang)

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Ancient Chinese proverb

The most capable woman cannot make a meal without food.


Chinese Communist Party saying

A capable woman can make a meal without food.
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NEWS AT A GLANCE

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Only about three in every hundred amateur novel-writers find their way into print, except at their own expense.

The Nelson Evening Mail, January 22 1907

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The erection of a verandah is a useful way to extend one’s living quarters.

Seven American states observe Abraham Lincoln’s birthday as a public holiday.

There is only one Tunumiisut-French grammar.

Anne Watson has just moved to university here, and right now really needs money to live. She is willing to go on a date – and has massive breasts.

There is a shark that can live for 400 years.

In 1945 the Soviet Union took the side of Chiang Kai-shek against the Chinese communists.

What in Britain is called the Special Relationship, in Germany is called treason.

Working-class people swear a lot.

At birth, a baby’s focal distance is not much more than 20cm.

In a recent survey, atheists and agnostics knew the most about religion. In second place were Mormons; third Jews; and then all other forms of Christianity.

Barack Obama is Irish.

The revolution will not be printed in Comic Sans.

The word ‘acrylic’ does not benefit from repetitive translation.
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An Oxford squaddie

From deer park to gun park…

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Sixteen years ago, American and British forces hurled themselves into Afghanistan the same week I arrived at Magdalen College, Oxford.

I didn’t give them much thought – although the ‘War on Terror’ was immediately everywhere. I had an Egyptology degree to get to grips with; and choral evensong to sing; and hockey to play; and girls to chase; and booze to drink.

I was in Cairo the following academic year, when Coalition troops invaded Iraq. And then I moved to Sri Lanka, which had its own war going on. And then returned and did a Master’s in the War Studies faculty at KCL. But still I didn’t think of war as something I would personally get involved in.

I am not what you’d call natural military material. ‘Independent-minded’ was, I think, my old headmaster’s gentle euphemism. And a major falling-out with Magdalen had left me feeling wary about big, traditional institutions. Upbringing, too, had hardly prepped me for it. As kids, we weren’t allowed toy guns, and had a ban on TV and/or games involving violence. My brief time in the RAF cadets expired when we were tested on the rank-structure. I don’t like polishing. I left the Cubs because it clashed with choir practice.

But once I had begun to earn a living (ha!) as a writer, I thought perhaps I could be a war correspondent – and so thought I’d better learn a bit about it.

At 28 I was already too old to become a career officer – it’s been done, anyway: the literary-officer thing – so I joined the Honourable Artillery Company, an ancient and somewhat idiosyncratic Reserve (then ‘TA’) unit in a modest castle just off City Road.

An HAC field weekend will typically involve more PhDs than big guns (the artillery in question being ‘Longe Bowes’ back in 1537); I’ve found one of our more retiring active members depicted in the National Portrait Gallery; and the regiment once purportedly fielded an entire rugby team called Henry. Thus it ought to be a breeding ground for whole platoons of Paddy Leigh Fermors; and yet, somehow, it isn’t. But in times of conflict, many members nonetheless have served their country with distinction – including one who thought the First World War was absolutely ripping.

So, in November 2012, I volunteered for Operation HERRICK – cf. ‘Fourth Afghan War’ – as Trooper Smyth (30075856), attached to 5th Regiment, a surveillance unit of The Royal Artillery, under the operational aegis of 1st Mechanised Brigade.

We were sent to ‘integrate’ at Catterick, where the regulars promptly dumped us in a disused block which stank of fish, six miles from the regimental HQ.

We did not, shall we say, have much in common. The gunners called us ‘STABs’ right from the get-go. They looked, and they behaved, like kids. They lived to massacre the English language (‘squaddielalia’, as my friend Harry called it) to an anthropologically-fascinating extent. They were all called either Brown or Thompson. And they almost all outranked us. It’s one thing playing trooper, part-time, in a regiment that thinks it is ungentlemanly to be a try-hard. Quite another in a unit where everyone else has just been made lance corporal.

I was 31. Many of them weren’t far off half my age. The concept of my being a writer was quite beyond them. For one glorious week I was David Duchovny in Californication; the rest of the time they thought that I was ‘on the dole’.

They were suspicious of anyone who liked to do things quietly and/or alone: Harry got absolutely screamed at for having his Kindle out – while everybody else was on a smoke-break. Accordingly, they took a person sitting on his own as evidence that he was in desperate need of company. I kept myself to myself; and on the few weekends when I couldn’t get away I made for a tea-room in the centre of Richmond (100% soldier-proof) or hit the charity shops.

Apart from simply standing out, of course, we part-timers were quite properly concerned that, practically, we might turn out to be less competent. Well. Once you’ve seen a soldier’s mag drop out of his rifle mid-range, or him lose his morphine pens, or pass out at a memorial parade…

Heading down the M1 to RAF Brize Norton, listening to Handel just about as loud as I could make it, my kit-bag was very heavy. It was full of books. And a tin-plaque Rodin’s ‘Thinker’ from my father, with the legend: ‘What if the Hokey Cokey really is what it’s all about?’

Bin Laden was already long-dead (and the movies in the cinema) by the time I touched down in Helmand, and it turned out there was not a lot for us to do there. In the context of the accelerating British ‘drawdown’, our surveillance role was essentially reduced to base-protection.

In the first week or so, Camp Bastion came under rocket attack. But after that things quietened down (I was shot at twice more, by my count), and we Reservists twigged we were the subs bench, stuck fixing broken camera equipment 6 days a week in what was fatuously termed the ‘gun park’. I decided to cut my losses, reverted hastily to type, and was quickly drafted into the Ops Room. It took one day before a gunner complained I’d told him what to do.

I read even more voraciously than usual (all the major prophets of doom – Frank Ledwidge; Max Boot; George MacDonald Fraser – as well as Cormac McCarthy just for light relief); I took endless notes (the army’s requirement that you keep a notebook is a helpful cover); and I made coffee, sorted post, put people and materiel on planes, and answered the phone. One day it was the 5th Regt. CO, calling to find out if my boss, a Cambridge music graduate, had once been in Mumford & Sons. (He had.)

I keenly volunteered for things. Duty driver; watch-tower; even a guard shift at the prison. Getting out of the Ops Room was still the high point of the day, and I’d take any excuse to drive down to the flight line with crypto packages, or surveillance spares that needed a responsible courier, looking for likely types to chat to. I had lunch one day with the major in charge of all the ISO containers. Chaplains, too, are usually good eggs. The vagaries of the HAC’s dress-regs meant soldiers treated one with useful caution, while officers would often stop to have a natter.

In the battery lines, meanwhile Private Brown asked, out of nowhere, if I’d been to ‘college’ – and I decided not to make the obvious gag.

Eventually, I got out. And to Kabul, of all places. The first thing I did was send a postcard home, of TE Lawrence: ‘Made it.’

The second thing I did – after only two months in Afghanistan – was my job. Surveillance. It wasn’t that exciting; but at least there was some purpose to it. No-one was blown up on my watch.

And it was a happy time. Keeping myself to myself, out and about, away from battery strictures, and being, near as damnit, my own chain of command. My favourite feeling was to come off a night-shift (whole hours of alone time), eat, drink coffee, and write a letter in the rising sunlight. If I got bored, I chatted to the Sri Lankan blokes who staffed the kitchens.

I went to Camp Souter, named in honour of a classic British military disaster. I went to Shawqat, a mud-brick castle built by our military forebears, which the locals, perhaps mischievously, said we should feel free to use again this time around. I went to Lashkar Gah, days after Task Force Helmand shut up shop there taking all the top brass back to Bastion. I was briefly grilled by a colonel from the Adjutant-General’s Corps who was convinced I must be gouging the MoD for some inflated City salary, when I was on a private’s pay (and glad of it!). And I got very close indeed to interviewing my overall boss at the time, brigade commander Rupert Jones (son of Lt Col H Jones VC: he of Goose Green). It was felt, though, in the end, that this might pose certain problems re ‘authority’, a private soldier asking a general what we were doing there.

I even ran into an ex-girlfriend of mine – from Magdalen, obviously – working her way up through the Foreign Office. What she made of my ‘trajectory’ she was too polite to say.

I escaped the lines one final time, to write an in-house article on the collapsing of Patrol Base Attal. I never filed it. But for one great week, I slept under the stars, shaved in a bowl, and lived entirely on ration boxes. “Finally.” I thought. “Some ****ing soldiering.” I was on the last flight out of Attal, before contractors ploughed it back into the ground.

Dr Johnson once said ‘every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier’; and I have to say I actually look back on my deployment rather proudly. But I cannot say I’d recommend the squaddie life.

We landed back in England, at Brize Norton. As the train pulled out of Oxford, I forbade myself a look back at the dreaming spires.


For The Oldie

Turning Japanese stomachs

Confessions of a Mask
by Yukio Mishima

Penguin, 170pp, £8.99

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Born two years after the Great Earthquake of 1923, in ‘not too good a section of Tokyo’, Kochan is a sickly child, brought up by stultifying parents and a morbid grandmother.

His first reliable memory is of the ‘night-soil’ man, and he immediately becomes obsessed with tragic lives, particularly in story books: anybody who is ‘fated for death’.

He is furious upon discovering that his favourite doomed knight is actually Joan of Arc. But after seeing a performance by a female magician, he begins to dress up in his mother’s clothing – and by adolescence he is committed to playing his ‘part’ upon life’s stage, ‘without ever once revealing my true self.’

Kochan is a literally and literarily pained young man, quoting Wilde, Huysmans, and sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld. He edits a Hungarian fairy tale to make the hero’s grisly end more realistic.

He quickly realises his interests are not merely aesthetic. He is aroused by the sight of marauding priests, sweating soldiers, sea-bathers, male in-laws. He stashes away images of (thin-ish) wrestlers and samurai as other boys would hide their porn mags.

Aged 12, he jerks off for the first time – over a picture of Guido Reni’s St Sebastian.

He falls in love with the school jock – ‘because of him I cannot love an intellectual person’ – and falls back out again some pages later, having got an envy-boner at the sight of hairy armpits.

He struggles, naturally enough, to blend in, since he has no idea what other boys are even thinking. (In his defence, mind you, he’s at the sort of pretentious, rigid school where grabbing other boys’ cocks is viewed as a normal playground pastime.)

His anaemia is counterbalanced by a raging blood-thirst. He daydreams, elaborately, of his family being obliterated in an air-raid; of tying a class-mate to a pillar and then stabbing him; of slaughtering ‘many white slaves of Arabia, princes of savage tribes’. He has long-since been enraptured by his own death.

A schoolfriend’s sister appears to provide the social cover that he’s needed. The approach of war looks set to grant him what he wants: ‘some natural, spontaneous suicide’.

A tough and compact piece of literature – in the manner of a JG Ballard, say, or Anthony Burgess – the most surprising thing about Confessions of a Mask is that, for all its euphemistic delicacy (‘inversion’, ‘bad habit’, ‘big thing’), this boundary-pushing novel was published only four years after Japan’s atomic cataclysm.

It is also plainly autobiographical. But as an exercise in personal catharsis, alas, it did not do the trick. Two decades, several dozen books, and three Nobel Prize nominations later, Mishima launched a one-man para-military coup, and wound up disembowelling himself. At least one biographer suggests that this was his intention from the outset.


For The Amorist

Veterans of modern wars

In a mid-September interview with the Sunday Telegraph, Baron Richards of Herstmonceux (GCB, CBE, DSO, DL – better known as General David Richards, former Chief of the Defence Staff) made a comment to the effect that “a part-time soldier cannot be as effective as someone who’s devoted his life to it and puts on a uniform every day.”

This would have been news to the 60 or so Reservist men and women who gathered last Thursday evening for a dinner to recognise the contributions of members of the Honourable Artillery Company who served on operational tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Organised by Lt Gearoid O’Connor and LCpls Ben McAndrew and Hamish Dickie – the Commanding Officer having squared the hire of the illustrious venue – this social event was unusual in being attended exclusively by soldiers (including guests and regular army training staff) with an operational service medal for Ops TELIC (Iraq), HERRICK (Afghanistan) and precursors such as Operation GRANBY.

It is estimated that approximately 250 Honourable Artillery Company soldiers were involved in the (most recent) wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a good handful of them deploying on more than one occasion. Two deaths – those of Tpr Jack Sadler and Lt Ed Drummond-Baxter – are recorded on the regimental Roll of Honour.

At least one reservist from another regiment was killed during my own tour of Afghanistan; and I overlapped with regular officers from other units who had started their careers alongside or immediately after me on the HAC recruits course, as well as fellow reservists who have subsequently embarked on full-time military careers.

The Guest Speaker for the dinner was Brigadier James Roddis (DSO, MBE – Commander Specialised Infantry Group), who, beneath a portrait of the HAC’s erstwhile CO Ted Heath, spoke of the unmatchable experience of war, and the bonds formed between those who’ve been on operational duty.

Though some attendees* raised an eyebrow re the strength and nature of those bonds [see – ahem – my forthcoming piece in this publication], Brig. Roddis went on, importantly, to ruminate on future wars, and to predict another brigade-level British expeditionary deployment rather sooner than one might imagine.

The deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan were both brigade-level. And, in the case of Afghanistan, at least, reservists made up approximately 10% of each deployment.

* Alas, this call-sign was unable to attend the dinner, confined to barracks on account of newborn. But – on a lighter note – he looks forward to the next dining opportunity, as hosted by the Corps of Drums, at which Bruce Dickinson will be the Guest of Honour. (That is Bruce Dickinson, NB, of Iron Maiden – and not, as one young officer had understood it, David Dickinson.)


For The Oldie