Letter from my terrace in Palma 12 'One Man in an Ambulance'
16
August, 2018
One
Man in an Ambulance
If you
have not read about Harris getting lost in the maze at Hampton Court, go and
read it now. And about George’s shirt in
the River Thames. And about Harris, George and J trying to open a tin of
pineapple without a tin opener. I have mentioned the book before in these
letters but again I suggest you read it. Beg, buy, borrow or even download a
copy of ‘Three Men in a Boat’. It is a
great tonic for this long, hot summer.
In
1889 three young men decided they needed a holiday on a boat on the River
Thames. They went from London upstream
to Oxford and then downstream back to London again. Well, almost back to London. Why they never finished the journey is
something else you can discover when you read the account of their adventures.
It has
become the best expression of the easy-going life of three young men at the end
of the 19th century. Victoria was on the throne and all was well. The trip up
the Thames as far as Oxford provides a nostalgia for the England of the time.
And the
writer? What happened to Jerome K.
Jerome, the only writer, I think, with a palindromic name? Ford Madox Ford
almost qualifies, but not quite. His middle name would have to be just an
initial. Anyway, after such a carefree jaunt up the River Thames, what did
Jerome do?
Life
is never a smooth journey for long. In 1914 the First World War broke out. Jerome wanted to do something. At 56 he was
too old for the army so he volunteered as an ambulance driver at the front.
It
must have been a terrible experience. His secretary said that when he returned,
‘He was not the same Jerome. He was strange.’ Yet in his autobiography, ‘My
Life and Times’, published in 1926 just a year before he died, there is still
something of the old Jerome. There is
still his enjoyment of the oddities of life. There is still some of the old
spirit and humour.
We
like to file away our writers firmly in a pigeon hole. For us they are not
human beings with complex lives. Once
they are safely dead and cannot surprise us with new work, we give them
convenient labels which we can understand.
So it
is with Jerome K. Jerome. Driving an
ambulance at the front in the First World War is an uncomfortable truth for us.
We push it to one side and try to forget it. What we want to hold on to is the
carefree creator of the three men and a dog in their boat.
In the
same way we want Kipling to be eternally in India writing the Mowgli stories.
This is what we understand. In fact, he wrote the Jungle Books while living in
Vermont, so Mowgli and Baloo were created in New England. We blot out Kipling’s
years in the States and we forget his years as the squire of Batemans, his
house in the countryside of Sussex.
Some
writers we delete altogether. The fame
of Sherlock Holmes deprives Conan Doyle of any sort of existence at all.
Sherlock Holmes lives on while Doyle remains a vague shadow.
Doyle
tried to kill off Sherlock Holmes when Holmes began to take over his life.
Holmes fell with Moriarty into the Reichenbach Falls and that was supposed to
be that. But the public demanded Holmes’s return, and so back he came giving
Watson a tremendous shock. ‘I rose to my
feet, stared at him for some seconds in utter amazement, and then it appears
that I must have fainted for the first and the last time in my life.’
We,
the demanding public, do not like our basic concepts to be shattered. We cannot
accept anything which does not fit with our simple view of life. We like our
world to make sense. We believe in our labels.
So, we
must broaden our minds. We must accept
contradictions. We must tolerate inconsistencies. Jerome left the comfort of
London and drove an ambulance at the front in France. We must let our favourite
writers live full lives. Above all, we
must take out those labels that we keep for our own ease and tear them up. Life
is never that simple.
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