Friends, are YOU a "morning person"? Is that when you get your best ideas? Or are you a bit of a night-owl? Do you "come alive" as soon as the sun goes down? Most of us are one or the other, aren't we, but not area woman Andrea Harris from nearby Basingstoke Hampshire - and my thanks to those hard-working local journalists from the local Onion News for breaking this story - it's quite a "doozy" !
"And which 'camp' are YOU in, Colin?", I hear you cry.
[Not me, I'm 'propping up the bar' at my local 'local' if you must know! - Ed]
Well, seeing as how you're obviously 'gagging' to know (!), this morning I can exclusively reveal that both myself and my medium-to-long-suffering wife Lois are both firmly in the morning person camp, and we're always in bed at the pre-witching hour of 10pm - we make darn sure of that (!).
me and my medium-to-long-suffering wife Lois on our morning
walk today over Weavers Down - we're both long-time and
paid-up members of the "morning person camp"
I'll put my cards on the table here, however. What we actually like is to get up in fairly smartly in the morning when we don't have anything much to do, and can just "mooch around", "slob around", "loll around" or even 'lol around (!), maybe just reading a magazine on the sofa or sitting on the computer - you know?
What we don't like is to have to get up early because we've got to be somewhere early, or because somebody's calling early to do some job or other in our house. That, to us, is the very definition of "the pits" - sorry, but it's true, you know.
And we're having a bit of a "basinful" of that this week - yesterday we had to leave the house at 7:30 am to get Lois to her cataract surgery pre-op session in Guildford, and tomorrow, local handyman Russell is calling at 8 am to do, like, a billion jobs around the house - more probably, if I'm honest (!). And ditto on Friday when local gardener Mitchell is coming at 8 am to start work on, like, a billion jobs around our garden.
"Eight o'clock start" fanatics, (left) local handyman Russell
and (right) local gardener Mitchell - what madness !!!!
What madness! What is it with this people and their liking for that "eight o'clock start" obsession? What's so sacred about that as a start-time, what time of day do you call that etc etc? I think we should be told, don't you? It's total madness !!!! [That's enough madness! - Ed]
So, although it's only Wednesday, Lois and I have to get up early just to get the house ready today, and "clear the decks", just so that Russell can ring our doorbell tomorrow Thursday at 8 am and immediately "crack on" with the, like, billion jobs we've asked him to do.
No fair !!!!
For example, look (1) what we've had to do (1) to Bedroom 4 (a.k.a "The Office" - a Hampshire workplace!), and (2) what we've had to do to Bedroom 2, just so that Russell tomorrow can do a few jobs in there - it's total madness !!!!!
a sleepy-eyed me today, showcasing how Lois and I have had
to (left) more or less "clear" Bedroom 4 (aka the Office), and (right)
pile a load of books onto the bed in Bedroom 2, all just
for local handyman Russell's benefit when he comes tomorrow at 8 am
- it's madness !!!!!
Poor Lois and me !!!! But what I most feel sorry about is what it's meant for Buckles and Rover, the stuffed toys that Lois and I are looking after on behalf of our 11-year-old twin granddaughters Lily and Jessica. The girls, together with their parents, left the UK and moved to Perth, Australia in September last year, and - "sob story" of all time, there was no room for beloved stuffed toys Buckles and Rover, either in their hand-luggage, or in the "household effects" shipped out to Perth by sea via Capetown.
Today, acting from simple human kindness and pity, Lois and I have had to turn Buckles and Rover's faces to the wall, so that they don't suffer any undue trauma during Russell's handyman-work in what's become "their room" tomorrow morning.
Poor Rover! And poor Buckles !!!!!
Poor stuffed toys Rover and Buckles!!! Out of simple
human kindness and pity, Lois and I "turn their faces to the wall"
so they don't suffer undue trauma during local handyman
Russell's visit early tomorrow morning.
flashback to last year: beloved stuffed toys Rover the Dog and Buckles
the Unicorn, seen here in happier times, missing their owners Lily and Jessica
9000 miles away in Australia, but able to live their lives with us in relative
ease, watching TV with us and generally "hanging out" - wonderful times!
[That's enough mawkish sentimentality! - Ed]
20:00 After a day of heavy lifting and generally "moving stuff around from room to room" and then "moving it back again" etc etc, Lois and I go to bed on the latest episode in ex-cabinet minister Michael Portillo's train journeys across the European continent - tonight he's in Brittany, in north-west France.
When Michael arrives in Rennes he pauses to reflect on the notorious "Dreyfus affair" that traumatised France in the 1890's. Alfred Dreyfus, a quiet and inoffensive man who was a captain in the French Army, was wrongly accused of spying and/or treason, and in 1894 he was sentenced to life imprisonment in the horror prison camp of Devil's Island off the coast of French Guyana. A document that had been used in his trial was eventually found to be a forgery, and he was given a second trial in Rennes, only to be found guilty again. In the end it took a presidential pardon to set him free.
Dreyfus was Jewish, and many at the time suspected that he'd been "picked on" to take the blame for that reason. Officers from the top brass in the French Army were notoriously anti-semitic. And there was something of a vicious campaign against him mounted by journalists working for the "Libre Parole" ("Free Speech").
In tonight's programme we see presenter Michael Portillo questioning a local Rennes historian about the affair.
The journalist Drumont carried out a vicious campaign against the totally inoffensive Dreyfus, we hear.
And the very name of Drumont's newspaper, "Free Speech" sounds a warning bell tonight for Lois and me.
Free speech is, of course, a noble ideal but, like patriotism according to Samuel Johnson in 1775, it can also be "the last refuge of the scoundrel".
Patriotism is "the last refuge of the scoundrel", according to a quote
from Samuel Johnson in 1775, on April 7th 1775, by coincidence almost exactly
250 years ago this week: and Johnson's quote was later elaborated on by
Mark Twain in a speech at the Waldorf Astoria, New York, in 1908
Lois comments, that she has read that on his final release the poor inoffensive and totally innocent Dreyfus had degenerated into "quite a wreck", and that most of his teeth had fallen out. Not surprising perhaps, after all the years of trauma.
At least there was a good political outcome from the affair, because the scandal led to formal separation of Church and State in France, in 1905.
We also hear in tonight's programme about early French efforts to colonise Canada, starting with the voyages of Jacques Cartier, who set sail from Brittany on three separate expeditions during the 1530's. Cartier was commissioned by the French king, Francis I, to lead an expedition to North America in search of gold, spices and the elusive "North West Passage".
Although Cartier was fully expecting that his third expedition would be the "clincher", his stock in France suffered a blow, on his return, when it all went pear-shaped, to put it mildly.
A bunch of worthless stones proudly brought back across the ocean and presented to the King. Oh dear!
But Lois and I comment, why didn't somebody tell Cartier that the stuff he'd picked up was all rubbish? I think we should be told, don't you? It's not exactly rocket science is it!!!
What a crazy world we live in !!!!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzzz!!!!!!