A Posterior Compliment

Words, as any good dictionary will tell us, often have many meanings. Some words tell us the brutal truth; others are euphemisms, making the described matter fit for polite society. When Eliza, to Colonel Pickering’s amusement,   encourages her racehorse  she uses the real word, not a euphemism. She does not yell “Move your blooming posterior.” Fit for polite society as this blog is  we shall call Eliza’s colorful expression the “a-word.”  In Bavaria, where the following happened, the common folk speak German, but in a very earthy dialect. Needless to point out that they also prefer the a-word to the euphemism.

Apartment houses in Munich are typically  four stories high and have flat roofs. People sometimes  find their way up, spread a beach towel and take a sunbath. If you have chosen a house that is taller than the surrounding ones nobody can see you. Clothing, then, is optional. A lady friend of ours one day made use of that situation, luxuriating face down in the warm sun.

But there is also a lot of equipment on the roofs, boxes, pipes, conduits, drains and such. On that day a young mechanic had been sent up to test some valves. As he stepped out on the roof he must have been stunned.  Yet, not showing a hint of embarrassment, he managed to express a most innocent, completely honest and guileless compliment. “Fräulein!” he almost shouted. “You have the most  beautiful (a-word)!”

Given the young man’s lack of education and sophistication, I give him a lot of credit for taste in art. I suspect that in every human male’s soul there hides a Renoir or a Boucher.

The Ghost

When I was young I was a master of planning things that, every one agreed, were impossible, couldn’t be done. I would then attempt to do it anyway and sure enough: every one was right. It could indeed not be done.

One such project was to cross the Danish border near Flensburg and gorge myself on Danish butter and cheese, things that were then not available in Germany. That was just one of those things that could not be done. One could say that I failed on this one. But it is only part of the story. I also learned something. You and I may not believe in ghosts. But some people, adults, do. They avoid cemeteries at night and insist they have actually seen a ghost. At the cemetery. Very early one morning before daylight. How can they say that with a straight face?

Easy, because they are right. They did see such a creature walking slowly from grave to grave. He was wearing a black pelouse and a wide brimmed black hat. The young woman who reported this saw him only from behind as she came around the corner on her bicycle. She was so frightened that she jumped off her bike and ran the rest the way on foot.

How can I be so sure of all that? Easy, too. I was there when it happened. I got stuck on my trip to Flensburg without a penny.  All I had was a return train ticket home. I had slept that night in an empty rail car. It was still too early for the first train home. Good thing I had this black overcoat over my shoulders and that big felt hat to keep my head warm. It was cool that morning as I passed the time reading grave stones.

I know a thing or two about ghosts, you see? And I also understand what they mean about hell freezing over.

 

The Lion of Messina

Sicily has seen many conquerors and rulers, from the ancient Greeks to Mussolini. The Greeks left behind their temples. Mussolini left behind some government buildings in unmistakable fascist style. At about the time of the Battle of Hastings the Normans called the shots. They too left some of their architecture behind, notably the cathedral of Messina. It has been destroyed and rebuilt several times and is now a precious sight-seeing item for the tourists, worth a visit if you like to see what Norman Style means. Most tourists have simpler interests, such as the much advertised Golden Lion on top of the bell tower. As the guide books will tell you, this is a masterwork by a French clock maker. While other lions such as the one in Belfort or the one by the lake near Lucerne just sit there, the one in  Messina is capable of letting go a most formidable roar, and he does this every day at twelve o’clock noon.

Shortly before noon, therefore, the plaza below fills with people craning their necks to catch a glimpse of the splendid thing in gold. Everybody holds their breath as the big dial jumps to twelve. We all did the day I was there. The brave animal opened its mouth and let go – yes – a small noise sounding like a muffled “GARP.” That was it. He said no more. End of the show. Add mechanical lions to your mice and your men.

Hello, Francois Rene!

My greeting goes to Chateaubriand. Not the steak cooked in butter but the author of Memoires d’outre-tomb. Which he published at age 80 to tell us wise things from beyond the grave. I also am thinking of telling people wise things, but I prefer to do that from this side of the tomb. Life, he is said to have suggested, is spent hovering round our tomb. This is much too dark and morbid. Who wants to hear such pessimistic memoirs? I will write a book and call it Mémoires de ce côté-ci.

I already started. But it is not as easy as I thought. I find myself telling young people: “Wait ’till you are my age. You will be a lot older then.” Good Lord, Chateaubriand could have said that. Or Yogy Berra. Was I not going to be more positive, more life-affirming? I must try to do better.

“Life is a dream?” Don’t get hung up on that idea. It isn’t. It is more like a roller coaster. Scream all you want. It will not stop for you. You are stuck.” Here I go again, still too morbid.

“Always scan the obituaries. Make it a Sunday morning habit. That way you will start the week in a good mood, happy that you once more did not get listed.” Now that’s much better. At least I mentioned the word ‘happy.’ How about this one: “At your age, don’t pinch pennies, Man. Pinch dollars! You can’t take them with you, no?” Trouble is he may not have any left. Scratch that.

O.k. “Some times you may not feel good. That is no crime. Just remember that you will not feel better until you feel better.”  Now that one I will let stand. People will study this and write dissertations about it.

When we were children we were told always to speak the truth. Bad idea. I still remember my supervisor telling me sixty years ago not to be so definite when discussing matters of business with customers. This line of thought translates into a new rule: “Never tell it like it is.” Example: you refer to this person over there as ‘an old woman.’ That’s a no-no however. What if she hears you? It Is bad enough to be a woman. But an old one? Never. So what do you do? You make her younger, of course. But how? Simple. The English language has one word which like the Roman  god Janus has two faces. This Janus-word is ‘older.’ On the side of truth the word means’older than old.’ Flip the word over and it means ‘younger  than old.’ In this simple way we convert an old woman into an older lady, i.e. a younger one.

In my Memoirs from this side of the to tomb I shall be bold and challenge Francois Rene by declaring that life is spent hovering round the truth and having a good time doing it, staying this side of the tomb.

 

Shades of Blue

Where I come from they say that a person who has had one or two too many is  “blau,” i.e. drunk. In America, blue is not a condition so much as it is a mood. We sing the blues. And if it is all about unrequited love, oh dear, things are not just bluer then blue can be, they are outright indigo if you listen to Duke Ellington. But those are the unhappy people. What if you wake up relaxed and the sky is blue from horizon to horizon and the sun is shining and it is Sunday and you have no appointments? And the Forget-me-nots are wearing their Sunday best blue? Suddenly the color blue changes meaning for us and we remember that the standard measure for beauty is to be blond and blue-eyed.

What does that have to do with me? Simple. I have kept an old German “Personalausweis,” a sort of Nation-wide identity document that states, in German of course, that I am six feet, two inches tall, my hair is blond, and my eyes are blue!  So there.

Math Test

Writing dense, hard to parse prose is a fine art. The city council of a neighboring town are masters of that art. A few months ago the local newspaper published the announcement of an upcoming local election. It reads more like a test question for Math 101:

 “Each of seven applicants will seek one of four spots on the Arts Commission, … With the Housing and Human Services Committee increasing its membership to nine members, six candidates are expected to fill six eligible spots.  Each of four applicants will seek one of two spots on the Planning Commission. … Eight applicants will vie for one of five spots on the Emergency/Disaster Preparedness Committee. … Three candidates will vie for three spots on the Personnel Board.”

If each winner gets 8 oz of champagne, how many bottles of bubbly must the commissioner order?  You have five minutes to answer. Talk about pressure during examinations.

The Bunny

We Americans are a most religious people. Some 90% of us believe in some god. I do not know how many gods there are, or if it is always the same and  folks just think it is “theirs.” I do not know how many of us go to church. Some churches have thousands of members. At any rate, we are no slouches when it comes to religion. Or are we?

I conducted a study. I went to the drug store and surveyed the Easter greeting card section. There were about 150 different cards on display. All but six (6) of them dealt with pastel-colored rabbits, eggs, flowers, and little birds. Five of the six cards listed under the heading “Religion” actually dealt with religious topics. The last of the six reverted to rabbits again. Religious rabbits, I presume.

I do not quite know what to make of this. Maybe we are religious all year long except at Easter. Yet on our currency we proclaim “In God We Trust.” That does not ring true any longer. We don’t. We trust in the Rabbit.

On Canine Intelligence

Dogs are smart. Dogs are a nuisance, too. Topsy, our dog, chewed off the spines of all my dictionaries, for example. And he leaves his “output” everywhere and I step in it and my wife gets mad because I drag it all over the house.

Then he died. As I come home from the veterinarian, alone, sobbing, I find still another little heap in the patio. A piece of paper sticks out, like a Chinese fortune cookie. I pull it out. It says: “Eliminatio non est crimen. Just pick it up and toss it, Man! See ya. Topsy”

I DO have the strangest dreams.

Our Robot: A Tail Tale

When I was a boy I had a book, a story that played in a modernistic villa where robots did the work. One of these servant robots ran on rails from the kitchen to the salon. On command, the rails would come to life like the baggage conveyor at the airport and the robot would slowly but inexorably appear balancing a tray with mugs of piping hot chocolate. Whenever I came to this point in the story my mouth would water because I liked hot chocolate. It never occurred to me that the robot could stumble and spill his load. Robots don’t stumble.  They can’t, they are just fiction.

But that was then. Now robots are real, running on little rubber wheels all over the house. Ours is extremely clever, cleans the entire floor, and when the battery runs low, finds his own way to the charging station. Our real robot is also harmless, just as my fictional hot chocolate carrier.

At least I thought so until this morning when we found out that he is a deadly weapon. Not to me, but to a fuzzy-haired dog with a long feathery tail. Yes, he is a machine, a machine that has a rotating brush to sweep up dust. He will stop for no one, certainly not for any feathery tails.  If such things come too close they get rolled up very rapidly. And when all of the tail is rolled up, that which is attached to this appendage is next in line. At this point the owner of the dog loses his or her composure because he or she cannot find the button that stops the infernal machine and the dog surprises professional sound specialists who did not even know there was such a high C.

In our case the dog was too big for the robot to swallow her. The mechanism stopped by itself. After unraveling the tail from the roller brush the dog was found unharmed. But my faith in robots has been shattered. You cannot get me, for example, into a self-driving Uber car, ever.  I will walk to the airport,  if need be.

How To Read A License Plate

We recently exchanged our very old car for a slightly newer one. When seen through my eyes it looks like a new car. So far so good. I understand that used cars already come with license plates. One has no choice. All of them include a block of three letters in addition to numbers. Those letters tell stories. I saw one that said WEL. A good omen, I think. Another said FIN. Just as the dealer promised, a fine car. There also is a GDC, same thing: “Good Car” obviously. Guess what the owner of DOC does for a living? As a writer I would not want REJ but I would settle for PEN. I also came across one that read YAL, a friendly Southern greeting, I suppose. FCL is one I saw. “First Class”? One of our neighbors has the letters DNU. That must be French. Stands for “De Nous”, meaning it is “OURS.” We are proud, too. So why does ours say REC? Why does my wife have to holler “Where did you park the REC” where people can hear us? I tell you, Roger Dangerfield, we don’t get any respect either.