The 97th in this occasional series of reprints from Quote Unquote the magazine is from the January/February
1994 issue. The seven-page feature “I Get a Kick Out of This” was a collection
of brief pieces by Brian Turner, Jacqueline Fahey, Owen Marshall, Colin Hogg, Iain Sharp, Nigel Cox, Mary-Louise Browne and others – booksellers,
painters, publishers, journalists, art curators – writing about more cheerful
stuff than most books magazines did at the time: motorbikes, daughters, dogs,
poker, haircuts, guitars, ice cream, shoes and more. The intro read:
There’s more to life than books. . . For a start, there’s chocolate. Here are another 20 of life’s extraordinary pleasures.
So far we have had James Macky on leaving early, Dave Witherow on motorbikes, Barbara
Else on romance, Tim
Wilson on press-ups, Elizabeth
Smither on saints, Brian
Boyd on science and Keith Stewart
on roses. Today: Bernard Brown (who featured recently on the blog here).
WALKING
Bernard Brown
I cherished no schoolboy ambition to be a perambulator. But
my hero, Ned Ludd, with his wrecker mates, hadn’t seen the job through. He’d
let down the Simple Society. Me especially.
The problem, for 60 years, has been my nervy relationship
with machines, even bicycles. Motor vehicles unerringly failed me. They could
be induced to go forward smoothly, but only convulsively the other way.
My last driving test – in ]ohore Bahru, 1958 – promised
success, until the Hudson Terraplane leaped back onto the examiner.
So walking became the chief and safer alternative, taking me
from Boulogne to Paris (three weeks), through Malayan jungles and into a
Singapore cricket match (where I was bowled by a chinaman, by a Chinaman),
around and about the 20 suburbs in search of the city of Canberra, down bumpy
parts of Borneo and, for a few years, New Guinea too (all for malaria, an arrow
wound and sweaty tales of Errol Flynn). After which, I turned to Auckland as a pedestrian
academe (“Here comes Associate Professor Plod,” the neighbours’ kids would
call).
However, the pleasures of walking do outweigh the
embarrassments, the inconvenience and the varicosity. You come to know your
routes, the dogs and cats (by name), the children, gnomes and concrete bunnies
on front lawns, as well as the dapper adulterer who tipped his hat to all he thought
might know.
Garbage – yes. You become an authority on who puts out the
really classy stuff. The rich are mean with rubbish. And in times of milk in
bottles, you were alerted at gates to illness or death – followed, alas, by For Sale signs, then quick-buck
gentrifications of the nice old homes. Even sadder, the last five or six years
have introduced this walker to the poor souls who used to be cared for, but who
now traipse the streets probing litter bins. Somehow, they miss the odd coin or
note dropped at the morning bus stops, but not the fag butts.
Along my ways I have found a homicide knife, numerous
booties, a Rasta beret, corsets, lecture notes on Leavis (from which I lectured
for a while), photos of a friend’s holiday and, intermittently, myself.
Pavement mores change. Exhausted condoms have become a
welcome sight. Indeed, in mid-winter, one marvels.
You learn to smile at all oncoming pedestrians. Even to say
hello. One ped, thus greeted, punched me in the throat. Thousands haven’t.
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