David Gower
elderflower cordial
I remember the conversation as
if it were yesterday. One of us remembers it though it is still hazy for my
friend of many years. To begin at the beginning – where does one begin? It
depends upon from whose perspective the tale is being told.
Decision made. The tale begins
with an argument between friends about what constitutes taste. It had begun after
wandering along the street of Lavenham – a Suffolk village which is described
in the tourist guides as a ‘gem’ and as a result it sees a stream of camera
clicking coach parties coming for cream teas in olde Englande. In particular
there is a house in the main street whose woodworm drilled porch is supported
by the contemporary figures of an Elizabethan couple. He in ruff and doublet
and she in a dress complete with accessories suited to a woman of her middle
class position.
Lavenham had been the straw
which broke the metaphorical camel’s back. It had come after a National Trust
stately home visit to a house set in a mere 3000 acres of landscaped grounds,
lakes and follies. It does not matter where the house was it encapsulated the
question of taste.
One of us argued that building
a house now and having the porch supported by figures in modern dress would be
seen as tacky and perhaps even – that wonderful current label of a class
division –chavvy. Perhaps a footballer or oligarch might get away with such a
statement and be seen as ‘eccentric’ whereas the ordinary (and less well
heeled) person could be pointed out as ‘weird’ and even ‘dangerous’. The other
saw the whole debate as irrelevant but took the opposing point of view –freedom
of expression – to play Devil’s Advocate. What are friends for if not to argue
with each other for the fun of it?
As another pint was supped the
National Trust house was next in the firing line. Architecturally beautiful but
paid for from the profits of slavery and built by local labourers who would go
home to hovels and the ills of 17th century peasantry. Granted they
might have starved sooner without the work building the house but why let logic
spoil an argument?
It was a debate which they
felt reflected Daily Mail and Guardian reader attitudes in a microcosm.
The next time the pair met was
under very different circumstances. One beside a hospital bed and the other in
it after a road accident. The patient had been the victim of a hit and run
driver who had left behind a crumpled bicycle and a broken skull with life
threatening bleeding. Cameras picked up the car details and the driver was
apprehended shortly afterwards.
The serious head injury ward
was a place of beeps from machines, a mix of quiet efficiency from health
professionals undermined by an inability to join information. As a close friend
of 40 years despite their name being given to consultants and solicitors no one
ever asked the bedside visitor for any information as to what the patient was
like before the accident.
The patient had woken from an
induced two week coma days before. That had been traumatic in itself as he had
regained consciousness to the sound of a strange voice. It asked ‘Do you know
where you are?’ repeatedly with a heavy accent. When the patient opened his
eyes in a dim room and a strange bed they could see the owner of the voice. A
woman in a hospital uniform but through the window behind her were Brutalist
concrete buildings. Our experiences shape our responses when afraid. He was
afraid. A strange bed, a dark room, a stranger asking his if he knew where he
was. It was clear, somehow he had been kidnapped by foreigners from his ship.
He must fight and escape. His struggle was overcome by other figures and he
slipped into darkness and bad dreams.
This was what he told his
bedside visitor and in the cold light of calmness the hospital was a modern
building, the nurse was from the European Union and the staff had held a
violent patient down to sedate him.
Injuries to the head are not
like those in detective films. More often than not the period immediately
before and after the impact is a void. So it was in this case and the patient
knew nothing of the minutes before the crash. His recovery from the physical
injuries would take months if not years and memory might never be clear.
The process of assessment of
injury, rehabilitation, criminal trial and insurance compensation takes years.
Unable to return to work one is introduced to the disability benefits system.
It is not designed for those with poor written skills – especially those
without clear memory.
Compensation in such cases is
related not only to injury but to age and employment status to calculate loss
of earnings.
This story goes full circle. Oscar
Wilde summed it up neatly, everything has a price. So given that the patient
lost both sense of smell and taste how can we settle a question of taste for a cruise
ship chef?
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