I have never read Touching The Void, Joe Simpson’s
1988 account of clambering, crawling, and hopping down a snowy Peruvian
mountainside with a broken leg. It was recommended to me, by someone whose
recommendations I generally trust, but for some reason I never got round to it.
Today I learned, via the Grauniad, that the book has become a set text for
teenpersons in our self esteem ‘n’ diversity hubs. I was startled, as I had no
idea they were still encouraged to read. It was not this revelation, however,
that was the point of the story. Rather, it was that various scallywags have
been conversing with Simpson through the medium of Twitter. All this social
networking and internettery can bring writers and readers together, you see.
(As I know myself. In a fit of madness, I once sent an email
to Alain De Botton to berate him for not knowing the difference between deprecate
and depreciate. He replied, the sensitive soul, within about thirty
seconds, to protest that he did know the difference, and went into a
lengthy and convoluted justification of his misuse. I was not convinced.)
Anyway, I am afraid I must report that, rather than taking
the opportunity to applaud Joe Simpson for his valour and grit and gumption,
the teenpersons have been whingeing at him. Much of this is not worthy of
comment, but I have to applaud the youngster who coined the term “crevasse
wanker”.
Now I tend not to use the language of the gutter myself, not
from any sense of prudery, but simply because I consider it a bit lazy. I once
knew a man whose every single utterance included at least one “fuck”, and
usually more. It was very tiresome to listen to him, and after a while one
wanted to stuff a rag into his mouth and have him whipped out of town, as they
might have done in an earlier, less barbarous age. Or perhaps I mean more
barbarous. If so, it would suggest that a certain modicum and type of barbarism
is actually a good thing. I must ponder that.
Generally speaking, the rarer the fuckery the more effective
it is. Pansy Cradledew, for example, a woman of great elegance and grace, lets
rip with a “fuck fuck fuck!” about once a year, on average. So unexpected is it
that jaws drop, glass tumblers shatter, and birds fall stone dead from the
skies. Ms Cradledew’s last outburst, at some point in the year of Our Lord
MMXI, was occasioned by some finicky faffing with thin strips of cardboard and
adhesive paste in the course of constructing a cardboard model of an important
building. She was not using the proprietary paste known as Cow Gum. Perhaps
that is what caused the sudden fuckery.
If one must swear more often than annually, then I think one
should at least approach the task with mad creativity. The baroque flights of
sweary fancy in the scripts of The Thick Of It are a model here, but I
think it is no accident that they are, precisely, scripted. Few of us could
come up with those verbal fireworks spontaneously. The sadly-unnamed Twitterer
who called Joe Simpson a “crevasse wanker” belongs, I think, in Malcolm
Tucker’s company. It is a phrase of genius. I only wish I could think of
occasions when I might use it myself.
Knowing not a jot about Joe Simpson, and not having read his
book, nor seen the film documentary which was adapted from it, I have no idea
if he deserves to be called a crevasse wanker. But without for one moment discounting
the valour, grit and gumption of those who pit themselves against nature’s
terrors – mountains, oceans, uncharted territories, polar wastes – there is
something faintly laughable about the whole business, is there not? I have read
more widely in the accounts of Simpson’s predecessors in earlier centuries, and
part of the pleasure, if not most of it, is in the contemplation of the sheer
foolishness at large. The following quotation, very dear to me, seems to sum up
an entire ethos. In Ex Libris : Confessions Of A Common Reader (1998),
Anne Fadiman writes
Who but an Englishman, the legendary Sir
John Franklin, could have managed to die of starvation and scurvy along with
all 129 of his men in a region of the Canadian Arctic whose game had supported
an Eskimo colony for centuries? When the corpses of some of Franklin’s officers and crew were later
discovered, miles from their ships, the men were found to have left behind
their guns but to have lugged such essentials as monogrammed silver cutlery, a
backgammon board, a cigar case, a clothes brush, a tin of button polish, and a
copy of The Vicar Of Wakefield. These men may have been incompetent
bunglers, but, by God, they were gentlemen.
Incompetent bunglers, gentlemen, and very probably crevasse
wankers. It is a term we can also apply to the doomed Scott and his chums,
perishing at the South Pole a hundred years ago. I am beginning to think it
would make a splendid title for an anthology.
Incidentally, does one have to be British to be a crevasse
wanker? Perhaps I am blinkered, but somehow certain foreign persons seem less
preposterous when pitting themselves against the etcetera etcetera. For
example, Werner Herzog’s various forays, and accounts of others’ forays, into
inhospitable wildernesses are, to be sure, ridiculous, but there is a mad
grandeur about them. Could Aguirre, The Wrath Of God be retitled Aguirre,
The Amazonian Jungle Wanker? I think not.
***
(~this post was up on the immortal and wonderful Hooting Yard website
yesterday. It made me wet myself with giggling, so I thought to do the same joyful thing for you. Aren't we lucky he let me borrow to put here for you? Do go to the website and be
entertained and wiping your eyes from tears of laughter, for the rest of the
day. Find it in my blogroll. Thank me for discovering this for
you, later, preferably with cake, chocolate or girls comics from the 70's or very early 80's…)
The fee for reposting this is 14p. Make cheques payable to Hooting Yard Global Domination Enterprises And Stairlifts For The Infirm GmbH.
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