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Monday, 30 September 2013

Letter sent on 30 Sep 1927 from Luxor, Egypt

Dear Wedgy,

Sorry I haven't written for while but I have been otherwise engaged and you'll never guess by what. Bunty, that complete arse of a cousin of mine is over staying with me. You remember him, short, thick and annoying; the sort of chap that bumbles around chaotically like a whirlwind causing untold damage and carnage and then walks away unscathed. He is staying at the behest of my mother as a favour to my auntie for 3 months. They seem to think he could be helpful. And he would be, if only I were in the demolition business. Sadly his brand of idiocy and simple minded clumsiness are not the qualities I look for when dealing with fragile artefacts which are several thousand years old.

On more than one occasion, I have felt the overwhelming urge to clasp my hands around his neck and squeeze very hard. Fortunately for Bunty he has a neck akin very much in size and durability to that of a Rhino. Should he ever face the prospect of the hangman's noose, then I have no doubt that the rope will yield before he does. Knowing my luck, instead of trying out other methods of execution, the law would classify his neck as an act of God and he would be allowed to go free. Still, only another 2 months, 3 weeks and 5 days.

Do hope you and yours are well.

Write soon.

Jack

Friday, 13 September 2013

Letter from Cairo to Mr Andrew Langton on 9 Sep 1927.


Dear Langers,

I hope this letter finds you both well. Sorry for not writing for a while but things have become unpleasantly complicated over the last few weeks. It all started when out of the blue, I received a letter of introduction from Auntie Jane regarding Bunty which was quite unnecessary as I know him well and any attempt to portray him as anything else than a cretin and a buffoon can only be greeted with derision. In response to this, I wrote to Ma Ma to ask her why it had been sent to me. I said to her, 'Why it almost seems to be some kind of request for a job which makes little sense as I am of course studying hard as Papa always wanted and not employed in any kind of work of any kind. Perhaps you would be good enough to explain in the next letter.'

She did explain. Apparently Lottie had let slip at the Wedding during one of her drunk but talkatively conscious moments, that I was running a small but profitable business in Cairo. My mother, never one to miss a trick, in one statement said that my father was never to know if my studies continued well and in the second statement, informed me that cousin Bunty was coming over to help with the business to ensure my studies didn't suffer.

I was about to march out to the telegraph office to send a violent exclamation of protest but for the fact that the overgrown, underdeveloped Darwinian throwback was stood outside my door. Unfortunately I had not had time to pack away all the valuables and secure all breakables. Consequently I have been spending the last three weeks clearing up after him as you would a child. If I hear him say "What's this for," followed by an ear splitting crash once more, I shall commit murder according to strict legal interpretation and putting him out of his misery by anyone else's interpretation.

I pray that your life is kinder and simpler than mine.

Fond regards,

Jack.

Thursday, 8 August 2013

Letter from Cairo to Mr Andrew Langton, London, dated 6 Aug 1927


Dear Langers,

Thank you for your letter. I'm glad you approved of the wedding gift. You can call it art or an antique if you like and it is indeed both of those things but it is also promotes fertility. I'm assuming that being a man of God, you will want to be getting straight to business of having a son and heir and not just simply practising for years to hone the technique if you get my meaning.

Just wanted to say, super knees up the wedding. Wonderful ceremony, the bride looked radiant and the food was really the crow's toes. The groom was a little underwhelming though but then I always said Kitty was too good for you. Lottie enjoyed herself as you no doubt heard. Desperation manifests itself in such diverse ways. Auntie is still clinging on to the vane hope that the two of them will get together but apart from a couple of further ill advised drunken escapades, they have not been seen together since. Lottie as you know is quite a spirited old girl and tends to do what she feels without any particular regard for social etiquette. Bunty is just glad to be able to take what he can get. Lottie called him very sweet the last time they met. That's the kiss of death for any relationship. All has gone quiet now but that leaves me uneasy. No one is talking about it at home; in fact they are going out of their way not to talk about it in public which means they are talking about it in private; planning, conniving and conspiring.
Oh call me paranoid if you will, but mark my words, something is up and when something is up, that's usually really bad news for me.

Let me know if you hear anything.

All the best to you and Kitty.

Jack,

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Letter from Cairo on 16 Jul 1927

Dear Wedgey,

Sorry we didn't see you at the wedding. Awfully back luck old man, wrapping your new car round that police officer. Many apologies also that it's been so long since I wrote you, or indeed anyone. I only got back to Cairo on Monday after spending eight weeks at home much to the annoyance of my tutor and my father but the delight of my mother.

I must say you missed a corking wedding. The Wedding itself went off without much of a hitch but nevertheless, there was plenty to keep us entertained, even if it was unintentional. See through Charlie has now been renamed See-round Charlie on account of the fact that he has for the first time in his twenty-eight years put on weight, a considerable amount of weight in fact. So much so that when stood by the window at the reception, he blocked out most of the light and had to be asked to move by the photographer.

Langers, slightly the worst for wear, called out a different name during the exchanging of the vowels at which point the whole congregation gasped in horror, only for the groom to turn round irritatedly and point out that he had said one of  Kitty's middle names first instead of her forename; she does after all have about six and that's a challenge for any man. Add to this, the fact that Kitty is her third second name and it's no wonder that the old man got confused, sober or in this case otherwise. You would have thought that the vicar might have helped out and prompted him, but he was left to struggle on alone until Kitty very sportingly too over from him, handing over only for the obligatory 'I do's'. We later found out that the vicar used to be an old flame of Kitty's and the flame was not quite spent in him.

The real highlight of the day or lowlight though, depending on your point of view was Lottie's antics. I spent two days with her shopping in London and wandering round the Botanical Gardens in Kew to cheer her up. In the end she found her own way of finding solace by sloping off during the ceremony with a bottle of wine only to be discovered a couple of hours later in a cupboard and in a very compromising position with Cousin Bunty all people. Bunty! I mean for God's sake, how low can the old girl go. I was expecting her to pull something off , but Bunty? There were large numbers of fine prostrate men in various states of inebriation to choose from and she chose Bunty!

As you can imagine, all hell let loose. They're not related by blood or anything but they are family. Auntie Jane (Bunty's mother) as you can imagine, took a very firm line and said that they both now had to get married to save both their's and the family's blushes, not that either of them were in the slightest embarrassed by the escapade. Lottie slurred that it was just a bit of fun.
My Aunt was very set on the idea because the dignity of the family had to be preserved and for the first time since he was born, a girl had shown the vaguest albeit heavily influenced, interest in Bunty and this was the best shot she had at marrying him off. My Uncle (Lottie's father) then promptly swore at Aunt Jane and strode off in the direction of the bar. Aunt Jane then turned to Lottie and cried, "You silly, stupid girl. What if you get pregnant?"
Lottie stood there swaying in the breeze and thought for a moment and then slurred, I'm no expert in ana-, anata- anatalo-," she took a big sigh, "bodies, but I do know that you can't get pregnant with your tonsils!"
At first Aunt Jane seemed puzzled and then disgusted as Lottie's words gained form and meaning. Seeing the chance to marry her unique offspring off slipping away and suddenly being confronted with an unnecessarily detailed account of her son's sexual encounter,  she shouted 'Harlot!' At which point Lottie corrected her and cried "It's pronounced Harlow!", before spinning on her heels, almost falling over in the process and flouncing of after her father in the direction of the bar.

So that was the floor show, played out in front of small pockets of people throughout the hotel, rather like street theatre as the players moved the drama from one place to another, taking the action from room to room. It's taken weeks for things to calm down and for people to start talking to each other. And in the middle of all this, I had an unexpected encounter myself.

As the Wedding evening wore on, the guests melted away and all that were left were cads, women of questionable virtue and of course myself, sitting with my feet propped up on the table with a whisky in my hand and my bow-tie now undone and draped loosely around my neck. The band played in the background and women draped themselves on the men on the dance floor and in some cases men were draped on women who staggered under the weight. All of a sudden, my whisky glass was taken from my hand, placed gently onto the table next to me and a slim but shapely silhouette grabbed my other hand and encouraged me to my feet. Being slightly the worse for wear myself I complied and was lead onto the dance floor. The lighting was now quite low, no doubt to spare the blushes of the guest who were left, as was my own visual acuity and I couldn't see the face of the lady I now had in my arms but I could feel her. She stood very close with her head upon my chest and my right arm was around her curvaceous figure, whilst my left felt the warm, smooth skin of her shoulder which poked out from her dress. We danced together for it must have been two to three songs, then she turned, kissed me and was gone. I caught only a glimpse of a red satin dress and dark hair as she left and at breakfast, I asked my host and a couple of other guests if they knew who she was. No one did and inevitably many assumed that I had imagined it and that it had all been part of a drunken stupor. But I tell you it was no dream.

Anyway, hope you and your fiancee are on the mend.

All the best.

Your chum, Jack.

(Editor - although most guests could not recall, further research reveals that the lady in question did actually exist. One male guest recalls in his journal, a 'beautiful creature wearing a red dress who arrived late in the evening and didn't like men.' Distinguishing features, apart from dark hair and ruby red lips were reported to be a heart shaped tattoo just over the right breast. Baring in mind the dimness of the light and reading between the lines, we must assume that the guest in question got pretty close to view the tattoo and his advances were not altogether well received.)

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

Letter from Cairo, dated 12 May 1927 to Miss Charlotte Harlot (pronounced Harlow)


Dearest Cousin Lottie,

How are you, old thing? Thanks for your letter. Completely unexpected as was the unique mottling effect on the paper which I deduce by the general tone of the letter and the sharp jaunty handwriting was caused by tears and unbridled sobbing.

Look, I know you were fond of Langers but lets put things into perspective: 1) He's not dead and 2) You know his reputation; he was always a cad of the first order and I'm saying this as his friend. When we were at school together, he used to leave a trail of inconsolable girls and human wrecks in his wake. Poor unfortunate creatures whom he had just used and mercilessly thrown away. It took a women like Kitty with a will of iron, an inheritance the size of Monaco's national budget and the seclusion of the middle of the African jungle, well away from any living, breathing female (human or otherwise) to tame him or at least restrain him. Though I am not convinced that his condition is irreversible given the wrong person, in the wrong place at the wrong time. Before you get any thoughts, you are not that person. You may not have an older brother but I am the next best thing. I've always watched out for you since we were little. I've lost count of the number of times I've been punched in the face because of you. Don't let my caved in nasal crypts and my subsided septum be in vane.

Besides, you're only twenty three. Look at me! I'm twenty seven, still studying, with no career and no girl to hang on my arm of an evening. No girl for me to drag to remote parts of the globe where white people are seldom seen by the indigenous population and are either feared, revered or possibly eaten. (I've yet to find a place that offers straight uncomplicated crossbreeding - fear, loathing and hunger are the most common responses but I digress).  Wedgy on the other hand has a thriving career in politics, drives the bees knees of cars, and is engaged to a top notch girl. Then there's Langers and even Charlie! See-through Charlie! The boy who always won Hide and Seek by standing behind standard lamps, sign posts and clinging to the sides of banisters. Even in his painfully thin and emaciated state, he has still managed to get hooked up with a young lady who is very happy with him and whom he is thinking of settling down with. He's even put on a bit of weight around the ears I believe.

What I'm trying to say, is that there will be other far more dashing, reliable chaps out there, desperate to meet a corker of a girl like you. Just don't go to the wedding, get drunk and end up snogging the groom. That can only lead to misery and despair. Besides, I'm told Kitty has a wicked right hook!

I'm back a couple of days before the main event so why don't we spend some time away from the house, just the two of us; preferably with a not so light lunch and refreshments courtesy of the Mouldy Truckle. It's either that, or breaking your teeth on Mama's patented fruit scones and burning the stomach linings with one of her rather austere jams. See you then.

Love and best wishes,

Jack.

Friday, 10 May 2013

Letter from Cairo dated 6th May 1927 addressed to Mr Andrew Langton


Dear Langers,

How are the wedding preparations going? We are very much looking forward to the auspicious occasion. Mother has bought yet another new hat even though she's not on the invite list (she needs very little excuse), Wedgy plans to roll up in his new Rolls and Seethrough Charlie has gone for a  fitted white suit. I fear however that with his gaunt, thin frame, he risks looking somewhat less than dashing and more like a desiccated corpse wrapped in a funerary shroud. Cousin Lottie on the other hand has taken the news very badly. Auntie says she hasn't been out of her room for days and puts it down to the old girl feeling that she's been left on the shelf . I on the other hand have a different theory. I have long suspected and shared with you the possibility she has always carried a torch for you. Between you and me and Kitty if she's reading this, I think you picked the right girl. One would have to be constantly fitted with earplugs and a possess a constitution of iron to endure Lottie's laugh which alternates between, snorting, braying and bleating. An hour in my cousin's company is like a day on the farm.

Anyway, I am just making final preparations to return to old Blighty. My tutor Dr Blomqvist is less than happy as we have just discovered a new site down in the banks of the Nile. As some small compensation, I have promised to do some research on Friezes and Cornices at the British library and to bring him back some books that he needs. I have also promised to bring back some decent whisky for an old retired RAF officer that I met at a bar. Pleasant enough old chap; well fed, ruddy faced with a huge white moustache. Apparently he was a flying ace in the Great War. You may have heard of him; Wing Commander Reginald T. Flatterblatter. I said to him, "With any luck in a few years they might allow you to command the whole plane." He was less than amused until I thrust a large scotch in front of him and then suddenly he perked up. Now we regularly meet up and discuss the good old days (his, not mine). After a tiring day digging through the dust and dirt, it is quite relaxing listening to someone prattle on and not have to join in. Rather like listening to the wireless.

Anyway all the best to you both. See you in a couple of weeks.

Best regards.

Jack.

Friday, 3 May 2013

Letter from Cairo dated 28th April 1927 addressed to Mrs Mary Courageous


Dear Mama

I hope you and Papa are well. I'm glad to hear that the weather has been unseasonably hot and sunny. Long may it continue. Hopefully the regrettable incident regarding the substitution of a piece of glass in the church window with a small lens and the resulting scorch marks on Reverend Thorne's  shiny pate have now been largely forgotten. It's strange; that lens must have been there for some considerable time. You'd almost be forgiven for thinking that someone had deliberately placed it there at the exact point where the sun would hit the very place where the very reverend stands. One can only surmise the motives behind such a calculated action but the long tedious, narcoleptic sermons interjected by spasms of fire and brimstone to keep the adults awake and ensure that children never sleep again must surely be a strong contender. I wonder what went through his mind when it happened? Did he perceive and was filled with the white hot all embracing power of the lord almighty or the burning, fiery clutches of the netherworld pressing a thumb on his scalp and marking him as its own.

Anyway on to the reason why I am writing. I will be home on the 6th of June and staying for a week. The Wedding is in Guildford on the Saturday so I should have enough time to pick up some essential supplies for my return. Have invited cousin Lottie over as she will also be attending. I assume she will be staying in one of the guest rooms overlooking the, in which case please do not put her in the one with grandpapa's old hunting trophies. As you know, she does not agree with the killing animals and does not eat meet so to put her in that room would be akin to putting up the guest bed in the town's abattoir.

Look forward to seeing you all in a couple of weeks.

All my love.

Jack.