Sir Alan Peacock (born 1922), the distinguished economist, lists as his recreations âtrying to write serious musicâ and âwine spottingâ, activities which suggest something of the flavour of this wry bookette in which he describes, if not exactly with relish, aspects of creeping decrepitude and the indignities inflicted on persons of advancing years. Grisly visits to oneâs General Medical Practitioner (Peacock calls them âMOTs for Old Bangersâ) are recorded with a lightness of touch not normally associated with grim waiting rooms (the reading matter in which provides dire warnings concerning the Dangers of Being Alive at All). Something of Sir Alanâs puckish humour is suggested by the memoir he prepared for his old school in Scotland, which was rejected for publication as âpornographicâ: one can imagine some purse-lipped figure taking exception to dispassionate accounts of not unique episodes of youthful exuberance (such as impressive feats involving peeing over high walls into the girlsâ playground on the other side).
We are entertained with clear-eyed analyses of the âcosts and benefitsâ (one phrase that chills the blood of this reviewer) of retirement, as well as with the various ploys open to us in the anticipation of lengthening life-spans (agreeable if one has some of oneâs wits about one, and even better if oneâs physical infirmities do not prevent a customary tendency to whizz about, eagerly sniffing out new things, like a dog with an infinity of lamp posts ahead). Tiresome sides of having to deal with medicos more often than was the case when one was younger are the perils of âhealthspeakâ and a tendency among some of them either to talk down to patients or to overload them with jargonese: fortunately, Sir Alan (like this reviewer) has no time for drivelling imbecilities and so, mercifully, his medical adviser (like mine) understands the need to give facts, straight, with clarity, precision and the avoidance of obfuscation.
As we hurtle towards the yawning grave (death being the only certainty in life, something the ancients well knew and dealt with more realistically than most manage today), the realisation that this is it, no rehearsal, gives meaning to Life itself. These days, when the Cult of Yoof is almost a religion, too many have become adept at fancy wordplay, so that the uneducated, the timid and the conformists confuse this with profundity. To others more perceptive, empty jargon and meaningless pseudo-language are unimpressive, deserving of contempt: cults invent their own liturgies, fraudulent claims and opaque language, designed to cloud rather than illuminate. Duds are duds, whatever their pretences of intellectual and moral superiority might be. The crabbed sacred texts of Modernism, Deconstructivism and the rest (and their ghastly physical manifestations) deserve to be analysed and unpicked: those of us with more telluric tastes are capable of doing so, and one might have wished that Sir Alan had gone for a few jugulars to further leaven and spice his entertaining memoir.
An admirer of François VI, Duc de La Rochefoucauld, Prince de Marcillac (1613-80), Peacock quotes from his RĂ©flexions ou Sentences et Maximes Morales (1665 and later editions): we are reminded that ânot many know how to be oldâ (this reviewer, and, I suspect, Sir Alan, find it difficult, too); that when one cannot find peace within oneâs self, it is âuseless to look for it elsewhereâ; that âage makes men both sillier and wiserâ; that we all come afresh to different stages of life, and in each of them we are âinexperienced, no matter how old we areâ; and although he does not quote it, I am convinced Sir Alan would agree that it is sometimes puzzling how one makes enemies, especially if one has not done them a good turn.
An unabashed admirer of pulchritude, Sir Alan relates being questioned by a âgorgeous-lookingâ anaesthetist with a âbeautiful husky voiceâ who enquired if he took any drugs: he admitted he did take one and, when asked what that might be, responded âalcoholâ. As more than a âspotterâ of fine wine and as someone who also attempts to write serious music, IÂ hope it might not be too much to hope that the next time I prop up the bar at the New Club in Edinburgh, Sir Alan might be there to do some sluicing with me over chat. I suspect such an occasion might include a lively exchange, to judge by this publication.
Defying Decrepitude: A Personal Memoir
By Alan Peacock
University of Buckingham Press, 140pp, ÂŁ10.00
ISBN 9781908684257
Published 14 March 2013
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