Mr Beardy lives next door. I don't know whether Mr Beardy is sad or happy, but I reckon Mr Beardy has got things just right.
Mr Beardy is a doctor, who lives in a medium-size Victorian house, within walking distance of the town centre. The Jurassic coast is 15 minutes away in one direction, and Hardy's Dorset lies in t'other. His children have now left for university. Mr Beardy owns a convertible, and, if the weather is nice, he peels down the roof, and drives away with his beard shooting the breeze. He also owns an old motorbike, which he occasionally teases into working order, popping and banging like a bag of old nails. Best of all, though, is Mr Beardy's garden. There is no hint of order or symmetry to Mr Beardy's garden: it's boisterous and ramshackle and wonderful. There are flower beds and garden benches here, a mazy path there, blossoming fruit trees and a small pond to the right, elms and birches and washing lines in the foreground, vegetable patches and a greenhouse in the background, and splitting the garden in twain is a row of bushes shouldering a wooden arch, engirdled with creeping plants and vines.
This is the type of garden I grew up in. Life as a child is an adventure in this type of garden. Too many children today grow up with ordered back-gardens the size of postage-stamps. These children also appear to grow up with no desire greater than to tick the check-boxes for: (i) career, (ii) family, (iii) mortgage, (iv) pension.
An old dog with sad, lonely eyes, who never barks, plays and sleeps and gazes into the house from Mr Beardy's garden. Perhaps his former play-mates have grown-up and forgotten him now they've gone to university. I think Mr Beardy, or his solemn grey-haired wife, should play with him more. Apart from that, however, I think Mr Beardy has got it just right. So here's a toast to Mr Beardy, and all his fellow Beardies, who make the world a more interesting place to live in!
Right! That's me and shaving finished for good. The missing ingredient: a beard. So obvious now. As obvious as something on one's face. Although not as obvious as the nose, of course, which is the most obvious thing. Clearly, I should have looked beyond my nose (or around it). Now, what style to go for? Maybe a distinguished-looking Vandyke.
ReplyDeleteYes, beards are good. A beard says so much about a man - that you have more important things to do than spend ten minutes in the bathroom in the morning, for instance. Also it is useful protection against the elements.
ReplyDeleteI suspect, Clare, that there's a complex philosophy and taxonomy of beards. Be careful, Neil, in your choice of facial growth. Some beards say 'I reject the modern world', other beards say 'I'm a wise and sensitive person', and yet other beards, notably the wide-goatee, say 'Fuck-off, I'm an aggressive person!'
ReplyDeleteMy husband grew a beard once and it turned out ginger!!! Surprise surprise. It was like being married to a coconut mat.
ReplyDeleteAre you married to Mick Hucknall, Anonymous? If so, you really shouldn't have been surprised.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if I want my beard to say anything at all. I certainly don't want it interrupting me, contradicting me or getting stroppy if I don't trim it often enough.
ReplyDelete