The Oldie magazine - August 2021 issue (403)

Page 30

Town Mouse

Today’s new is tomorrow’s old tom hodgkinson

When I was a country mouse, I loved old things. My favourite quote – almost a maxim for living – was that lovely line from Oliver Goldsmith’s She Stoops to Conquer: ‘I love everything that’s old: old friends, old times, old manners, old books, old wine.’ These wise words are spoken by the irascible country mouse Mr Hardcastle. He also complains that London ways are corrupting the countryside: ‘I wonder why London cannot keep its own fools at home! In my time, the follies of the town crept slowly among us, but now they travel faster than a stagecoach. Its fopperies come down not only as inside passengers, but in the very basket.’ Well, the follies and fopperies of the town have severely infected this town mouse lately. In the country, in addition to Mr Hardcastle’s excellent list, I had old cars, old clothes and old kitchen units and was perfectly happy. So often, I noticed, old, cheap things were repackaged as new, expensive things. Victorian gruel has now been revamped as oatmeal-based Oatly – what was once food for the poor is now marketed as a trendy milk substitute, costing £2 a pint. 30 The Oldie August 2021

But something has happened. Something has shifted. I’ve started to covet new things, like the other fools of London town. Take cars. Till recently, we bought an old banger every two or three years. To my mind, the difference between a car costing £1,000 and £30,000 is minimal. The modern car has more screens and is a tiny bit shinier. Apart from that, I doubt whether a Martian would be able to tell the difference between my old Vauxhall Vectra from 2006 and a brand-new Tesla. They both have four wheels and bomb along at the same speed. Imagine my surprise, therefore, last month to find myself buying a new car. OK, it’s not actually new; it’s five years old. But that’s new to me. It cost ten times the price of the Vauxhall Vectra. To buy it, I went deep into debt – a habit I avoided as a frugal country mouse. I justified this decision thus: old cars are apparently toxic and virtually illegal in London. To drive them into central London – now called the Ultra Low Emission Zone, or ULEZ – you have to pay £12.50 every trip. New cars have lower tax, and are supposedly less ecologically damaging than old cars. So there are arguments in favour of

the new. But I feel corrupted a little bit, as if I have been seduced by the vanities and affectations of town living. The same is true of clothes. In the country, I would wear any old secondhand clothes that were lying around. A tweed jacket from a charity shop. Ancient jumpers. Jeans with holes in them. Old boots. Sometimes I looked hip by accident: I quite liked the country look of flat cap and tweeds. Weirdly, this style migrated from country to town and I remember coming to London in a flat cap and feeling quite trendy as all the DJs in Soho were wearing them. It’s the same with that young Kaleb Cooper, Jeremy Clarkson’s brilliant 22-year-old farmhand in his new TV show, Clarkson’s Farm. Kaleb went to London once and didn’t like it. He wears country clothes and looks a lot better than his foppish contemporaries in town. Anyway, in London I’ve found myself hanging round emporiums such as Uniqlo, buying black drainpipe trousers and cardigans. I bought a shirt from Harvie & Hudson. I bought not one but two new pairs of trainers, one by Nike and the other by Converse. I bought a new velvet jacket, new T-shirts, new tennis clothes and a new tennis racket. Our backyard boasts a new bench and we put in a new kitchen with a new oven and a new fridge. I’ve even been buying new books: back on the farm, all the books I bought were second-hand. After 12 years of resisting the cult of newness, I find I am being seduced by its siren strains. The next thing to go, I suppose, will be the old phone. I am still clinging on to my rubbish Samsung dumbphone, which is singularly unintelligent. It cannot connect to the internet. It has no camera. It does nothing except make calls and send texts. And I really like it. It’s cheap and, after all, it was the latest thing 15 years ago. But I feel as if I am practically the only person in the world without a smartphone. Doubtless, the authorities will soon make it illegal not to have one of these computerised tracking devices in your pocket at all times. It’s all vanity, of course. Today’s new is tomorrow’s old. I used to say that I lived like a millionaire, just like a millionaire from 1969, or even 1989. Go backwards and you’ll feel rich. The new is a tyranny. G K Chesterton said, ‘We must go back to freedom or forward to slavery.’ But maybe there is a third way and it’s the one recommended by Ovid. In the Fasti, he wrote, ‘We praise the old ways, but use the present years. And both are customs worthy to be kept.’


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Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

5min
pages 98-100

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

On the Road: Roy Strong

4min
pages 86-88

Taking a Walk: Strolling by Old Father Thames

3min
page 85

The Middle Kingdom: the splendours of Meath

7min
pages 80-81

Overlooked Britain: The New House, near Tunbridge Wells,

4min
pages 82-84

Drink Bill Knott

5min
page 71

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 67-68

Golden Oldies John Stoker

4min
page 66

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 65

Television Roger Lewis

5min
page 64

Film: Now, Voyager

3min
page 62

History

4min
page 61

The Paper Palace, by Miranda Cowley Heller Alex Clark

4min
pages 55-56

Media Matters

4min
page 57

Borges and Me: An Encounter, by Jay Parini

5min
pages 51-52

Silent Earth: Averting the Insect Apocalypse, by Dave Goulson

5min
pages 49-50

Prisoners of Time: Prussians Germans and Other Humans, by Christopher Clark

3min
pages 53-54

The Making of Oliver Cromwell, by Ronald Hutton

3min
pages 45-46

The Doctor’s Surgery

10min
pages 39-41

Autograph obsessive

6min
pages 28-29

Country Mouse

4min
page 31

I hate fussy food Ray Connolly

4min
pages 32-34

Small World

4min
page 35

Bob, the gallant, Scottish

6min
pages 22-24

The genius of Alec Guinness

5min
pages 26-27

Town Mouse

4min
page 30

My gossip days are over

4min
page 19

The super Mini Cooper

4min
page 13

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Felicity Kendal, still living the good life at 75 Simon Hemelryk

3min
page 11

Postcards from the Edge

4min
pages 20-21

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

3min
pages 7-8

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10

The Old Un’s Notes

6min
pages 5-6
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