The Oldie magazine - August 2021 issue (403)

Page 53

cares for Borges after he falls off the side of a mountain near Aviemore while impersonating King Lear for a storm that has called to him. As do the father and daughter who fish him out of Loch Ness after he capsizes a rowing boat while reciting the Song of Creation from Beowulf. In his afterword, Parini admits to having dined out on his Borges tales for almost half a century. He retells them here with a nice light touch. They make the perfect comic pair, these two: ‘the callow, overly serious, shy, and often terrified’ Jay, and the blind bard who takes time between pratfalls and literary disquisitions to ponder madly on his young guide’s dreams and terrors. But for all his talk of labyrinths, mirrors and fictitious selves, Borges is striving desperately to give the boy courage. By the time Rocinante stalls just outside the city limits of St Andrews, he has somehow succeeded, ‘forcing a shift’ in Jay, ‘a change in perspective’ that must, he later decides, ‘have hit me at just the right time’. Parini went on to become one of the most admired and American original writers of his generation. This is his tribute to the man who opened the door.

Germans in the dock HAMISH ROBINSON Prisoners of Time: Prussians, Germans and Other Humans By Christopher Clark

BRITISH LIBRARY

Allen Lane £25 Prisoners of Time shares common ground with the two superb books that brought Christopher Clark to prominence. Iron Kingdom was a comprehensive history of the rise and fall of Prussia. The Sleepwalkers was his brilliant unravelling of the diplomatic entanglements that led to the First World War. It also hints, with mild provocation, at a philosophical stance: the historian will view all things, even Prussians and Germans, humanely. This humanity is evident in the two detailed historical papers included in the collection. There’s a study of the ambivalent career of Colonel General Blaskowitz, a senior Wehrmacht officer who threw himself down a stairwell on the eve of a likely acquittal at the Nuremburg Trials in 1948. And there’s ‘From Prussia with Love’ – an account of a sex scandal involving the prosecution of two charismatic preachers in Königsberg in the 1830s. In the former, Clark teases out the Christian ethos of a professional soldier.

Calendar of a Book of Hours, August. From Going to Church in Medieval England by Nicholas Orme, Yale University Press, £20

In 1939, he blighted his career by repeatedly filing reports complaining of atrocities in Poland, but continued doggedly to serve the regime in subordinate capacities throughout the war. In the latter, he highlights the real consolation provided by eccentric religious groups persecuted by an ‘enlightened’ administration. The same capacity for empathy is on show in his assessment of John Röhl’s three-volume biography of Kaiser Wilhelm II. Röhl, he argues, like many biographers, came to despise his subject, and his contempt unbalances an otherwise unrivalled scholarly achievement. It is only in not seeing the Kaiser as the hateful caricature of bombast and bluster that one can come to a more

balanced view of his role in the diplomatic escalation leading up to the First World War. There was a cautious, even cowardly Kaiser, whom readers of The Sleepwalkers will recognise, who was not all hothead and fool. In a more speculative essay advertised as the centrepiece of the book, ‘The Dream of Nebuchadnezzar’, Clark sketches the shifting, cyclical morphing of power through history as it concentrates or disperses, often deceptively, in different types of regime. There is a pair of Festschrift-style tributes to two pioneers of world history, Jürgen Osterhammel and Chris Bayley. Clark praises the former for the bird-like freedom with which he surveys his vast historical panoramas, swooping down on instructive detail. He praises the latter for the untrammelled curiosity and The Oldie August 2021 53


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

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
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.