Grumpy Old Men: A Manual for the British Malcontent. David Quantick
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Another thing about cats which is false is the fool remark that they’re intelligent. Now this might wash to some extent with dolphins, who do seem to talk a bit and can do tricks but cats? Come off it. Here’s a simple test; lock the cat in the house, having first blocked up the catflap. Put a chair next to the keyhole for the back door and on that chair place the key to the back door. Tell the cat, in short words, that the key on the chair will open the back door. And go to Florida for six months (using the front door). When you come back, will you find a) the back door opened and all your possessions removed and sold, b) an armed gang of felines waiting for you to exact a terrible revenge, or c) the skeleton of a cat? Case rested or what? Bugger off, cats and take ocelots with you.
Red squirrels. How we loved them, with their cute ears and their little faces and their russet fur. We even, bafflingly, based a road safety campaign around a red squirrel. These days, if they wanted to find Tufty to interview him on one of those nostalgia TV shows, they’d be stuffed. Tufty has gone the way of all flesh, driven out of his native Nutwood City Limits or wherever he lived by a grey squirrel, name of Arseface. What was the deal with red squirrels, that they wouldn’t stand up and fight for their red squirrel rights? Were they too busy hoarding acorns for the long winter, or were they just too interested in learning about road safety? Either way, the grey squirrels moved in and trashed the neighbourhood.
Grey squirrels – someone called them ‘jazz rats’, a rare combination of two unpopular things. Grey squirrels are the cuckoos of the squirrel world and they should be outed as such. Just pray that one day, what with genetic engineering, GM foods, global warming and all, it’s just a matter of time until the big mauve squirrels come along and give the grey squirrels the kicking they so richly deserve.
What’s the point of wasps? We’ve got mosquitos and we’ve got bees and we really don’t need some inbetweeny stripey stinging spiv as well. Wasps are crap. The only reason Noah took two wasps onto the Ark was they probably stung the unicorns to death and nicked their tickets. That’s the kind of useful animal wasps are.
Wasps are, in fact, bees gone bad. Not literally, obviously, nobody really thinks that if a bee is naughty, it starts smoking tabs and building a paper nest. Wasps resemble bees in many ways; they buzz, they’re stripey, they have queens, and that’s it. Wasps are sods. At school they probably bullied the bees and made them do their homework for them. Later they would go out drinking with a bee because the bee had a car, and then the wasps would rob a sub post office and make the bee take the rap. Wasps are not bees. There’s no kids’ book about a wasp being friends with an ant because wasps don’t have friends. Ha ha! Look at the lonely wasp!
The real difference between bees and wasps is this; when a bee stings you, it dies. Its only weapon, other than pollen, is fatal to it. When a wasp stings you, it doesn’t die. It just laughs and twirls its imaginary moustache.
When a wasp stings you, it doesn’t die. It just laughs and twirls its imaginary moustache.
Wasps are bastards and they know it. All they do all day is chew paper to make nests, hang around sticky drinks, and sting people for fun. And why is it that, on the one day of the year when the weather is remotely bearable, the sun comes out and with it come the wasps? Why don’t the little gits ever go skiing or something? Then at least they might break their stupid wasp waists and we could all have a good laugh. But no, hot day, wasp. Sod off, wasps, and take flies with you. As humans, we prefer the company of daddy-long-legses.
Let’s differentiate here. There are some fine pigeons in the world. Real credits to society. Your wood pigeon is virtually a saint. It makes a nice noise, and it is pretty. Also in a pie it’s OK. Racing pigeons are the greyhounds of the sky, noble beasts of the air who could find a pin in the Gobi Desert if, for some reason, they wanted to. But city pigeons are vile. Airborne sewers with guano so toxic it will burn through the paintwork of your car like bird’s arse napalm.
Flying rats, you say? Hardly. People would pay money to see a flying rat. Aerodynamically graceful, sleek and with a wavy tail, a flying rat might be fun to see. A rat has character, it’s a rat, not just a non-flying pigeon. Pigeons, on the other hand, are crap. Leaving aside the hereditary syphilis thing or whatever that is, they ought to be Cockney doves of the air, surviving on a diet of jellied eels and olive branches in the mean city streets. But they’re not. They’re brickthick, filthy, one-toed nerks. They’re not actually animals, they’re machines designed for turning birdseed into guano. Good skill there, pigeon chappy.
… pigeons will come along and empty their bowels over everything and everyone
And as for those old women who have nothing better to do than go out and spread the contents of their breadbins all over your local green space so that pigeons will come along and empty their bowels over everything and everyone – wouldn’t you just love to see one of those old dears feeding the pigeons one sunny morning and suddenly an umarked van screech up, the doors fly open and four masked men leap out, throw her in the back and she’s never seen again?
Better than a fine, any day of the week.
‘It’s the idea that thousands of potentially incontinent businessmen or absent-minded serial killers have stayed here before you.’
Hotel rooms are like real rooms, only about nine times pokier and a hundred times more depressing. There’s something deeply gloomy about staying in a hotel. Possibly it’s the idea that thousands of potentially incontinent businessmen or absent-minded serial killers who just may have forgotten to take the severed head out of the safe when they left have stayed here before you. Possibly it’s the ambience, that strange dim hotel room atmosphere which is part East German brothel in a spy movie and part overdressed cabin on a gay trawler. And possibly it’s simply the knowledge that doing anything apart from opening the window will cost you a fortune; the minibar, the phone, the pay TV – if they could find a way to put a meter on the chocolate on the pillow they would.
Awful places. For a start, they’re often beige which is depressing. Instead of shampoo and soap and toothpaste, they have ‘toiletries’. Toiletries are the smallest amounts of shampoo, soap and toothpaste that can actually be held. (Despite this, after you’ve used them, there’s always some left which has to be either thrown away or drunk by the manager).
The shower curtain is made of some special clinging plastic which moulds itself to the shape of your cold wet body and