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Today's quote:

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Is there a Diogenes to give me a hand?

 

 

Diogenes, the ancient Greek philosopher, famously threw away his cup after seeing a child drink water from his cupped hands, exclaiming, "A child has beaten me in plainness of living." I think of Diogenes every time I look at the accumulation of clutter in and around the house. He would have a field day here!

For most of my life I lived like Diogenes, never accumulating anything, or if I did, disposing of it when I moved on, which was scores of times. Everything I owned fitted into one medium-sized suitcase and an expandable pilot case reserved for the heavy reference books I needed for my work (those were the days before the internet!) which I took onto an aircraft as hand-luggage to avoid paying for excess baggage.

The need to travel light through life became almost pathological, so much so that if I stayed in one place for too long — and six months was usually too long — I would do the occasional trial-packing to ensure it all still fitted into the one suitcase. If not, I would dispose of it at once.

Not that I needed role models but I did have two: Noel, my best friend for almost thirty years who never had much because he never had much — money, that is! — and Brian, a latterly-acquired friend who never had much because he didn't want to spend the money — of which he had too much, presumably because he never spent it! Both were living examples of the age-old quote "A man's riches are the fewness of his wants".

That was forty years ago! Against my better judgement, I then turned domestic with a vengeance, acquiring everything that's needed for a comfortable life — and even more that's not needed and only makes life more complex and therefore less comfortable — often in duplicate and even triplicate, to the point that I no longer own the possessions but the possessions own me. That once medium-sized suitcase would morph into several shipping containers if I ever had to move again — unless I did some very radical trial-packing. Is there a Diogenes to give me a hand?

 


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Monday, January 12, 2026

Checkmate, mate!

 

 

I've just been told that, after a hiatus of many, many months, the Batemans Bay Chess Club is resuming its weekly tournament this coming Wednesday at the Catalina Club. What wonderful news!

And the timing is wonderful as well: the chess tournament runs from 5 to 7 p.m., after which we can just move across to the restaurant for a barramundi dinner washed down with a glass (or two) of the old chardy.

Life doesn't get much better than that!

 


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P.S. Mention chess and some people are reminded of the scene in the movie "The Seventh Seal" where a knight meets Death and challenges him to a game of chess in order to save his life. Mention chess to me and I am reminded of my time in Saudi Arabia when I spent all those lonely nights in a five-star hotel with many other lonely expats, some who stood outside my hotel room door at one o'clock in the morning with a chess-board under their arm and, in order to save their sanity, had asked me in a timid voice, "Feel like a game of chess?" - click here.

 

Raffles stands for all the fables of the exotic East!

 

1b  1c  1d  2a  2b  2c  2d  3a  3b  3c  3d  4a  4b  4c
4d  5a  5b  5c  5d  6a  6b  6c  6d  7a  7b  7c  7d

In June 1988, Noel Barber´s “Tanamera” was filmed at the Raffles

 

Somerset Maugham once remarked, "Raffles stands for all the fables of the exotic East!", and ever since this saying can be found wherever the logo of Singapore's Raffles Hotel appears.

 

Yours truly inside the Hermann Hesse suite

 

Maugham fell in love with the Grand Old Lady when he arrived for the first time in March 1921. He used to sit under the frangipani tree in the Palm Court. There he worked every morning until lunch. There and in what is today the spacious Somerset Maugham Suite, he corrected the galleys of his short story collection "The Trembling of a Leaf" and worked on a play called "East of Suez". When he returned to the hotel in 1925, he was writing some stories for "The Casuarina Tree", a rare compilation of indiscretions which helped multiply the anger against him that already escalated in the colonies.

 

Yours truly enjoying a Singapore Sling near the Long Bar

 

I stayed at the Raffles on a number of occasions - and on two occasions in the Hermann Hesse and the Somerset Maugham Suite - but, unlike Maugham, I never worked before lunch because it took me all morning to recover from the night before. However, once I had gorged myself on Raffles' famous tiffin, it was back and forth between Beach Road and the port of Sembawang to keep an eye on my employer's trans-shipment of tens of thousands of tons of sorghum and barley which came into Singapore in bulk to be bagged into 50kg-bags and reloaded onto one of our ships returning to the Middle East - click here.

 

Yours truly relaxing in the Palm Court

 

With the value of our cargoes running into the millions, flying into Singapore in the pointy end of the plane and putting up in the town's best hostelry was little more than a rounding error.

 

 

Those were the days, my friends; I thought they'd never end - but they did because in a fit of misdiagnosed homesickness I resigned, leaving me with no more than one last look at the legendary Raffles.

 


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An Experiment in Criticism

 

 

Those of us who have been true readers all our life seldom fully realise the enormous extension of our being which we owe to authors. We realise it best when we talk with an unliterary friend. He may be full of goodness and good sense but he inhabits a tiny world. In it, we should be suffocated. The man who is contented to be only himself, and therefore less a self, is in prison. My own eyes are not enough for me, I will see through those of others. Reality, even seen through the eyes of many, is not enough. I will see what others have invented ...” [page 89 of C.S. Lewis' "An Experiment in Criticism "]

 

Read it online here

 

C.S. Lewis may be most famous for his beloved children's fantasy series, "The Chronicles of Narnia", especially "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", but they all passed me by as I spent my childhood in bombed-out Germany. I discovered him rather late in adult life through his non-fiction works, one of which is "An Experiment in Criticism", in which he proposes that the quality of books should be measured not by how they are written, but by how often they are re-read.

 

"If on the other hand we found even one reader to whom the cheap little book with its double columns and the lurid daub on its cover had been a lifelong delight, who had read and reread it, who would notice, and object, if a single word were changed, then, however little we could see in it ourselves and however it was despised by our friends and colleagues, we should not dare to put it beyond the pale." [page 69]

 

I couldn't agree more and have re-read this essay at least twice!

 


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Sunday, January 11, 2026

A sign of the time?

 

 

I don't sleep well as there's simply too much on my mind, although seemingly not enough because last night, as I woke up thinking of my old mate Noel, I couldn't remember the name of the town he had lived in. I did remember that it was something starting with 'Mount' but was it Mount Morgan or Mount Carbine or what?

Not being much of a physical person, I had always regarded my mind as my greatest asset, and there I was, unable to remember the name of the town where my best friend had seen out his last few years and where I had visited him just after having come back to Australia in 1985, and of which I had often written in my blog. Was I losing my marbles?

The thought of losing my marbles bothered me so much that I got up to get my mobile phone to look up a GOOGLE map of the area around Bundaberg - yes, I did remember the nearest big city! - amd there it was, a hundred kilometres to the west, MOUNT PERRY ! What a relief!

Is this a sign of the time? Is this the early onset of dementia? (or is it Alzheimer's Disease? I've never worked out the difference!) Should I call my wife who reads up on all those things? What's her name again?

 


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