I still remember the story about a learned gentleman in Australia who in the 1930s foresaw that a great war was about to break over the world and, not wanting to participate in this foolish war, fled to the then almost unknown island of Guadalcanal — which, as we now all know, saw some of the bloodiest fighting in WWII.
I remember having written about this story some years ago - click here. I don't remember whether it was W. Somerset Maugham or James A. Michener who wrote it, although chronologically it must've been the latter as Maugham was already retired when World War II broke out.
I lived on Guadalcanal twice: once to work for a statutory body as secretary (which is what they called their commercial manager), and the second time to sort out the finances of a large trading company.
The company was managed by an Englishman well into the second half of his life - the sort of man Graham Greene once called "a burnt out case" - who kept coming back to work in the islands because his wife back in England liked the money he was making there but not him.
He being more than twice my age but only half the energy I applied to this urgent job meant that we had nothing in common other than our loneliness, and so I accepted his invitation to dinner at his house.
As we sat at the large dinner table in front of a fake fireplace with a large painting of London Bridge hanging above it, and the haus boi brought in dish after dish, punctuated by gin and tonics, his sorry story of morbid decay called tropical deterioration slowly unravelled.
I was unable to relate to any of it, as life hadn't kicked me around yet as much as it has since, and I found the setting quite pathetic: that fake fireplace with a large painting of London Bridge hanging above it, and his getting all soppy about a home he only saw every couple of years.
The image stayed with me and probably influenced me in quitting my last expatriate job ten years later which still gave me time to settle down to a regular job at home before tropical deterioration set in.







