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Today's quote:

Sunday, June 28, 2026

It is a dark and stormy night ...

 

 

Oh, you can kiss me on a Monday
A Monday, a Monday is very, very good
Or you can kiss me on a Tuesday
A Tuesday, a Tuesday, in fact I wish you would
Or you can kiss me on a Wednesday
A Thursday, a Friday and Saturday is best
But never, never on a Sunday
A Sunday, a Sunday, 'cause that's my day of rest

Most any day you can be my guest
Any day you say, but my day of rest
Just name the day that you like the best
Only stay away on my day of rest

Oh, you can kiss me on a cool day, a hot day
A wet day, which everyone you choose
Or try to kiss me on a gray day, a May day
A pay day, and see if I refuse
And if you make it on a bleak day
A freak day, a week day, why you can be my guest
But never, never on a Sunday

Indulge yourself and listen to the soundtracks here

 

... and I want to be transported back to a time when both the world and I were still young - and decidedly warmer than tonight's "Riverbend".

Greece may still be envisioned by some as old guys in sheets wandering around the Acropolis spouting wisdom before somebody pours hemlock in their ear, but my guess is that they will change their minds after having watched Melina Mercouri do her stuff in "Never on Sunday".

The film is a mix of Pygmalion plus "hooker with a heart of gold", and tells the story of Ilya, a self-employed, free-spirited prostitute who lives in the port of Piraeus in Greece, and Homer, an American tourist and classical scholar who is enamored of all things Greek.

 

Homer Thrace: She killed them. Medea herself, does she not say, “I killed my children”?
Ilya: And you believe her? You don’t understand the women. Medea loves her husband, yes?
Homer Thrace: Yes.
Ilya: Her husband is interested in another woman? Yes?
Homer Thrace: Yes.
Ilya: So she said to her husband that she has killed her children to frighten him, to get him back.
Homer Thrace: No!
Ilya: Yes. She gets him back, and everybody go away and everybody is happy and they go to the seashore. And that’s all!
Homer Thrace: If I show you that everything that was ever written about Medea talks of her killing her children. If you ask 10 out of 10 people who saw the play and they tell you it’s true, then by simple logic. . .You’re a Greek, you should be logical.
Ilya: Why?
Homer Thrace: Because the greatest Greek of them all, Aristotle, invented logic. He said –
Ilya: Who?
Homer Thrace: Aristotle. . .
Ilya: Aristotle! The one that the Captain said thinks men are everything and women are nothing? I don’t care what he said, Aristotle.


Homer Thrace: It's extraordinary. Where do you learn all those languages?
Ilya: In bed.

 

Both Greece’s film industry and the entire nation took centre stage when the film was released in October of 1960, and it led to massive increases in tourism and location-shooting there.

Some twenty years later, I lived and worked in Piraeus by which time Melina Mercouri was already a not-so-sprightly 64 years old. Piraeus was still as lively and, in parts, as bawdy as shown in this movie, but never on Monday when I went back to work in my office at # 3 Agiou Nikolaou to manage my Saudi boss's commodity trading and fleet of bulk carriers.

 

 

 

"And everybody is happy and they go to the seashore." Some memories can get you through even the darkest and stormiest night.

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

P.S. See also Armchair-travelling on a windy day

 

Remembering "The Colonel"

 

Anyone who recognises me in this photo gets a year's free subscription to this blog

 

Canberra's Barton House in the sixties was a place for young people or anyone who could not afford more than the weekly £11/10s for a shared room, shared facilties, breakfast and dinner, and a brown-paper-bag full of soggy lunchtime sandwiches. Our average age was well below thirty as you had to be young to survive the late-night drinking and partying.

Pity the retired old surveyor, known as "The Colonel", who lived alone in a room, just him and a copy of every Canberra Times ever printed. He spoke to no-one and yet, if you met him in the corridor, he would stop and stare, daring you to go past him. You could hear him before you saw him as he always carried his own set of cutlery in his pockets. In the mornings he would stand outside the communal showers and rap his walking-stick on the door if anyone dared to stand under the shower for longer than what he considered was a reasonably long enough time.

According to the archives, "The Colonel" - who only ever made it to sergeant - came to Canberra in 1913 to work as surveyor for the Commonwealth. His real name was Ernest John Dowling and he was born in Geelong on 20 March 1891 (which would've made him 74 years old the first time he rapped his walking-stick on my shower cubicle).

Mercifully, he died on 13 August 1971, long before his "home", Barton House, was demolished in 1981. A trig station on a hill near Uriarra in the A.C.T. is named after him, which is more than any of us callous youngsters achieved who so mercilessly made fun of him in the sixties.

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Taking a leek inside Woolies

 

 

Padma is again considering a trip home to Indonesia and took me along for some grocery shopping so that I will know where everything is and where all the specials are while she's away. After all that mental overload, I couldn't help myself but had to take a leek - well, two, actually.

Before he could call the woman with the mob and bucket and the police, I explained to the manager that this was just one of my occasional outbursts of the oxymoronic 'German humour' which had followed me halfway around the world, but all he wanted to know was the meaning of 'oxymoronic'. I told him to ask my friend Des.

To all my old friends from the Bougainville days, this is merely a photographic confirmation that all that lovely CAMAY soap we were given in the camps did nothing for my complexion, and neither have the ravages of time passed me by, so if you run into me at Woolies, you'd probably won't recognise me - unless you see me taking a leek.

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

The Berlin Lift

 

Click on Watch on YouTube to view this clip

 

They say history repeats itself, and none is more similar to what's happening in Ukraine right now than the eleven-month-long Berlin Airlift when Soviet forces blockaded rail, road, and water access to Allied-controlled areas of Berlin from 24 June 1948 to 12 May 1949.

 

Yours truly before we were airlifted out of Berlin

 

I, together with my mother and three sisters, was amongst the 48,000 people that were airlifted out of Berlin during the Russian Blockade. Ours was a freight plane that had landed tons of coal. As soon as the coal had been unloaded, we were flown out to a new life in the West.

 

Commemorative postage stamp of the Berlin Memorial, first issued on September 1, 1948

The "Notopfer Berlin" postal tax stamp was introduced as a consequence of the Berlin blockade (24 June 1948 – 12 May 1949). The 2 pfennigs that were collected were intended to benefit the West Berlin population who suffered economic hardship. This stamp was in obligatory use until 31.3.1954 but was still used when I began my articled years in 1960.

 

Maybe Montgomery Clift as pilot Danny MacCullough in "The Big Lift" tells a better story than any documentary ever could:

 

 

That was in 1949. Sixteen years later, I made an even better escape to Australia, but you already know of this as I'm still here to tell the tale.

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Komm zurück weisser Bruder

 

 

My knowledge of the Amazon Basin is limited to what I know of Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald, also known as Fitzcarraldo, an opera-loving fortune hunter who dreamt of building an opera house in the Peruvian rainforest, after I watched the movie Fitzcarraldo.

All this changed when I discovered "Komm zurück weisser Bruder" in the Salvos op-shop. I simply had to give it a new home since it was the original German edition which had been meticulously preserved since its publication in 1962, clearly by someone as fond of books as I am.

 

 

I had never heard of Theodor Koch-Grünberg whose sudden death in Brazil in 1924 was fictionalised in the 2015 film "El abrazo de la serpiente" (Embrace of the Serpent). It's the kind of book I will take to "Melbourne" to read by the light of a flickering kerosene lantern, far away from all the depressing news of earthquakes, wars, pestilence, and the seemingly never-ending fall of the value of my BHP shares.

 

 

I was so pleased having found this book that I bought someone a meal to square the books, so to speak. You can do the same by clicking here.

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

P.S. If you, too, feel troubled by the constant bombardment with it, you may wish to read Alain de Botton's excellent user's manual "The News".