I am confirmed as 'Trésorier,' which is all fine until I wonder however will I be unconfirmed? Being Treasurer of a voluntary organisation is like taking up one of the more violent religions: apostasy being impossible, or at least very hard. You slog away like Atlas holding the mountain of paper and bank accounts and audit reports on your shoulders, year after year, suffering the brickbats of all those who accuse you - often with reason - of not been able to add up until you can find someone else to take over from you. It is not often that a Hercules comes around - and even then if you remember the story he tricked poor Atlas by saying that he would take the world upon his shoulders while Atlas went off for a spot of needy retirement, but would Atlas just mind holding the world one last time for a couple of minutes while he, Hercules, rearranged his lion skin to make himself slightly more comfortable for the eternity to come. Of course once Atlas had taken the world back, Hercules, cad that he was, disappeared fast. His word as obviously not his bond. He wasn't British, clearly. Although to be strictly fair Atlas had tried to trick Hercules before.
But what, I wonder, ever happened to Atlas? They don't tell you these things in legends. They say only that Atlas fathered many children. Goddesses of the day were attracted, apparently, by strong men holding up the world. I suppose they must have had their sex standing up, which is not recommended when you are trying to conceive. But I suppose gods make their own rules. Anyway despite having to hold up the world, Atlas pulled. That much we know.
What we don't know is whether Atlas is still there doing his bit for mankind. If that were the case you'd have thought the world would have got itself together to hold an Atlas day to give thanks. I mean if Atlas got tired he might drop the world into.......er.........space, I suppose, and we'd be left to drift around the sun for ever and a day, or until the sun burns up and we shall - as Tom Lehrer succinctly puts it 'all fry together when we fry,' though he had in mind something depressingly thermo-nuclear happening before that.
So maybe Atlas just got bored one day and wandered off - or maybe he succeeded in handing over the task of world's strongest man and multiple goddess inseminator to one of his many sons, who maybe was a lesser man than his father, or who maybe had arthritis or rheumatism and so cast the world into outer or, rather, inner, space. And here we are today. Twinning Associations and all.
Where exactly were we? Oh yes! Giving up. Relinquishing the burden of Trésorier of the Twinning Association. All is not actually lost because the Twinning Association is running out of funds at a fairly substantial rate and we shall have to draw a halt to our activities in a year or two, unless some benefactor comes along. In past years that benefactor was the European Commission, plus a rather larger and younger membership with deeper pockets than is the case today. Hosting and entertaining a coachload of visitors for a weekend costs some £5,000 - and although we have some income to offset this, the sands of our bank account are running out. These visits take place every other year - alternating with our visits to them when they bear the cost - and we have enough money to host one more visit after this one. But then the bank account will be empty and it is just possible that I shall be free.
This time we shall entertain the visitors when they arrive to a Reception in our charming Physic Garden and the next day whisk them off to the Penderyn Distillery for aperitifs. Then to a hotel for lunch before a ride on the Brecon Mountain Railway with a stop scheduled: photographs for the taking of. The following night, we shall uphold the Entente Cordiale by dancing and singing in the Town Hall. Not boring disco dancing; we shall dust-off the lovely folk dances that they do better than we such as the bull dance in which you all make a circle and someone takes a tea towel and waves it, matador style, in front of someone they fancy. That person then has to act the part of a bull charging the tea towel to the music. After a few passes the bull becomes the matador and the tea towel is dangled before another swain. We sing French, Welsh and English songs; I have accrued a compendium over the years. Singing like this - for enjoyment rather than exhibition - is something that has almost entirely fallen out of the social calendar. We don't even sing in pubs anymore. It is all rather sad. Atlas would have sung, wouldn't he? To keep his spirits up?
Book Review: No Country for Girls by Emma Styles
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Two girls go on the run in Emma Styles’ No Country for Girls: a man is dead
and they leave the city in his ute, still strangers but now accomplices to
murd...
1 week ago


