I discovered the other day that the man who began the company that became Norwich Union Insurance - and later Aviva - developed an idea for shoes with revolving heels.
Or maybe they were boots with revolving heels. I’m not sure. Anyway I gather the idea didn’t catch on, though I am not sure why. Heels are always the most vulnerable part of the shoe and if the heel could rotate, well it might wear down evenly across its surface, though eventually, presumably, leaving a protruding pin in the middle of the heel which might do serious damage to a polished floor.
Since those very early days I’m not sure that any more work has been done on heels though a cobbler could perhaps rapidly put me right on that. Whether work has or hasn’t been done, heels still seem to wear down apace and that is without any serious walking.
And when I think of serious walking I think not of people in boots with trousers tucked into their socks, striding upwards over the Brecon Beacons, but of William Gladstone who thought nothing of a twelve mile hike from Chester to Hawarden carrying a suitcase or more probably one of those large bags that bear his name. His shoes must have worn out quickly and I suppose the cobbling trade in those parts must have been profitable.
Three or four times a week I trudge up the local hill above the town here in pursuit of exercise and it is on such treks that my brain, let off its humdrum leash, begins to rehearse such thoughts. Are they valuable? I don’t know. They seem to be the counterpoint to the ‘useless’ knowledge that schools used to try to drum into the heads of sixth formers whose minds were otherwise engaged with ‘A’ levels and university entrance papers. The phrase ‘Useless Knowledge’ (or something very similar) figures prominently in Alan Bennett’s play ‘The History Boys.’
Is 'Useless Knowledge' - useful? After all, it seems to be a question that many people in and out of education have spent a long time worrying about. The fact that you can’t define useless or useful seems no hindrance to the debate. Nor in fact does the fact that the useful versus useless dimension is but one aspect of the question. I’d prefer to pose the question: is useless knowledge fun? Does it contribute to human happiness? That seems a more relevant line to debate.
Had I been a cobbler I could perhaps have written a technical blog about mending heels, which I doubt would have interested anyone outside the cobbling fraternity; and I would look silly learning about such technical aspects and trying to regurgitate them if I weren’t a cobbler. But anyone can write about revolving heels and can imagine the eccentricities of direction they might imply. That seems infinitely more fun and in these days of economic drift - someone suggested we might be in this mess for the next twenty years - fun is perhaps all we have left.
Hell
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“Grab your coat, love, we’re going to Cineworld,” Sartre said. “All that I
know about my life, it seems, I have learned in books. Wanna see a film.”
Simone ...
1 hour ago

10 comments:
It would certainly make turning on your heel to effect a swift exit a more graceful affair. As long as didn't develop ideas of their own and swivel you about arbitrarily!
I thought this was an April Fool at 1st...ie. the revolvong heels...
I like the image of your brain being let off its leash....
There used to be revolving heels of a sort! Apparently they were quite common in poor areas, on men's shoes - so someone told me, and I actually saw someone with them in the 1970s - they must have been about the last pair. A metal disc was fixed to the outer part of the heel where it went on the ground, and it could be rotated as it wore down. Thank God for durable rubber soles nowadays - saves a lot of cash!
Fennie, I just enjoy these sorts of questions that you share with us, and so hope that you keep on taking walks up that hill, if you'll continue to bring questions back down with you.
xo
I want some revolving heels to wear with my circular skirt
Fennie, lovely to catch up with you, the summer months got in the way of blogging and my blog friends. Thank you for your very kind offer of the Gaelic song book, I would love to give it a home in the hebrides and it would be very loved.
The mind boggles about revolving heels, the happy farmers' family were well respected cobblers for many years, on is mother's side, and now their machinery resides in a museum.
Rather late to both of these thanks to activities at Hotel H, but wanted to say that those revolving heel moments with brain off the leash are clearly immensely productive. Congratulations on the success of your adaptation of 'Temporary Shelter' which has resulted in you being asked to come up with another winning Tremain adaptation. I bet that whilst you think your brain is off the leash it'll be busily working on the next play. So long as you don't use those walks to learn how to fart at will, we'll all be happy!
I love the thought of your brain, off-leash, Fennie!
Revolving heels might work, but the middle pin problem could well be the obstacle. Over here it`s very hard to find someone to repair shoes - it`s nearly an extinct trade.
Milla - yes turning on your heel is a fine art often seen in films. I must practice it!
Jan - yes, it feels like a bit of a puppy; always rushing round in circles and investigating everything.
Vivien - Rubber soles are fine but the heels are still a problem.
Frances - Certainly, I do think better in the rarified air of a hilltop.
Elizabeth - but wouldn't a revolving skirt be better still? It might even carry logos back and front like a T shirt.
Posie - I'll look out the book!
Chris - well if I do at least it will be out in the open air!
Pondside - not easy here either. We live in a throwaway age.
I seem to remember seeing an advert for 'revolving heels' in our local cobbler when I was a child. They had a central fixing and could be turned around at will... or have I made that up ...?
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