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A number of years ago now - as a child - I remember moving into
a new house and with it acquiring a considerable garden that over-looked
the river.
One side of
this garden was bounded by leylandii hedging that separated us from
our neighbour, an eccentric naval officer (retired) called Mr. Leggett,
a man passionate about drinking, playing bridge and tending to his
lawn - a lawn, incidentally, that he kept well groomed and immaculate
for he spent long hours digging clover and daisies from it with
a knife and fork. But he had another passion as well, a passion
manifested during night-time hours and one which gave rise to some
concern in our household: a passion for shooting rabbits. Nothing
disturbing about that of course, no, not unless you're a rabbit,
only this was conducted by searchlight (ex-Navy surplus, I suspect,
or possibly 'requisitioned' from a Gun Boat or a Destroyer) and
swivel mounted to the ledge outside his bedroom window.
And so, with
an air rifle attached to his upper body, and clad only in pyjamas,
he took well-illuminated pot shots at startled rabbits on the lawn.
His aim was invariably inaccurate, I recall, complimented no doubt
by numerous gin and tonics, and as a consequence many pellets passed
straight through the hedge and into our greenhouse. Some of these
rogue pellets even had the audacity to pass through both walls of
the greenhouse and mutilate a giant Bergenia Cordifolia ('Elephant's
Ears') on the other side. Strangely enough, though, the pellets
didn't break the glass at all, no, not a single pane, but bored
perfect holes straight through them. As you might imagine my father
was not amused by this situation, no, in fact he was furious.
In this day
and age, of course, the spectre of 'Garden Rage' might manifest
itself in an ugly scene over the garden fence after such unneighbourly
conduct, perhaps even a slap on the head with a mutilated Bergenia,
but this was in more tolerant times: times when public rage was
something akin to an admission of mental incapacity and a diplomatic
word or two over the garden fence was more readily employed to resolve
such matters.
Mind you,
I never did discover what was said all those years ago over the
garden fence, but night-time warfare against rabbits ceased and
the greenhouse acquired new glass, so whatever it was, it must have
been effective.
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