FARQUHAR McLAY
Playboys
NOTE: For many years Lord Provost McTinn of Glasgow travelled the globe
from one great capital to another. It was long rumoured that throughout
his travels he kept a journal in which was recorded, in minute and sometimes
disturbing detail, his most intimate experiences with important and powerful
leaders of the world. The journal is believed to have comprised some two
dozen 120-sheet Big Value Jotters which, we now know, had been gifted to
him by the S.CWS from their now defunct Stationery Department at 398 Paisley
Road, Glasgow, on the eve of his departure for Ottawa. As well as brief
day-to-day entries the journal contained longer and more finished passages,
whole chapters of autobiography, in fact, which were clearly intended for
the public, either in the form of published memoirs, or lectures, or, maybe,
after-dinner speeches. Sadly all two dozen books of the journal disappeared
following a mysterious burglary at McTinn's home shortly after his return
from Jidda. Although gold and silver swords, an Arabian jewelled dagger
and other gifts and valuables said to be worth well in excess of £900,000
were on the premises at the time and ready to hand, only the notebooks were
taken. To this day the thief s identity remains unknown. His, or indeed
her, purpose in wishing to lay hands on this substantial historical document,
has been variously conjectured. If, however, suppression was the object
it has signally failed. Extracts purporting to be from McTinn's journal,
some of extremely doubtful authenticity, let it be said, have popped up
in the Far East, the Middle East and the Near East, in the Mid West, the
North West and the Far North, as well as in the Deep South and, more recently,
on the South Side. Many of these unauthenticated texts are mere crude pornography.
For example in the Port Said edition the Prince of Mecca flagellates
McTinn with a sjambok. And again, in an account emanating from Milan (M
XXI ms.7) McTinn, in the nude, plays the organ in the Papal Chapel while
the Pope flagellates himself. The fragment published here is the Mecca version
(Z IVms.l) which has been scrupulously collated with all other verifiable
editions. In the absence of internal evidence to the contrary, and with
no better data to go on, I think we can safely accept this as being as close
to McTinn's original text as we are ever likely to get.
* * *
THE SAUDI PRINCE was full of breeding, with a royal dignity of head and
shoulders. Such was his colossal stature that one could only marvel at the
manner in which he put up with our trade delegation - such pygmies we must
have seemed to him.
But by rights I ought to begin with the Mayor of Jidda, a tall, graceful,
vigorous man with whom I at once struck up a terrific bond of friendship.
He played backgammon with my wife in the guest tent and was fond of reciting
lengthy passages from the Koran, the whole of which he had committed to
memory in boyhood. It was through the Mayor of Jidda that my Arabian adventure
really got underway.
One morning he had me kitted out in the regalia of Sherif Fauzan ibn Tikheimi,
his bosom friend, with ceremonial dagger and all. The hilt of that dagger
was studded with priceless jewels, and it was only with the greatest reluctance,
not wishing to offend, yet fearful I might lose it, that I was persuaded
to carry it about my person. They packed me off, with a specially padded
saddle under me, on Biseita, the Mayor's favourite she-camel, to ride the
lonely velvet sands of the Wadi Murrmiya.
Bedouin tribesmen bowed their heads as I passed. The Bedouin, let me tell
you, are a hard and pitiless race. They are wholly imbued with the spirit
of the desert, harsh and repellent, and cannot act otherwise but in accordance
with that spirit. Their chief delight would seem to be directing strangers
to wells which they know to be dry, and even to wells which do not in fact
exist and have never existed. To succour the afflicted seems to the Bedouin
a monstrous aberration: their natural disposition is to finish you off and
take your belongings. Yet how different, how very different, it proved to
be in my case!
When I lost control of Biseita in the Wadi Fura and was pitched headlong
into the sand, I thought my hour had come. The carrion crows hovered above
me and I resigned myself to death in the wilderness, far from family and
friends.
And as I composed myself for the final ordeal my whole career passed before
my eyes as in some wondrous vision. With the hand of death clutching at
my throat, it was that vision alone which eased my spirit and sustained
me. All things were suddenly made crystal clear. Yes I had made mistakes,
and they were not hidden from me, but my successes far outweighed them.
In the scale of eternal values I would be vindicated. My decision to become
the roving ambassador for our fair city had been the correct one. That above
all was what cheered and comforted me and enabled me to endure. I had chosen
the right course rather than the easy one. I had kept faith with destiny.
In my terrible anguish that vision consoled me. I knew my pre-ordained task
would be fulfilled.
Those who scoffed when I resisted their urgings to confine my duties to
a narrow sphere - they would be cast down. And the mud-slingers who said
I was taking long holidays at the ratepayers' expense, and free-wheeling
round the world simply to amass a personal fortune out of gifts received
from high dignitaries in Rome, Milan, Ottowa, London, Warsaw, Kabul, Mecca,
Medina, Jidda, Peking, Shanghai, Canton and all along the Great Wall of
China - these detractors would be scattered and confounded and put to shame.
My mission was to salvage and restore the broken and blighted image of our
town. Consider the disrepute into which we had fallen before I began my
travels. Even the Bedouin bandit who came to my rescue in a red Toyota truck
- yes even he, Abd el Shimt Bataab, porn merchant, even he had heard of
us. He even believed we must be descended from a tribe of professional jobbers
of pilgrims - a tribe banished in ancient times by a false Emir and blood-brothers
to the Bedouin. It was due entirely to this mythical Arab connection that
my life was spared. (Not that it saved Sherif Fauzan's jewelled dagger,
signed by Mufaddhi, the greatest swordsmith in all Arabia; it was stolen
from me as I slept, after a feast in my honour at a watering-place called
Abu Markha.)
On arrival back in Jidda a most fantastic reception awaited me. Scenes of
wild delirium all around. Wherever I stopped a sumptuous banquet was immediately
prepared.
The story of my desert travail had gone before me. Without in any way desiring
it, and indeed completely unknown to me, I had become a hero and celebrity
overnight. Everywhere I went people kept rushing up to me with tears in
their eyes and showering me with gifts of money and victual. "No!"
I yelled, "I am not the Prophet!". But my words were drowned in
their tumultuous acclaim.
As we neared the centre of the town the crowds grew even larger and soon
there were tens of thousands flocking round me. The Prince's soldiery had
to fend them off with whips. But the more bloodily the soldiers lashed out,
the more fervent these zealots became. At length some live ammunition was
distributed among the troops, and I was whisked away to the Royal Palace.
There I was reunited with my dear wife. It seems she had abandoned all hope
of ever seeing me again, and such was the shock occasioned by my sudden
appearance before her, that she fell away in a swoon. My friend and colleague
Bashir Kahn, who was part of the delegation, openly wept. The Mayor of Jidda,
alas, was absent from the gathering: I learnt later he had been called out
urgently to help quell the rioting. Indeed intermittent bursts of machine-gun
fire could be heard during the whole of that never-to-be-forgotten night.
Somewhere in the courtyard, Abdul Pasha, ancient laureate of the Saudis,
intoned his First and Second Hymn to the Prophet. This bold work was composed
in the first instance to commemorate the arrival of our trade mission. It
was now greatly expanded to take in the whole of my desert adventure and
triumphal return to Jidda.
Princess Mieff, a most gifted lady, graciously undertook to render the whole
of this very long poem into English. You can imagine how deeply affected
I was. But judge of my feelings when she bent down and whispered that at
any moment now I was to have bestowed upon me the highest honour in all
Arabia. My head was spinning.
I could not think what was happening to me as I was led away, dazed and
bewildered, down long meandering corridors and up huge flights of steps.
I caught a glimpse of Bashir deep in business negotiations with some sheiks.
1 noticed too that my dear wife seemed not yet to have recovered from her
little upset and was sprawled out on the floor of the courtyard with nobody
paying the least attention. At last we stopped at a massive gateway which
looked to be constructed out of solid gold. And I realised at once what
was happening: I had been summoned to the Royal Presence.
The Prince was striding towards me, the last word in breeding, a royal dignity
of head and shoulders.
"I want you to tell me everything" said the Prince, taking me
by the elbow and ushering me to a couch. "You must leave out not a
single detail. So far I have heard rumours merely. If half of what I have
heard is true, you may rest assured we shall not be displeased."
I did as the Prince bade me and left nothing out. By degress I came to the
part about my wondrous vision in the desert when I was exalted and saw myself
elect and justified in all my transactions and decisions, both public and
private. I recounted every little thing I could remember, exactly as it
had occurred, without embellishment or deletion. Finally I told of my deliverance
at the hands of the porn bandit Abd el Shimt Bataab who, on discovering
the name of my native place, hailed me as a brother of the true blood, one
of a lost tribe of the Bedu, and had me escorted safely back to Jidda amidst unheard
of and amazing scenes of mad joy. During the whole of my narration the Prince
sat very close to me on the divan and from time to time placed a hand on
my knee and in a low, croaking kind of voice kept saying something like
"It is the will of Allah, it is the will of Allah", to which I
thought it prudent simply to nod my head and go on with the story.
When I had finished, the Prince took several long, deep inhalations of air
and threw himself back amongst the silken cushions. He lay with his back
to me for a long time. I could not think what was expected of me. I had
heard stories of his delicate health.
I was beginning to wonder whether the Prince had had a seizure, an epileptic
fit perhaps, for his body jerked about violently for some minutes in a most
disquieting manner, and then his whole frame seemed to be convulsed, and
I was in something of a quandary as to whether I should summon help.
Then, as suddenly as it had overtaken him, whatever it was, it was gone,
and I found the Prince staring up at me with cold, almost malevolent eyes,
as if he held me in some way responsible for what had happened.
Without a word he sprang from the divan, pulled his robes around him, lit
a cigarette, and began to pace restlessly up and down.
"I must humbly beg your Royal Highnesses's pardon" I said, "if
anything I have done or any word I have uttered has been offensive to you."
I bowed my head very low and slid onto one knee. There was a long time during
which my head remained sunk low. The Prince came round to where I was kneeling
and stood over me. I could feel he was to some extent mollified now, seeing
me in that respectful posture.
"The Golden Sword of Mecca" said the Prince, "is never lightly
bestowed, nor is the Silver Sword of Jidda granted to the unworthy."
"I am at your feet, your Royal Highness" I said. "Show me
in what way I may prove myself worthy, for I know not, being a stranger
in your beautiful country, and I fear I may have erred unwittingly or in
some way caused offence without intending anything of the kind."
"This Abd el Shimt Bataab" said the Prince, "he is well known
to us. A purveyor of shameless and dissolute filth, a pernicious renegade
and transgressor of Shariah law. He has been condemned by the Wahhabi, which
means you are not permitted to sleep with him, eat with him, converse with
him or give countenance to any communication regarding him which is not
couched in terms of the most bitter disparagement."
The Prince was up so close to me that the folds of his gamboz, which he
wore with superb style and dignity, ruffled the hair on my bowed head, and
I became aware of a most delightful aroma enveloping me as I knelt there
on his silken olive-green carpet.
"He has crossed and re-crossed the desert many times" the Prince
went on, "from the mountain fastnesses of Taif to Dhahran, to Jidda,
to Riyadh and even to Mecca itself, with his caravan of red Toyota trucks
which contain filthy videos. I suppose you lay in his private tent? I suppose
he regaled you with some films?"
I gave my head two quick little shakes, not looking up, to signify total
and unreserved denial.
"There are other considerations, of course" the Prince continued.
"By the code of Hammurabi the trafficking in such merchandise condemns
him. But there is more. Abd el Shimt Bataab is a nomadic pastoralist who
preaches against oil and settled agriculture. Wherever he appears there
are disturbances and people leave their little wooden huts and once again
take to the camel and the tent and go roaming the desert to evade the tax!"
Yet again I shook my head rapidly two or three times, and I gasped, and
I squirmed, hoping by all this to convey to the Prince my sense of shock
and outrage.
"It's all right" said the Prince. "My Chief of Police, Gasim
Fuad Bey, is hot on his trail. Abd el Shimt Bataab's reign of savagery is
near to its close. What concerns me more —-" and here the Prince
raised my head in both his hands and stared penetratingly into my eyes -
"is you! This blood-brother connection you speak of. That's what worries
me. It may be nonsense of course. And yet - from what I've heard of your
town and townspeople... If you are of the banished tribe of the Bedu, a
tainted race, you are by nature rebellious. The high ideals of wealth and
luxury, grace, breeding, culture, leave you cold. The very concept of authority
and power and the law makes you boke. I could not in all honesty advise
anyone to invest money in your schemes. It would be nothing but aggravation."
My mind was racing. Clearly our rivals had stolen a march on us. Flagrant
untruths had been disseminated among the sheiks. The good name of our city
had been dragged through the dirt. We had been depicted as anarchists and
revolutionaries out to shatter the very fabric of the State itself. These
absurd calumnies had obviously reached the ears of the Prince. How was I,
a long-standing member of the Labour Party, to convince his Highness of
the sheer bliss I was experiencing, and the thousand and ones sensations
of voluptuous joy which coursed through me, as I knelt there on his silken
olive-green carpet?
After a hasty invocation to the Virgin Mother of Good Counsel, that she
might lead me to say and do all the right things at that critical juncture,
I began in this wise:
"Your Royal Highness, may I be permitted to attempt to rectify what
I very much fear has been a gross misrepresentation of the true character
and natural disposition of my people? You surely know that there are unprincipled
types going about, who, for their own ends and objects, would like to see
us vilified and muddied in your gracious Majesty's esteem. No doubt they
have tried to portray us as a gang of footpads and firebrands. But let me
assure you the truth is very different. In all my travels it has seldom
been my good fortune to meet with anything to equal the unique supineness
of our national character. The nearest I got to it was among the Dahomeans
on the Guinea Coast and in certain of the Witoto clans of North Western
Amazonia. We are an abject people, my Prince, utterly craven and base, emasculated
of all spirit and made tractable and stupid on a massive scale. Our jails
are hell-holes -"
"Ah!" interposed the Prince. "I see a contradiction here.
I am told your jails are overflowing. How is it, if your people are so docile,
they have to be locked away in such large numbers?"
"Because" I replied, the truth blowing into my mind like the Gift
of Tongues, "life on the outside is just as bad. Our wretched discards
no longer care very much one way or the other. DHSS poverty kills. Those
who do not actually perish in the flesh will, most infallibly and in due
time, perish in spirit. Unlike your Benignant Royal Highness, we do not
just chop limbs - we butcher the soul!"
"Sorcery?" inquired the Prince.
"Education" I replied. "Compulsory education. It is very
important. You have to catch them young, if you see what I mean."
"You have specialists in that work?"
"We do, we do. They are absolutely indispensable. We manufacture them
in our schools and universities. Afterwards they go into the community and
take jobs in the media or public relations or teaching or medicine or politics
or art or anything you care to mention and go right on furthering the good
work: dealing death to the human spirit and freeing us forever from the
pernicious frivolity of revolt. You could take the Labour Party as a pretty
good example of what I mean. Or Jimmy Reid. Or Margo MacDonald. You never
saw two like that for sinking the human spirit. In drama, in literature,
in art they abound, keeping the people meek, keeping the world safe for
authority."
"Yet for all that" said the Prince, fondling my hair, "some
not so meek slip through. This John MacLean I've been hearing about. Maybe
not an Abd el Shimt Bataab, but very dangerous nonetheless. How can I be
sure there are not others just like him waiting to pounce? How can I be
sure your people are not more cunning than abject?"
"I'm glad you brought that up" I put in quickly. "That little
episode in our history only serves to illustrate my point more forcibly.
When the rebel was convicted and sent to the hell-hole, the mob, if you
recall, followed him to the gates of that place in their tens of thousands.
And when the gates of the hell-hole were slammed behind their hero, what
did the mob do? I'll you, my Lord Prince. They scuttled off home to get
their tea, in their tens of thousands, and left their hero there to rot.
They just slunk off home, quietly and orderly, like the good citizens they
were - back to the peeces of bread and lard, back to a khaki uniform or
a bench in the munitions factory, back to redeem the alarm clocks MacLean
had urged them to pawn, back to the TB and the rickets and the highest infant
mortality rate this side of Calcutta!"
"Incredible" said the Prince.
"Not in the least" I went on. "Nothing could have been more
natural. None of this was any hardship to them. It was MacLean that was
their hardship, and we had relieved them of that. We had given them back
what they most desired in their heart of hearts: the right to grovel. Now
they could return, with an easy conscience, to their old obsequious ways:
for to duck and bob and bow and scrape was all their love. We even took
their space and cleared them out to ghettoes at the far perimeter: we ordered
them out and they went, like frightened sheep, so that developers could
make a bundle. What fervour of subservience was there!"
"In such an uncouth race" mused the Prince, "I'd have expected
bombs."
"Bombs!" I exlaimed, or rather spluttered, my head muffled in
the Prince's costly robes. "Did you say bombs?"
"Yes" said the Prince airily, "bombs. Government buildings
going up in smoke. Policemen stretched out dead in the street."
Such was the consternation engendered in me by these last remarks I was
struck dumb. I suddenly drew back from him and felt myself trembling from
top to toe as I knelt there. For a moment I thought I was about to vomit.
Then, in a wonderfully soothing voice, the Prince said: "It is nothing,
my little friend. Nothing. What have we to fear? We are leaders of the world,
but safe here in the Palace of the Prince."
(Perhaps I should advert here to the fact that, from this moment onwards
the Prince used this mode of address when we were en tete-a-tete together,
but somehow it managed to get out and very soon the fawning sheiks, who
seethed with envy on account of my position of influence with his Royal
Highness, and all the numerous Palace retainers, were referring to me as
"the Prince's little friend" which pleased me mightily and endowed
our trade mission with much glamour and prestige.)
"My dear Prince," I resumed, once I had collected myself, "you
do our dear old proletariat a grievous wrong. The only blood they've ever
spilt is their own."
"A neat solution" said the Prince.
"Very neat" I added quickly. "And what's more, you can rely
on the Labour Party to keep it neat. That's what we're here for. We are
against all forms of simplistic (that is to say direct and effective) action
- especially when perpetrated for political or economic gain. We don't mind
people protesting about dog shit on the pavement. That is perfectly proper
and democratic. Canine control is a legitimate issue. To put it in a nutshell,
your Royal Highness: We have the people by the balls! Just trust us. If
Capitalism goes down the stank, the Labour Party goes with it. If privilege
is swept away, how are we to get ourselves knighthoods and OBEs, amass fortunes,
become landlords and send our children to private schools? It doesn't bear
thinking about. All we ask is a little trust. Look at it this way: we, the
Labour Party, speak for the people. What is the result? The people stay
dumb. We act for the people: and the people stay impotent. We think for
the people: and the people stay children. The system is fool-proof."
When I had said these things the Prince once again took my head in both
his hands and drew me close to his person.
"You have spoken well" said the Prince, "and your words have
pleased us. Henceforth we shall look kindly upon you and upon your mission.
Your people have found favour in our eyes, and they shall be to us even
as our own, for verily your people and my people have much in common."
At that moment I underwent a most beautiful experience. It was indeed as
if all the cares of the world, and all the toilsome burdens of office, had
been lifted clean off my shoulders. It was as if all the baffling perplexities
of life were dissolved in that moment of languorous ease. A secret voluptuous
tremor passed through me, and with it a feeling of the most intense, the
most sublime gratification.
Kneeling there I bethought me of the Wanderer in Holy Scripture who, at
his journey's end, exclaims: O yea, it is good to be here! I have travelled
too long in strange lands. In a word, I found myself in a state of delirious
contentment: as if I had eaten of the lotus flower and time and the world
had faded from my ken and I and my Calypso were one!
O yea, I have wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and in dens and caves
of the earth, and endured the unendurable for our fair city, but there were
moments, and this was one of them, when the reward was of such magnitude
as to make all my pains and travail seem as nothing.
I listened to the interminable drone of the good Abdul Pasha who was closetted
nearby, on a stool, in the Prince's private elevator, as he intoned the
First and Second Hymn to the Prophet.
All night the machine guns chattered away and one heard the odd shriek and
cry of pain coming up from the street. Doubtless Abd el Shimt Bataab was
now captured, and the chief of police, Gasim Fuad Bey, would be pouring
the wealth of Arabia, in boiling little driblets, down the rebel's throat.
At that moment I was under a spell which nothing could break.
Towards morning two deaf and dumb eunuchs fetched us the cardamon-flavoured
coffee in a brass pot with a long spout. The playful Prince lounged at his
ease beside me, and with charming and astonishing eclat blew smoke rings
into the air.
I fell to thinking of all I had come through to reach the citadel. The days
and nights I battled through the simoom, the snake bite at the Wadi Itm,
the fever, the thirst - and here at last my reward. I thought of the trust
that had been placed in me by merchant bankers and high-grade entrepreneurs
at home. And I was easy in the conscience, knowing I had faced my obligations
in their totality and discharged my functions as Provost/Ambassador with
zeal right to the end.
Suddenly the Prince took a powerful grip on my arm just above the elbow.
"My little friend" he said, "let me prophesy. I see a time
coming, and that time not far off, when your city will become one of the
great capitals of the world. Business confidence will be restored and high
finance will flourish. There will be huge redevelopments. I see sun-tanned
men in Cadillacs coming from the east and west to see wonders of high art
and extravagant culture. And they will put money in your purse till your
purse bulges and overflows. And you shall be a city of tycoons and whizz-kids
and high rollers."
"That's it!" I shouted. "That's it! That's what we want!"
"But the dead ones" the Prince continued, "the ones you have
thrust from your bosom, they shall be nowhere in sight. They shall neither
see, nor touch, nor even smell this money. Nor shall they benefit from it
in any way whatsoever, unless, perhaps, as the coolie benefits from the
burden strapped to his back."
O yea, it is good to be here.
From:
Workers City "The Real Glasgow Stands Up"
Edited By Farquar McLay Clydeside Press

