Last week we held a funeral service for the parish wolf, although none of us is sure if it is really dead. Its howling has not been heard for twelve years, though, and under our laws a death certificate can be issued for a missing wolf after just five years. The general feeling in the parish was summed up by the sexton in a notice nailed, Luther fashion, to the door of the church. Even in the absence of a corpse, it would be for the good of the parish if obsequies were held. This was the gist of his notice, though it was couched in the mighty prose he deployed even when writing nature notes for the parish newsletter, and he did not on any account use the word closure.
One reason the sexton is so persuasive is that his appearance and bearing are strongly reminiscent of the actor James Robertson Justice (1907-1975). This is no accident. Over the years, the sexton has worked hard to imitate that booming voice, and he has undergone cosmetic surgery the better to ape the appearance of the man who, when not appearing in films, kept busy as a naturalist, racing driver, and falconry expert.
Before dawn on the morning of the funeral there was a teeming downpour. The rain had ceased by the time we gathered in the churchyard, but the pugton trees were drenched, water droplets dripping from the tiny grey spongy buds, each bud like the brain of a homunculus. An extraordinary number of puddles had formed on the paths, and there are many paths converging on St Bibblydibdib’s, for it is the only church for miles around, all others having been smashed to ruination by the sexton’s predecessor, single-handedly. He was twice the size of the present incumbent, a titan among sextons, and a brute, and the parish has been much quieter since he wilted away and was carted off to a mercy home. No ducks plashed in the puddles, for word had not yet reached them that the parish wolf was dead, or at least thought to be dead, and no duck dared come near for fear of being torn to bits.
How long does a duck live? If ‘no duck dared come near for fear of being torn to bits’, yet the vulpine howling had not been heard in a dozen years, then these must be superannuated wildfowl indeed to have remembered even its last-recorded effusions. Or, more intriguingly, is a duck’s fear of such predators somehow passed on to succeeding generations of chicks? If so, it is no wonder that the folk of the parish retained a lingering fear of the winsome, windswept wolf as well: doubtless they broke fast daily on ducks’ eggs, and serve them right, I say, if they ingested more than they bargained for.
Dobson wrote a pamphlet entitled “Some Comments About The Lifespan Of Ducks”, which would probably answer your questions. Alas, it is out of print.
R.
It should be borne in mind that the ducks could have been, as is so often the case around Hooting Yard, spectral ducks projected from somewhere behind the Big Iron Fence.
Outa_Spaceman
Eagle-eyed denizens of the Yard may remember the famous ‘Moorhen Incident’ which was the cause of a fracas between myself and Mr Key. For those of you who missed it, suffice to say that said moorhen was nowhere near the coast of Marseilles at the time. Suffice to say also that I am dubious about his knowledge of the lifespan of ducks
So the reception was held at an airfield… an airfield surrounded by splashing and dabbling ducks? But was this a decoy airfield? And were these by inference decoy ducks? I suspect that Dobson’s pamphlet would be germane.