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Out of Africa
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A few weeks ago there was a small stir of
excitement in our area, which briefly lit up the gloom of our northern Scottish
winter like the Northern Lights, which are quite visible to us at this latitude.
Apparently a man - a Marine, no less - had walked, wearing nothing but a grin
and a beard straight out of Lord of the Rings, from the south of England into
Scotland, up past Loch Ness and the Highlands where I live, and on to the very
northernmost point, John O'Groats - in winter. A Scottish winter, at that. James Collins is an artist, writer and
musician who works in the Highlands of Scotland. These days he
specialises in portraits of pets and other animals, but he still
finds time to paint and draw the beautiful and rugged Scottish
landscape. He lives with his wife, daughter and three dogs in a
house overlooking the Moray Firth.
I'm not sure where his starting point was but he must have walked about six
hundred miles. Forest Gump would have been impressed. It was either a very
brave, or foolhardy course of action, depending on your point of view but it
certainly bought him his fifteen minutes of fame. There he was on TV, being
carefully filmed from the waist up, the way they used to film Elvis Presley in
the early days.
"Everyone", he said, "should be free to follow my
example if they've a mind to". 'Not even as a joke', thought the whole of
Scotland, 'and even less in winter' The police didn't see the funny side of it
either. He was arrested five or six times and spent several nights in prison
cells, covered by a blanket (the police's idea, not his). I remember scanning
the local papers for the headline 'Man arrested for palely loitering', but it
wasn't to be. I still think they missed one there.
" He was
certainly persistant. He finally arrived at his destination and no, he didn't
throw himself off a high point into the North Sea, which some people thought (I
won't say hoped) might be the logical end to his journey. As far as I know he
got dressed, took a train to his hometown and quietly faded back into obscurity,
leaving us with a memory, like the Cheshire cat's grin. All this was, I suppose,
to make the point that he had the inalienable right to freeze anytime he had a
mind to. Well, point taken, but this little saga set me thinking. Why have we
never had our own coat, like other animals? 'But we do', I hear you cry, 'and
anyway I'm not an animal'. Oh yes you most certainly are, Madam, and besides, I
mean the kind of coat you're born with.
"Almost every animal, from a
mouse to a moose has a coat. Ok, elephants don't, and maybe hippos, but I
suppose they have extra thick skin to compensate. No, beyond dispute, we are the
only animal that has to keep warm by getting dressed every morning by the fire.
The reason we are coatless seems fairly obvious. Didn't we start out under the
hot sun of Africa, and so had no need of a natural coat? Hmm... then how about
gorillas, who share 98% of our genes? They're pretty hairy, no question, so why
didn't they shed their coat? You don't see them prancing about in their bare
skin?
Alright, let's try it from a different angle. Why did we move out
of Africa? I have a theory. Suppose the other animals started snickering behind
their paws as they watched us tottering around on our spindly legs? Or maybe we
just thought we detected a sardonic look or two. No, really, I'm serious.
Anybody who's ever played tag with a dog in the garden knows how clumsy they
think we are. Just watch as Bracken feints to the left and then effortlessly
switches direction in mid-stride as Master sprawls into the rosepatch. And
they're our friends.
We all know the human race is notoriously
sensitive to criticism, and I don't suppose the animal kingdom took us very
seriously before we equipped ourselves with guns, boots, Landrovers etc. Perhaps
a few of the more vulnerable and touchy families got together one day and
decided to head out for colder climes, where it would be possible to dress up
and hide their bony knees without feeling they were being stared at.
I
read somewhere that the whole population of northern Europeans could be traced
back to about five gene types (genotypes?). If I understand this right it means
that around five families were responsible for the diversity of virtually the
whole of Western culture from Boadicea (Boudicca to Guardian readers) to George
Bush. Nepotism on a grand scale. So, bearing this true and staggering fact in
mind, my theory about our neurotic ancestors could account for a lot of things,
couldn't it?
What do you mean, 'In a pigs eye'? Don't you know
people laughed at Darwin when he brought out his theory, and they would
certainly have done the same to Einstein if they'd understood what he was
talking about? Anyway, if I'm right, my idea throws some light on seemingly
irrational activities like war, mud wrestling and round-the-world yacht racing.
A large claim, you may say, but consider; those pioneer Europeans who came
trudging all the way from the plains of Africa (I seem to recall reading in a
book by H.G.Wells that they came from India, but I'll think about that
tomorrow); these hardy pioneers, like so many Pilgrim Fathers searching for a
new horizon, went to an awful lot of trouble just to soothe their wounded
dignity and avoid ridicule. (Remember? They were laughed out of Africa? - try to
keep up, it all fits).
Now, does any of this seem familiar? You
betcha. It's the M.O. of just about every politician you ever heard of. One
imagined slight and you have shoes banged on conference tables, and sanctions
applied at the very least, and at the worst - well, you know what I'm saying.
And there you have it. These are the same guys who led us out of swampy old
Africa in the year dot - give or take a couple of millennia.
Neat
theory,eh? Better than the string theory. I wonder why nobody ever thought of it
before? It's a pity though, that it doesn't seem to have any practical
application. I mean, you couldn't gather up all our leaders and put them back in
the African veldt. Could you?
As for our friend the intrepid Marine,
who trekked all the way up north in his birthday suit - he's done Scotland;
maybe he should try Africa next.
James Collins
http://www.pet-portraits-scotland.com
email: collinsdallasart@tiscali.co.uk
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