An idle Saturday morning at the coffee shop.
It is dark and stormy outside and the conversation has drifted around to cats,
well to be honest I navigate the conversation round to one cat in particular.
“Have you ever wondered,” asks M…de V . .
. .(all names have been subtly changed as
protection against libel), “where Yorick actually came from?”
“From under the hedge,” I say realising immediately
how juvenile that sounds. I hear my mealy mouthed alter ego scoffing - or perhaps the Stork brought him. “I've
told everyone that,” I continue lamely. And the table nods in resigned and
silent affirmation.
“No no,” persists M . . .de V . . . “I’ve
met him.” This with triumphant emphasis and a glint of challenge to the others
around the table, “And he has a special character about him.” As if I don’t
know that! “I wonder who he is the reincarnation of,” she says. The atmosphere
crackles with triumph, glint and challenge.
There is a sudden echoic hush in the
shopping mall, the table shudders, my world does half a gambol and I am forced
to order another cappuccino. Who the hell is Yorick? As you can imagine
that fundamental question took a bit of asking, let alone answering.
Without knowing an awful lot about reincarnation,
well in truth knowing nothing about the subject I set about the task of finding
the essential Yorick without carrying out one jot of academic research. Let’s
not get bound up with existential arguments, I thought, or glued down by Buddhist
dogma. Neither the Quaran nor the Bible are going to be of any use in this
quest. It’s back to basics!
The detective work began, and I logged on
to Wikipedia to find out who died round about the beginning of October 2008.
Given the obvious uncertainty about Yorick’s
actual date of birth his conception is an even deeper mystery so I decided to
concentrate on the former date. Barry the vet had settled on a “registered”
date of birth 1st
October 2008 , a sort of Nom
de Naissance. (Barry is incidentally his real name. I have no fear of legal
dismemberment from that quarter.) Allowing a degree of latitude in his accuracy
in dating kittens – unlike dating trees it is not an exact science and cannot involve
destructive testing, I thought a five day window on either side of his assumed date
of birth a reasonable guess. So that was one parameter settled. (I have not
incidentally asked for confirmation from the veterinary profession about my
assumptions on the grounds that I would have to explain why I am enquiring.)
The next bit is a lot more difficult. How
long does a soul hang about waiting for a suitable host? I don’t think anyone
knows, but I have to assume the same five day window of opportunity pertains. I
know no better after all. So this great intellectual leap leads me to a ten day
period that is fertile ground from whence the Yorick character can be found - 26th
September to the 5th October.
Oh, and to make the quest attainable the
soul has had to come from someone who has made some sort of mark, but that of
course – given Yorick’s personality – goes without saying.
According to Wikipedia 86 people of note
died over this period. This could be a mammoth task of elimination! September 29th
was a particularly fertile day for the grim reaper with 14 notable deaths recorded.
There is the inevitable crop of sporting and film luminaries, and very old war
heroes (who as far as I can see were very ordinary chaps who became heroes simply
because they were very old).
Five stand out. Paul Newman tops the list, closely
followed by two leaders of al-Qaida.
The cat with Paul Newman eyes. |
Where Mahir
al-Zubaydi and Mohamed Moumou are concerned I can thankfully discern no evidence
of reincarnation other than Yoricks generally subversive behaviour when it
comes to prospecting for semi-precious metals under the throws and cushions on
the sofas. If I felt a stiffening of the feline fur every time I swear – a
regular occurance; or jumpy behavior when we discuss Christians, Tony Blair, George
W Bush, or Americans in general, then I would have reason to delve deeper; but
I have not. I tried the acid test of dropping the phrase “The Prophet” into
normal conversation while he was around. Not an easy task in a secular houshold
I can tell you, but not so much as a blink. With a sense of relief these two
are abandoned. Lets face it the thought of some sort of really nasty Jihad
emanating from the admission that either Mahir al-Z . . . or Mohamed M . . are eating their lunch of tinned pork and
dried kitty food in our kitchen is not a pleasant one. I don’t have the fervour
of Salmon Rushdie.
Fourthly there is an American pornographic
film producer. A reincarnation of this talent in feline form boggles even my over-active
imagination. I'm not going there - and neither is Yorick.
Lastly there is Marian McQuade who lived
to the ripe old age of 91 and whose claim to fame was the founding of National
Grandparents Day. This it appears she formed when she was a
grandparent – there’s good ‘ole American enterprise for you! Delightfully dotty
but still not quite right.
But then a curiosity caught my eye with
such intensity that for the second time in this my world did a
hop-skip-and-a-jump!
___________________________________________________________________
Raymond Macherot shuffled off at the age of
84 on 26th September. Also known as “Zara”, Macherot was a Belgian cartoonist who worked for a time on Tintin
magazine followed by Spirou. It seemed that Macherot had a thing about cats.
His debut for Spirout was a new series – Chaminou – which featured a cat secret agent.
In the subsequent Sybilline et Taboum
series he introduced a stupid cat named ‘Pantouffle’, followed in another
series by a cat called ‘Mirliton’ of which I know nothing except that a
mirliton is either an oddly shaped fruit not unlike an avocado pear, or a membranophone,
neither of which even I can remotely connect to Yorick
– but there is evidence enough elsewhere.
The description of a cat secret agent
resonates delightfully with Yoricks suspiciously furtive character, his ability
to appear from the most unlikely direction, and the slightly pained look he
flings over his shoulder as he crouches over the dogs bowl of freshly poured water
that says “ . . . would have preferred it shaken and not stirred.” But what set
me all a’shiver was the realisation that ‘pantouffle’ is the french for
‘slipper’. The hairs on the back of my neck prickled and glistered as I
remembered a period when Yorick would pull out the false inner sole of one of
Margaret’s slip-on shoes and bat it around the passage floor. This thankfully
brief period of feline foot fetishism is surely proof indeed of a strong
slipper connection.
Enough you cry, enough!
But wait - there is more!
According to my source (Wikipedia
naturally) Macherot's cartoons belie their apparent innocence with an
underlying theme of the struggle for survival. I quote “In Macherot's world,
animals live in a society of their own, and species must learn to coexist
together peacefully.” Here we have a cat who cannot keep his paws off the dogs,
tolerates his fellow cats, has long (admittedly fruitless) chats with goldfish,
befriends a variety of small rodents and not so small lizards, and eats grass.
For all I know he shins up one of the pine trees of an evening to pay his
regards to the Spotted Eagle Owl (Smallkittenus
eatus).
The answer is staring me in the face. The
spirit of Macherot has chosen to adopt as his new form a cat, a figure that he
has depicted in various guises over decades. And the evidence is all there.
QED. Yorick is the soul of Raymond
Macherot!
The mechanics of how the Macherot soul
somehow connected with that spitting ball of renegade fluff who later fetched
up at the bottom of our garden I do not know, and I do not care – but there is
no doubt in my mind that behind those limpid grey green eyes there is a
cartoonists twinkle.
From what little I have managed to read
about Raymond Macherot the more I feel attracted to him and the more I regret
not having met him - but maybe I can - and have?
So
now we (well actually me) are busy engaging with Yorick in execrable schoolboy
french in an accent lying uncomfortably somewhere between ex British Prime Minister Ted Heath and
Inspector Clouseau. These attempts are however such a failure that I am
beginning to wonder if “Zara” was in actual fact a Waloon speaker – or perhaps
even Dutch!
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