When the budding young painter in Waugh’s novel Brideshead Revisited declares that he plans to go to Venice and study the works of Bellini haughty Lord Marchmain nonplusses him by asking: “Which one; there are two.” Likewise, when young people ask me what I did “In the war” I can stop them cold by asking: “Which one; there were three.” My war, of course, is the one that ended 74 years ago, now named World War II. I was still young then, but I was in that war, indeed.
The question is what I did. If my inquirer is old enough to understand the meaning of the term “absurd,” my answer is simple: absurd stuff. Absurdity is the nature of war. I had a gun. My job was to shoot at American airplanes. A man whom I know was a pilot. I shot him down (remember: that was my job. His job was to burn down our house). His entire crew died except him. His parachute saved him. I was then a German, speaking German. He, of course, was American. Now we are both old, both are US citizens speaking English. And we are the best of friends. That, I think is absurd. As I said above: nothing made sense. Everything I did, great or small, was in one way or another absurd.
I could give many small examples. One shall suffice. For breakfast we got a brew called “coffee.” It consisted of roasted oats and barley, ground into a black powder and boiled in water. Our unit commander was a reserve officer, a colonel recalled from retirement. He was a stickler for regulations. Which required that we get breakfast. When the colonel found out that some of us poured this liquid called coffee down the sink instead of drinking it we were all summoned to a lecture. I do not remember the rest of his harangue except the memorable phrase: “He who does not drink his morning coffee is a traitor.”
So what did I do in the war? Nothing heroical, I am afraid. I did what I was ordered to do: shoot off my trusty 88mm gun and drink that awful coffee.




For a small town we have a splendid team, the Falcons. I myself am not much of a sports fan but my wife understands the game and has been known to assure players that “they can do it” from her couch.
The car we drive looks as if it were made of nothing but steel and glass. But that is not true. A significant part of an automobile is plastic. What we wear may look like wool or cotton or silk. But it is not. My fine Calvin Klein raincoat is made of polyester, 100 % as the label explains. Polyester fiber is indestructible. That used to be a virtue. We now understand that indestructible means that the material is not biodegradable, hence may be a menace to the environment. My coat will not be forgotten. It will be around for a long, long time. There is something ominous about that thought.
This man we knew had a sharp mind. Unlike many other old men he had kept his youthful and optimistic outlook. Although he understood that the world was full of problems he was not going to let that bother him. There had been fears of worldwide tuberculosis outbreaks, for example. He maintained that a remedy would be found and he was right. Though not completely eradicated, the disease was eventually controlled. When it became obvious that our cities were going to be choked by exhaust fumes he predicted that within years cleaner engines would be developed and he was right on that, too. In time he convinced himself that most, if not all, our fears and problems were in our minds, not anchored in reality.
The Cosmos is not fully understood as of today.