Miskatonic University Press

Framework 952 intro

field.recordings framework podcasts

To my delight, an introduction I made for Framework Radio was used in last week’s episode: Framework #952: 2025.11.23. Patrick McGinley, who makes the shows, did a very nice mix from this into an Aporee Maps recording by Jan Krtička.

Anyone can record and submit an introduction: the rules are simple and the text is short. It’d be nice not hear men doing it every two weeks.

I’ve been listening to Framework for years (I first mentioned it here in 2019) and always recommend it as a great show for anyone interested in field recordings and soundscapes. (I also support it financially.)

CUPE 1281 and YUFA

york

I’ve had eighteen happy years in my union, the York University Faculty Association … over eighteen-and-a-half years of membership.

YUFA has staff who are in a union of their own. They are now in the fifth week of a strike. This terrible situation was directly caused by the current Executive. It is hurting the staff right now, and some YUFA members, and will do permanent damage to YUFA that will affect all members. I’m strongly opposed to what my union’s Executive is doing.

What’s happening boggles my mind. I’ll document some of it here for anyone who’s interested, and to make my opinions public.

About YUFA

As a librarian at York University, I’m a member of the York University Faculty Association (YUFA). All full-time faculty, librarians, and archivists are in YUFA (plus two small groups of others), but not faculty at the law school, who for historical reasons are in a different union. Right now there are about 1500 members, down from around 1700 just a few years ago. Of course, this excludes faculty and librarians in management and administration roles: the president and provost (academic vice-president) are professors, and were YUFA members, but are not currently in the union.

(Side note for Americans and others: in Canada our Charter of Rights and Freedoms says that “freedom of association” makes union membership a human right; separately, the Rand formula says that all union members pay union dues.)

I’ve been a member of YUFA since I started at York in 2007. In that time I’ve had several roles in the union: three full and two partial terms as a steward, over twelve years; I was a member of a side table bargaining team updating our tenure and promotion document; for one year I was on the union executive; and for two years I was a trustee.

The trustee role is defined in YUFA’s constitution; there are two, and they review “the Association’s activities and operations during their year in office and recommend improvements in the methods of operation.” I was a sole trustee for one year, then a colleague joined me for my second. The reports cover a lot of what members can know about YUFA operations, but nothing confidential: Trustee’s Report from 2023–24 and Trustees’ Report from 2024–25.

YUFA staff

YUFA has eight staff members. There are seven “executive associates” or “staff representatives” and one “co-ordinator of accounting and administration.” YUFA members see a lot of the staff reps and less of the admin person.

Member dealings with the union usually start with an email. The staff reps answer our questions and begin to help deal with problems. These range from minor to life-changing (such as the possibility of not earning tenure and therefore losing one’s job). If the problem needs special attention, the staff escalate it and YUFA members with special union roles (chief stewards, known elsewhere as grievance officers) get involved; this might lead into a complaints process that could result in a formal grievance, which could in turn lead to a mediation or formal arbitration between the parties. Big problems can take years to resolve. Staff are crucial to every stage. On top of this, staff advise and support the union executive in its work, and our bargaining team when we negotiate our collective agreement with York every three years.

The staff are in a union themselves: they are a sub-local of the Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 1281 (CUPE 1281), which has units representing staff at various unions. It may seem surprising: YUFA’s staff are themselves in a union, which means YUFA is an Employer. It surprised me when I first learned it. The CUPE 1281 - York University Faculty Association (YUFA) collective agreement is online.

(You may wonder, are CUPE’s office staff in a union? They are, in the Canadian Office and Professional Employees Union. As are the staff at the Canadian Association of University Teachers, the national association of academic unions and faculty associations. I don’t know what union COPE’s staff are in. That’s quite a chain of unions, but unions believe in the importance of unions and union membership, and it’s all various levels of people helping each other, making a better workplace, and, for social unions, trying to make changes in society.)

YUFA staff are on strike

The staff’s collective agreement with YUFA expired in May, and there was bargaining over the summer. The titles of this series of October posts from 1281 show things getting worse and the strike starting on 27 October. (See Ontario’s page on collective bargaining for details of the processes involved in conciliation and “no-board” reports.)

CUPE 1281 is not the only CUPE local on campus. The biggest and most well known is CUPE 3903: “proudly representing Teaching Assistants, Contract Faculty, Graduate & Research Assistants, Part-Time Librarians & Archivists, and Canadian Observatory on Homelessness workers at York University.” (The labour disruptions section of Wikipedia’s article on York describes its four strikes.)

Generally 3903 and YUFA maintain friendly relations, with mutual support at a respectful distance. But on 27 October, it posted CUPE 3903 Exec: Solidarity with CUPE 1281 YUFA Staff. It’s no surprise: they’re both CUPE locals. Good unions stand up for each other. I take this, and other events, as a marker that cross-campus solidarity is badly damaged, and YUFA won’t be able to depend on its fellow unions in our 2027 bargaining.

Inside YUFA there have been some emails from the Executive, and these posts on the web site:

There have been two poorly-attended meetings on the strike. It seems most members don’t care. That’s hard to understand, but at the fall general membership meeting last week only 5% of the members attended.

Executive director and in-house counsel

The most important issue is that the YUFA Executive wants to hire a manager to oversee the staff. This manager would have a role in hiring and firing and would not be in 1281. This has a been a red line for the staff. They said they wouldn’t accept it, and they haven’t.

YUFA has “managerial rights” and could just go ahead and hire for this role—employers have that power—but the Executive didn’t start with that. Instead, YUFA tabled changes to the collective agreement that set out how a manager would fit in, but it did this by surprise, without introducing the idea earlier in, for example, the labour-management committee. This infuriated 1281. YUFA says the idea has been discussed for years, so really it’s not a surprise.

Everyone agrees that YUFA could use another employee. There is too much work. But why a manager? YUFA offers a few reasons: institutional memory, assisting Executive members in their duties, helping better manage the organization and distribution of work … and stopping the staff from “running the union,” which a lot of people seem to think the staff does. I don’t. I do know of management-staff problems going back years and years, but the ones I know about were all caused by Executive members I wouldn’t want to have as my boss. Later Executive members need to work to fix those problems. That’s part of their roles.

To help in its negotiations, YUFA hired two lawyers from the Toronto office of Ogletree Deakins. One of them spoke at this labour and employment law briefing in 2024, which featured such sessions as:

Union Capture of Millennials and Gen Z

Unions are increasingly gaining favour with younger workers with the result that waves of union campaigns are hitting workplaces, both blue-collar and white-collar alike. In this session, the speakers will discuss how employers might consider addressing the new union movement—whether as an already unionized employer dealing with demands that are less about economics and more about social investment, or as a non-union employer seeking to maintain a direct relationship with its employees in an environment where unions are showing an ever-improving ability to connect and engage.

“A non-union employer seeking to maintain a direct relationship with its employees.” You know what that means: stopping people from starting a union! See 1281’s Who is Ogletree Deakins, YUFA’s Union-Busting Lawyers? post from 06 July for more about the firm.

YUFA Executive members seems to really dislike when we call Ogletree union-busters, but that’s the correct word. As this document from the Traditional Labor Relations Practice Group puts it:

Ogletree Deakins’ clients measure results in two important ways. Most firm clients go year-after-year without experiencing a union election. That is the ultimate result of a well-executed positive employee relations program. Other clients that are targeted by unions for campaigns measure results differently. With unions winning elections at historically high rates in the 60% range, a very high percentage of Ogletree Deakins clients’ employees reject unionization. Moreover, these results are achieved lawfully and, in most cases, without further organizing attempts by the same union later.

YUFA spent around $75,000 on Ogletree, drove the staff to a strike, and then dropped the firm.

The other position YUFA wants to hire is an in-house lawyer. YUFA spends hundreds of thousands a year on lawyers (for consultations, briefs, representation at arbitrations, etc.), and the potential benefits of having counsel on staff are clear to everyone. CUPE 1281 staff have concerns about work being taken away from them—though not lawyers, they do legal work—but that could be worked out.

YUFA wants the in-house lawyer to be a management position. They want the lawyer to work on relations and bargaining with 1281. I don’t know how often before this round of bargaining YUFA hired outside lawyers to help it bargain with staff, but it wasn’t much, and it could be done again if needed. The lawyer doesn’t need to be management. CUPE 1281 is again entirely opposed to a new out-of-scope (non-union) position being introduced.

YUFA’s main argument is to says it’s impossible for a lawyer to be in a union. It points to §3 of Ontario’s Labour Relations Act (1995) and quotes from §3 (a):

No person shall be deemed to be an employee,

(a) who is a member of the architectural, dental, land surveying, legal or medical profession entitled to practise in Ontario and employed in a professional capacity; or

(b) who, in the opinion of the Board, exercises managerial functions or is employed in a confidential capacity in matters relating to labour relations.

Here’s what David Doorey, York professor, author of the excellent textbook The Law of Work, and expert on employment law, said about that: “It’s a Charter violation.”

Many people point to his 2022 paper “The Stubborn Persistence of the Lawyer Exemption in Canadian Collective Bargaining Legislation” in the Dalhousie Law Journal, but not everyone seems to have read it all. The abstract says:

However, some employees were excluded entirely from this legislation, including employees in five professions, law among them. By the 1970s, the federal government and most provinces had repealed the professional exclusion from the primary collective bargaining legislation. However, four jurisdictions—Ontario, Alberta, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island (Exclusionary Provinces)—have stubbornly preserved the exclusion.

Clear enough. But that’s the beginning, not the end. In the conclusion:

Several observations can be made about the situation facing lawyers interested in collective bargaining in the four Exclusionary Provinces. One is that without access to statutory collective bargaining machinery,employed lawyers in the private sector have no access to meaningful collective bargaining unless their employer agrees to an extra-statutory, voluntary recognition. In practice, this has only occurred when the employer is itself a union or what might be described as “a progressive employer” interested in workers’ rights and access to justice issues (e.g. legal clinics)….

A second observation is that unions have occasionally been successful at pressuring public sector or publicly funded organizations to voluntarily recognize bargaining agents representing lawyers by launching Charter challenges against the lawyer exemption or threatening to do so….

A third observation is that where lawyers have managed to obtain collective bargaining rights, the bargaining process has worked well. Experience has demonstrated that there is nothing special about employed lawyers that justifies treating them differently than other employees.

Doorey said there are many unionized lawyers in Ontario, and it’s just a matter of time before that clause in the Labour Relations Act is removed.

YUFA’s interpretation of the law is embarrassing. It should be hiring a lawyer to be in the union—a lawyer who’s the kind who wants to be in a union, and to stand up for that right—and if there’s trouble about it, YUFA should be ready for a Charter challenge. That’s how I want my union to behave.

Finally, about both the positions, there has never been any clear answer about how they will be paid for if no staff lose their jobs. YUFA has said they won’t, but 1281 is suspicious. These two new positions might cost, say, $350,000 total per year, with salaries and benefits and pensions and such. Can all of that be carved out from what YUFA is paying lawyers now? The numbers have never been clearly presented. There’s an idea that one person could combine both jobs in one. I doubt it.

The other big issue is the nature of the workplace, with staff wanting a better environment and protections from abusive YUFA members, and YUFA painting this as uppity staff refusing to help people they don’t like. I won’t get into it here.

(For more about the whole situation, see this interview with an anonymous 1281 member.)

York is winning

In the fifth week of the strike, on 24 November, YUFA posted a job ad for Executive Director and In-House Counsel.

The York University Faculty Association (YUFA) invites applications for the position of Executive Director / In-House Counsel.

Should a candidate that can occupy both roles not be found, YUFA is open to hiring one individual for each role. However, candidates who meet the requirements of both aspects of the position are especially invited to apply.

This is outrageous. This will make YUFA worse—not because of this person or these people personally, but because of how it was done, that it will drive away our excellent staff, that a new structure will be managerial and haunted by the union-busting tactics of YUFA as an employer, and that, inevitably, YUFA Executive will complain that the executive director and the in-house counsel “run the union.”

(A new Q&A for members on YUFA’s bargaining this year with our staff went up the next day.)

YUFA Executive members get annoyed when I say that they are doing to their employees exactly what York wants to do to us. But it’s true! YUFA used an anti-union law firm to help introduce non-union management while having run a deficit for years and with inadequate reserve funds … all the while complaining about how York’s administration is hiring more administration in a budget crisis. When we go into bargaining in 2027, the York bargaining team can quote YUFA’s words back at it. “You’re complaining about hiring management positions, and calling it administrative bloat? But actually, these new associate vice presidents will help York to ‘more nimbly serve our [faculty] in a climate that is increasingly hostile to the work we do as researchers and educators’! So there!”

Bargaining in 2021 was difficult. Bargaining in 2024 was worse and we were very close to walking out. I always predicted bargaining in 2027 would probably take us into a strike. With all these problems, I started to think that we’d get walked all over by the Employer and it would be a huge fight to keep what we have. Now I’m starting to think the whole situation could be so bad there is no strike but we end up making concessions. A lot will depend on the next Executive and on member organization.

The root cause of all of this is YUFA’s Employer: York University. York is winning a years-long campaign to damage every union on campus. York forces us to turn complaints into grievances and grievances into arbitrations. A staffer likes to say: “They all sing from the same songbook. Every song has one word: No.” York has essentially infinite resources, but the unions do not. Bit by bit, faculty by faculty, program by program, year by year, complaint by complaint, York made YUFA spend millions of dollars and it put incredible pressure on YUFA members. Some lost their jobs.

York has pushed things to the breaking point, and now YUFA is fracturing. To my fellow YUFA members, I say: You may be an academic with tenure, but you’re in a union. You need a strong one. What is happening to higher education in Ontario is a policy decision made by the provincial and federal governments, and it won’t suddenly improve. We need protection and we get that through YUFA. To the YUFA Executive: Once again, I ask you to back down.

(Send comments to my off-York email address for YUFA matters, yufa@williamdenton.org.)

Blazons and escutcheons

alc heraldry wikipedia

Recently I was looking at the flag of the Supreme Court of Canada and was struck by its formal description in The Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges of Canada:

Flag of the Supreme Court of Canada
Flag of the Supreme Court of Canada

Gules on a Canadian pale Argent a lozenge lozengy Gules and Argent charged with maple leaves alternately Or and Gules.

Yes, it says “a lozenge lozengy.”

I mentioned this on Mastodon and it led to a fun exchange. In particular, Stephen Childs pointed out a 2019 PyCon talk by Lady Red / Christopher Beacham: A Medieval DSL? Parsing Heraldic Blazons with Python! It’s very entertaining and extremely informative about both blazons and parsing structured text into data structures with the programming language Python.

This led me, as usual, to Wikipedia, for example to its article on tinctures, which explains the special names used in heraldry for colours: it’s not blue, it’s azure; it’s not red, it’s gules; it’s not gold, it’s or or Or (which isn’t a colour, it’s a metal). The shapes—crosses and lines and such—are ordinaries. There is an article on heraldic lozenges.

For some Canadian examples the arms of the governors-general are worth a look, for example Vincent Massey.

[Note: What follows may contain many mistakes. If you’re an expert, don’t flame me.]

Vincent Massey's coat of arms
Vincent Massey's coat of arms

This is:

Argent on a chevron between three lozenges Sable each charged with a fleur-de-lis Argent, three stags’ heads erased Or, a canton Azure charged with the Crest of the Royal Arms of Canada (on a wreath Argent and Gules a lion passant guardant Or wearing the Royal Crown proper and holding in the dexter paw a maple leaf Gules).

On first reading, indeed possibly on second or tenth, this is cryptic, but picking apart the elements shows what’s going on:

First, start with Argent (the white background) and then on a chevron between three lozenges (the chevron is inside the three rhombi, though as we’ll soon learn you can’t really see one of them) Sable (the rhombi are black) each charged with a fleur-de-lis Argent (each black rhombus has a white fleur-de-lis on it) are three stags’ heads (we’re back in the chevron now) erased (their necks have ragged ends: see Wikipedia on heads in heraldry) Or (the heads are gold in colour). (I’m not sure how the chevron gets to be black.)

Now the description comes back up from one descent into detail and starts over with a canton Azure (the blue square in the upper left) on which there is a crest (the animal at the top) of the coat of arms of Canada, which is helpfully described in parentheses. I won’t pull out the details of that but you can see the mention of a lion wearing a crown and holding a maple leaf.

Massey’s entry in the Register describes the symbolism: “The white field, black chevron and lozenges, as well as the fleurs-de-lis are common charges found in other Massey or Massy coats of arms. The stags’ heads are likely a reference to Mr. Massey’s father, Hart Almerrin Massey, as the word ‘hart’ is a synonym for stag. The blue canton charged with the crest of the Royal Arms of Canada is an Honourable Augmentation granted to Mr. Massey by Her Majesty The Queen to honour his service as Governor General of Canada.”

Also Vincent Massey's coat of arms
Also Vincent Massey's coat of arms

And it has an illustration of Massey’s crest, from which I’ve picked out the shield. Notice that all the same elements are there but it is different from the one in Wikipedia. A blazon can be drawn in different ways.

Lady Red talks about this in the PyCon talk, and it’s covered in the Wikimedia Commons page for the escutcheon: “This coat of arms was drawn based on its blazon which – being a written description – is free from copyright. Any illustration conforming with the blazon of the arms is considered to be heraldically correct. Thus several different artistic interpretations of the same coat of arms can exist.” This was unknown and unexpected to me, and strangely delightful.

Those arms were awarded in 1963, but Massey had first received heraldry in 1920, when the Arts and Letters Club of Toronto moved to 14 Elm Street. Massey was the president at the time. To celebrate, J.E.H. MacDonald made punning shields for the executive and the past presidents; they were hung in the Great Hall and have been there ever since. I see them often because I’m a member.

A third coat of arms for Massey
A third coat of arms for Massey

Here we have an azure (blue) background on which is a sheaf of wheat tied with a ribbon that says “Blest be the tie that binds.” This I take to be about both the friendly comradeship at the club and the farm equipment made by Massey-Harris, the company that made the Masseys rich. Around it are stags—also known as harts, as the Register said, a reference to Massey’s father Hart Massey and Massey’s creation of Hart House at the University of Toronto.

I bet the harts done humorously in 1920 led directly to the harts done armigerously in 1963. J.E.H. never expected that!

One last thing about blazons and how the specialized language they use is parsed, as Lady Red talked about. “Heraldry and Blazon: A Graphic-Based Information Language” by Harold E. Thiele Jr., from Library Trends (Spring 1990), is working on the very same lines. The abstract says in part:

Examination of the various descriptive conventions used by heralds over the last 700 years to blazon armorial devices reveals several patterns that can be adapted to form a generalized algorithm to describe trademarks, logos, and other types of graphic designs. The key assumption used in the algorithm is that the graphic design is to be treated as a glyph that is to be painted onto a surface with some form of opaque media. The different design elements of the glyph are described in the order in which they are applied to the surface as one works from the background to the foreground.

Thiele turns “Azure, a bell with a pull argent” into: F\\h half-round shield # \ (:\ .\ ,\h azure)PC\\ (:\p centered .\p a bell with two rope pulls ,\h argent) PO\\ (:\p centered on bell .\h cross fleuretty ,\h argent [:\p centered on cross fleuretty .\h cross fillet ,\h sable]) SC \ \ (: \ .\ ,\) SO \ (:\ ,\ ,\) E\\ (:\ .\ ,\). I don’t know how successful this approach turned out to be, but it seems to me clearly influenced by the International Standard Bibliographic Description, the rules used to describe books for old-fashioned library catalogue cards. (Rules which haunt the libraries still, decades later.) Two people, same interests, same purpose, different fields, different decades, different results.

Small caps

literature

Harriet the Spy (1964) by Louise Fitzhugh is a masterpiece I have gone back to many times, but it was only on rereading it last week that I noticed that two of the greatest characters in fiction express themselves in small caps.

Illustrated by the author
Illustrated by the author

The first is Harriet M. Welsch, who does it when she writes in her notebook. This is the end of the first section of the book, after Harriet’s nanny Ole Golly has left to get married and Harriet is very alone.

i feel all the same things when i do things alone as when ole golly was here. the bath feels hot, the bed feels soft, but i feel like there’s a funny little hole in me that wasn’t there before, like a splinter in your finger, but this is somewhere above my stomach.

The other is Death in the Discworld books by Terry Pratchett. This is an exchange with Rincewind in The Last Continent (1998):

“Is it true that your life passes before your eyes before you die?”

yes.

“Ghastly thought, really.” Rincewind shuddered. “Oh, gods, I’ve just had another one. Suppose I am just about to die and this is my whole life passing in front of my eyes?”

i think perhaps you do not understand. people’s whole lives do pass in front of their eyes before they die. the process is called “living.”

In C × 2

terry.riley

Two interpretations of Terry Riley’s In C added to my list of Bandcamp recordings:

  • Node Music, In C (2024, 60:31 and 71:51)
  • Ouroboros is Broken, In C (2020, 67:27)

Repetition

literature quotes repetition

I saw Gertrude Stein quoted in the TLS: “There is no such thing as repetition.” Searching this online turns up a lot of misquotes, so here’s where it comes from:

Is there repetition or is there insistence. I am inclined to believe there is no such thing as repetition.

Here it is with some context. This is from the second paragraph of “Portraits and Repetition” in Lectures in America (originally published by Random House in 1935; the Internet Archive has a few copies you can check out):

Then also there is the important question of repetition and is there any such thing. Is there repetition or is there insistence. I am inclined to believe there is no such thing as repetition. And really how can there be. This is a thing about which I want you to think before I go on telling about portraits of anything. Think about all the detective stories everybody reads. The kind of crime is the same, and the idea of the story is very often the same, take for example a man like Wallace, he always has the same theme, take a man like Fletcher he always has the same theme, take any American ones, they too always have the scene, the same scene, the kind of invention that is necessary to make a general scheme is very limited in everybody’s experience, every time one of the hundreds of times a newspaper man makes fun of my writing and of my repetition he always has the same theme, always having the same theme, that is, if you like, repetition, that is if you like the repeating that is the same thing, but once started expressing this thing, expressing any thing there can be no repetition because the essence of that expression is insistence, and if you insist you must each time use emphasis and if you use emphasis it is not possible while anybody is alive that they should use exactly the same emphasis. And so let us think seriously of the difference between repetition and insistence.

(That’s Edgar Wallace and J.S. Fletcher.)

A few pages later she repeats the phrase:

When I first began writing portraits of any one I was not so sure, not so certain of this thing that there is no difference between clarity and confusion. I was however almost certain then when I began writing portraits that if anything is alive there is no such thing as repetition. I do not know that I have ever changed my mind about that.

I’ll also quote from “Repetition” by the Fall, from their 1978 debut Bingo-Master’s Break-Out! (fan site source, lyrics are by Mark E. Smith):

This is the three Rs

The three Rs:

Repetition, repetition, repetition

And also from Prince’s “Joy in Repetition” from Graffiti Bridge (1990):

There’s joy in repetition

There’s joy in repetition

There’s joy in repetition

There’s joy in repetition

Clown Town, Yellow Car

john.finnemore literature mick.herron

From the new Mick Herron novel, Clown Town:

The sky was as blue as an egg, provided the egg was blue. The fields were as yellow as cars.

And later, when Louisa is driving and talking on the phone to Jackson Lamb:

“I’ll let him know. Yellow car.”

“What now?”

“Nothing.”

See also: Yellow Car in London Rules, Yellow Car in Joe Country and Yellow Car again again.

A Fall Day for Bear

kady.macdonald.denton

A Fall Day for Bear, illustrated by my mother Kady MacDonald Denton and written by Bonny Becker, is now out!

So far it’s had a good review in Kirkus Reviews (“Denton’s greatly entertaining art shows Bear enduring a spectacular tumble into the mud”) and a starred review in Booklist (“Denton’s wonderfully expressive artwork, created with ink, watercolor, and gouache, captures the characters’ emotions as well as the humor of the narrative, the beauty of the season, and the double meaning of fall”).

I remember reading the manuscript for the first Bear and Mouse book, A Visitor for Bear (2008), and thinking it was perfect. It was immediately clear Bonny Becker had written a classic. I felt the same reading each subsequent one, but Fall Day has a sadness and a poignancy that make it especially good, particularly for grown-up readers who have perhaps wondered what will happen when Bear outlives Mouse. This book is not about that, but it is about seasons changing and leaves falling and time passing.

“I don’t like it when things go away,” Mouse said quietly.

It’s also about pickles and about friends. It’s great.

In C × 6

terry.riley

Six interpretations of Terry Riley’s In C added to my list of Bandcamp recordings:

Thesiger challenge

quotes

A quote from Wilfred Thesiger to remember and use whenever one does something that is at the moment difficult even if others would not think it is: “I daresay, not much of a challenge; but a challenge all the same.”

Text from the book
Text from the book

I came across it years ago in a review or excerpt and never forgot it. A few days ago I found the source thanks to the Internet Archive (check it out). It’s from the end of Wilfred Thesiger: The Life of the Great Explorer by Alexander Maitland (London: Harper, 2004). Note that in June 2003 Thesiger turned 93.

Towards the end of April 2003, Thesiger began to look very frail indeed. For the first week of May he was confined to bed: On 16 May, after a fall, he was X-rayed at St Helier Hospital for a suspected hip fracture. He had no broken bones, but suffered much pain for several days, and after that continued to have difficulty in walking even aided by one of his heavy African walking sticks. For some time he had needed help with dressing, and it was becoming evident that he could no longer fend for himself in other ways. On 11 August he was moved to the Selkirk Nursing Wing, adjoining Woodcote Grove House, where he had a room on the ground floor with a view of the garden. He still preferred, however, to walk (with assistance) the short distance to the main house and have lunch and supper with the other residents. Even this he viewed courageously, and without resignation, as a challenge: “I daresay, not much of a challenge; but a challenge all the same.”

I daresay, not much of a challenge; but a challenge all the same.

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