Wales IS Enough To Make You Cry
by
Sean Corrigan
by Sean Corrigan
I
grew up in a Welsh mining town, son of an Irish immigrant father.
Mam (the Welsh form) and Dad still live there and so I visit, if
a little too infrequently for a true discharge of filial obligations.
As
something of a qualified observer, therefore, I could not agree
more with Hywel
Williams' recent article.
I
recall, thirty-odd years ago, growing up in a valley, black with
spoil heaps and thick with smoke from the iron foundry, but where
we routinely left our doors unlocked and where we children, unleashed
from school in the summer, would roam the hillsides from dawn to
dusk in search of make-believe adventures as Celtic Swallows and
Amazons in near perfect safety.
Though
that Wales still lived, off the sweat of others, as well as its
own, to the extent that the miners and steel workers however
conscientiously they performed their dirty and dangerous work as
individuals were only kept in their jobs by subsidies and
tariffs, by inflationary finance and through the involuntary support
of other taxpayers, that sort of socialism, though doomed
to eventual failure as are all strains of the disease, at least
allowed the fiction of making a livelihood through hard work, well-rewarded,
to persist.
Thus,
though materially poor, the Wales of my childhood was infinitely
richer in a moral sense, even though the iron hand of the Chapel
was already fast relinquishing its grip, and so the few actual dole-mongers
and inveterate shirkers, unwed teenage mothers, petty criminals,
and minor vandals (the occasional pitied alcoholic, not today's
prevalent loutish drug abuser, being the norm), were held in general
contempt.
In
contrast with today's society of the entrenched disrespect for others,
half-heartedly supervised by its time-serving, car-bound coppers
and regulated by its apathetic, if officious, council panjandrums,
a sharp word from the town policeman or the truancy officer was
enough to bring down a worse fate than any court could impose upon
the town's malefactors the full, unpalatable wrath of 'Our
Mam's' tongue sometimes, though not always reinforced, in
the intensely matriarchal Welsh household, by 'Our Dad's' belt
and so would summarily exact due retribution and restore instant
peace to the community.
Even
in the state schools, when I was a lad, teachers were still largely
regarded not least by themselves as professionals in the old
sense of the word and excellence was encouraged. Many a collier
was proud his son had passed the exams for the local grammar school,
so giving his offspring the chance to avoid the long years of toil
in the bowels of the earth which was his lot in life.
In
my case, my junior state school headmaster not only suggested that
I and a few other likely candidates try out for a scholarship at
a nearby private school, but he undertook to arrange extra tuition
to maximize our chances of success an act of professional
pride and personal altruism to which I largely owe the very fine
education I received thereafter.
Contrast
this with today's 'teachers' themselves either poorly-read, demotivated
social workers or, conversely and much more perniciously, energetic
Jacobin indoctrinators of young minds and look at these worthies'
role in the institutionalized pogrom on merit and in the dark, egalitarian
cult of 'social inclusion', whereby the possession of a good academic
record is now likely to deny one entry to university if it bears
the class traitor's imprimatur of a prior private education, and
you can swiftly unearth another reason for moral decline in Cymry,
the land of the Citizens.
Today's
collectivist model is as the writer paints it; a newly greened and unarguably more Paradisiacal land of reclaimed and replanted
mounds of slag, watered by streams now sparkling, home to dabbling
waders and stocked with fish for the first time in nearly two centuries.
Outside
every one of the ribbon-terraced homes, most besporting the ugly
protrusion of a satellite dish, is a new car. Inside are DVDs, microwaves
and computers and all manner of other modern consumer durables
such as my grandparents would only have dimly seen presaged in the
Saturday morning penny-dreadful tomorrows of Buck Rogers and Flash
Gordon.
But,
too much of this wealth has been even more invidiously and corruptly
acquired then ever was the lesser largesse which was showered unbeknownst
on our fathers and grandfathers and its new owners have bought it
at the cost of no less than their pride and their self-reliance
(however economically fictitious this last used to be, a generation
ago).
Far
too many goodies have been gained by the workless and feckless;
by the canny, if often semi-literate, individuals who are so adept
at exploiting and defrauding the benefit system at the street level,
while, from within their plush, new, cost-overrun council chambers,
their preening apparatchik 'representatives' (few actually vote,
of course) further the rot, by enacting a pervasion of the culture
of 'rights' and 'benefits' – a creed which elevates into a sacred
tablet of 'entitlements' the accommodation of the infantile demands
for 'MORE!' on the part of those who contribute nothing themselves,
bar another litter of welfare bastards to feed on supermarket ready
meals and to clothe in expensive, designer, ghetto wear.
Assuredly,
the Wales in which my parents live is more environmentally pleasant
than it was a decade or so back a mercy for which we would
be churlish not to offer some thanks at the shrine of the Unknown
Taxpayer but, nonetheless, we should never lose sight of
the fact that the removal of the toxins of the Industrial past has
been accompanied by the injection of newer, Collectivist poisons
into the bloodstream of the Welsh themselves and that
noxious by-product will prove far harder to eradicate: a scraping
of bulldozers and a quick fertilizing with other people's wealth
is not likely to prove much of a remedy to the human, rather than
to the geographical, blight which now prevails.
So
to answer one novelist's question with another novelist's answer:
How
Green [is] My Valley? much greener, indeed; but this
has been a 'Rape
of the Fair Country', all the same.
May
25, 2004
Sean
Corrigan [send him mail]
writes from London.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Sean
Corrigan Archives
|