Alfred N.Muggins : The Man Responsible For Bringing Fact and Fiction Together! (In A New Way) : Remolding and Renovating History : Part 3 : Evolution Not Revolution
By David Kirtley
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Benjamin Franklin might never have got to Paris and impressed the latent French Revolutionaries with his Revolutionary ideas, which may or may not have directly, or indirectly, led to the French Revolution, and the beheading of poor Louis XVI and his poor Austrian wife Marie Antoinette. They could have given the Bourbon biscuits out to the Paris masses, and the Freemasons and Revolutionary Middle Classes at a much earlier date, and kept them happy (without ever needing to resort to Opium or Television, or even Religion, or for that matter suburban gardens or washing machines or any other relatively cheap consumer durables of the future 20th and 21st Centuries).
What became of British America, without its Revolution?, and French Canada, without its British conquest or takeover? And Bourbon France, without its Revolution?
Robespierre remains a forgotten gentleman, who at least kept his own head, and Corporal Napoleon never rose to such Grand (Army?) Heights! There was no Invasion of Russia, and therefore no 1812 Overture from Tchaikovsky! And then, what about the rest of it? No Civil War in the United States, no Waterloo, no Peninsula War, and therefore no Prime Minister Wellington! (Would the Wellington boots ever have been invented?)
No ‘Trail of Tears’ for the Cherokees and the Choctaws etc. as Andrew Jackson never became President (of the non existent United States)! And the American colonists never flooded across the border to take Texas off the Mexicans, and the Alamo never happened!
What about California? Did British America buy it off the Spaniards? Did the Russians decide to keep Alaska? And did the French hang on to Louisiana and the West of the Mississippi or more? (It was Napoleon who sold it to his fellow American Revolutionaries in the Louisiana Purchase, but if those two Revolutions never happened it most likely would never have happened! The ‘Wild West’ would not have been the same as the one we know from the films. The Sioux might have hung on to the Dakotas, and the Battle of the Little Bighorn might never have taken place, and the Apaches would have continued to dominate their region of the Southwest?)
And what about British India? Did Clive let the French have it instead, or did the Moghul Empire and the Hindu States survive?
It was at about this moment that even Alfred N.Muggins’ complex mind began to boggle, and he thought he had better stop writing, for his own benefit and sanity!!
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Comments
Who knew bourbon biscuits
Who knew bourbon biscuits could have such significant historica context? In a multiverse somewhere, all of those scenarios played out. Mind bending, isn't it?
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And Billy J. Kramer?
It’s not just the mind of Alfred N. Muggins that is boggling. Mine boggles too as I try to get to grips with the following …
If Marie Antoinette had said ‘Give them a suburban garden and a washing machine’ would this quote have stood the test of time in the same way that her cake-based command has done?
and …
Would Manchester-based 1960s beat combo The Dakotas have still gone on to play at Liverpool’s famous Cavern Club and have a string of smash hits as Billy J. Kramer’s backing band if the Sioux had hung on to them?
Another entertaining read David. I wish you had been my history teacher at school.
Turlough
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Madame Euveur
My partner is French. I call her Priyatelka which is the Bulgarian word for partner or girlfriend. We live in Bulgaria so our conversations tend to take place in a combination of English, French and Bulgarian languages together with a few words that don’t really exist but which one of us has imagined originates from the other’s native tongue but the error is never corrected because neither of us have a total grasp of any language. In a totally good humoured way we spend a great deal of time ridiculing each other’s ethnic backgrounds, often on the basis of asking a question with the full knowledge that giving an accurate reply will be difficult. For this reason, Marie Antoinette often gets a mention, especially when our cats or dogs are hungry.
Priyatelka insists that Marie Antoinette said brioche rather than cake and scratches her head in puzzlement when I enquire if it was made to the standard recipe or did it contain chocolate chips or a confiture of figs, as it often does when we have it locally with Turkish coffee.
She tells me that whatever the French queen’s suggestion was, it made good sense because what good is simple bread without marmalade (the invention of which was another notable event in French history), which the poor people wouldn't have had. Priyatelka rarely eats bread, she seems to take pleasure from doing our laundry and together we are keen amateur horticulturalists. So the demands of Marie Antoinette that we have previously mentioned make perfect sense to her. She also likes to use the vacuum cleaner, probably more so than the washing machine. I love the way her accent transforms Hoover into euveur, giving it the flavour of a real French verb. Apparently, many French peasants still do not own a vacuum cleaner, so how much sweeter might be the slums of Paris had history taken a slightly different course.
I had forgotten about Paul Revere and The Raiders. Poor old Paul nosedived into obscurity when his backing band abandoned their musical career, concentrating instead on finding their lost arc. I tried to watch the film version of the events but gave up after only a few minutes. Well surely you’d start looking for anything that was lost by checking in your coat pockets and down the back of the settee but no, not these boys. They seem to think that a Peruvian temple is the obvious place. Though from Liverpool rather than Manchester, Gerry and the Pacemakers, in my opinion, were a much more admirable band from the 1960s. If history had been different they could so easily have been called Gerry and the Devices For Stimulating the Heart Muscle and Regulating Its Contractions.
I enjoyed reading your reply to my comment. My best wishes to you both.
Turlough
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