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24 September 2014
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It's all Dutch to me
by Morris Telford
Morris Telford
Morris Telford's - Diary of Adventure

It's all Dutch to Morris as he tries to persuade the people of Gorinchem to move to Shropshire. He gives a great speech in the main square and many people are moved.. in fact they're so moved that they disperse like as many autumn leaves leaving a leafy pile of leaves.

SEE ALSO

The Morris Telford archive. Read about Morris's previous exploits.

See what everyone's saying and leave a message on our

Follow Morris's journey
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Day Five
Day Six
Day Seven
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View a printable version of this page.
FACTS

Name: Morris Telford

Age: 33

DOB: 18/04/70

Occupation:Unemployed

Hobbies: Enlightenment, Philosophy, Bingo

Favourite book – Ordnance Survey Map of Shropshire 1999 edition

Favourite foods – Pickled Eggs

Favourite film – Late For Dinner

Favourite colour – The delicate cyan of the dinnertime sky in Moreton Say.

Favourite British County – Shropshire

Favourite Place – Moreton Say

Favourite Postal Code Area – TF9

Favourite radio
frequency - 96FM

Favourite sound – The gentle breeze rustling through the leafy glades of Moreton Say

Favourite Clive – Clive of India

Favourite Iron Bridge - Ironbridge

Favourite adhesive note size – 75 x 75mm

Favourite band – *(shameless plug)

Biggest inspiration –
MESSAGES
Is Morris a madman, a genius - or both? Have your say on our - and see what other people are saying about him.
Communicate with Morris via the - or look back through the archive to find out what happened in previous weeks.
WEEK 20, DAY 1
IÂ’m in Holland, IÂ’m not quite sure where in Holland. It all looks the same to me. The terrain here is as flat as a fresh pack of A4 copier paper and considerably less interesting.

IÂ’m not feeling like myself today, the last week was a bit of a disappointment. I had great plans for persuading a commune to move en masse to Shropshire. They didnÂ’t. They kicked me out.

I hate getting kicked out of places. I never got kicked out of anywhere in Moreton Say. Mr Derby didn’t get kicked out of the village’s weekly Bingo game when he developed Yemeks syndrome, even Mrs Ingot didn’t get kicked out of Market Drayton village hall when she was caught selling out-of–date scones. I got kicked out of that commune just for trying to arrange a nice coach trip to Shropshire. It’s all so wrong.

Yemeks syndrome is a sort of milder, bingo related version of Tourettes syndrome. You donÂ’t shout out obscenities, but instead shout out random numbers and occasionally "HOUSE". It played havoc with the weekly bingo for years. Fortunately Mr Derby had his tongue ripped out in a freak fan-belt accident in 1998 and after that he no longer disturbed the game so much.

IÂ’m trying to hitchhike my way to Gorinchem, which apparently is just north of Breda; IÂ’m not having a great deal of success. Five people have stopped so far, they all followed the same pattern, they ask me something in Dutch, I respond loudly and slowly that I do not understand and they then drive off. I need a new strategy if IÂ’m going to get anywhere.

The Dutch language is to my mind very like the European Monetary Union, I just donÂ’t understand it.

IÂ’m going to go somewhere where they speak English next; itÂ’s very frustrating having all this knowledge and information about Shropshire and not being able to make people understand you. Also, I always have this sneaking suspicion that people in Holland do understand me, they just pretend not to. Like when that last car stopped and I said, "I donÂ’t speak Dutch, I come from Shropshire, can I have a lift please?" the driverÂ’s mouth was saying something Dutch and apologetic sounding but his eyes were full of hate and fear.

I read somewhere (It might have been the Moreton Say Parish magazine "The Purity, Bingo and Bee-keeping Gazetteer") that by 2023 everyone outside Shropshire would be so paranoid about burglary, mugging, fraud, murder, kidnapping and escaped convicts that no-one would talk to anyone else at all. It just occurred to me, that this only gives me 20 more years to get everyone to move to Shropshire, I’ve got a lot of ground to cover.
WEEK 20, DAY 2
I met a lady today called Elaine who bore a quite stunning resemblance to Oliver Hardy, only without the moustache and the back catalogue of silent movies.

Elaine lives in a one-room house out in the Dutch countryside with her seventeen cats and some quite breathtaking odours.

I had dinner with Elaine, who despite obvious hygiene issues seems very content and she promised to visit Shropshire first chance she gets.

The really interesting thing about Elaine was her ability to communicate with her feline companions. I offered to cat-sit while she makes the trip, but she declined.
WEEK 20, DAY 3
My Mother always used to say you can tell a lot about a person from their shoes and their haircut. Not only is this excellent advice for life, but it also explains why she never liked the barefoot bald man that lived in that disused milk depot outside Oswestry.

So today I bought a new pair of boots, very smart, very shiny, purposeful boots, the sort of boots you might conquer the Wrekin with. I also had a haircut.

I tried to chat to the barber but he just kept agreeing with me every time I asked him a question. It was very irritating.

"How long have you lived here?"

"Yes"

"If you moved is there anywhere in particular you would like to move to?"

"Yes, yes"

"How much is a haircut here?"

"Mmmm, Yes."

"Do you speak English?"

"Yes"

"You donÂ’t do you?"

"Yes, sir"

You get the idea. It wasnÂ’t a bad haircut though. Apparently IÂ’m not all that far from Gorinchem, IÂ’m on a bus there right now.
WEEK 20, DAY 4
IÂ’ve arrived in the town of Gorinchem. IÂ’ve been told the people here uncannily resemble Shropshire folk, but are trapped in their Dutch ways. IÂ’m staying in a little hotel and getting the feel of the place. I can sense it is ripe. The very streets of Gorinchem will soon cry out with a long buried yearning for all things Shropshire, mark my words.

ThereÂ’s not really much here in Gorinchem to make people want to stay, I feel sure that once I get chance to speak to them they will understand how much better off they will be in Shropshire. IÂ’ve found someone who is prepared to translate a speech for me and IÂ’m planning to speak to the people tomorrow.

In the meantime IÂ’ve been trying to meet people on a one to one basis, but itÂ’s really difficult, less people seem to speak English here than they did in Amsterdam.

I found a lovely little shop and bought a "Learn Dutch" book and tape, but none of the phrases in it helped me much. I donÂ’t need "Where is the toilet", or "Two sandwiches please", or "The weather is fine today", I want "Come and live in Shropshire", "Have you any idea how lovely Market Drayton is at this time of year?" or "If only you would learn about the idyllic life that can be yours for the taking in Shropshire IÂ’m sure you would agree to go there, here take this plane ticket and let me be the alarm call that wakes you from this Dutch nightmare and helps you embark on a wonderful journey into the real life in Shropshire."
WEEK 20, DAY 5
I gave a speech in the town square today, I generally make these things up as I go along, but I had to have this translated so I could give it phonetically. I thought IÂ’d share the transcript with you-

"Good Afternoon good people. Thank you for coming. My name is Morris Telford, I come to you from the Shropshire village of Moreton Say and I am here to change your life for the better.

There are essentially three types of people in this world. People who are born in Shropshire, people who move to Shropshire and, sadly the largest group, people who never see Shropshire.

DonÂ’t worry. IÂ’m here to balance the scales.

IÂ’ve been travelling all over the world as an emissary for the sacred pleasures of Shropshire life, a herald of the unspoken beauty that fills EnglandÂ’s finest county, a solid platinum bell ringing in a new era of Salopian understanding and peace, a lightning flash of sudden revelations in the dark night of ignorance, an ethereal guiding hand to push you towards Shropshire and all it holds for you, a signpost of reason at the crossroads of confusion, an explosion of common sense in a firework factory of misguided acts. I am your magical master butcher in the meat market of inferior, diseased animal parts, your buy one get one free special offer of a lifetime in the freezer aisle of the global supermarket, your heavy duty stapler of truth in the stationary cupboard of deceit, your giant squid of retribution in the stormy sea of guilt, your only Cuban cigar in the last chance box of smoking opportunity, your own personal representative in the tumultuous, disorientating whirlwind of package lifestyles and your last, best hope for escaping the hideous life you now lead and embarking on a superlative voyage of destiny to the very heart of the golden county, Shropshire."

I think it must have lost something in translation. The crowd just seemed bewildered after I gave my speech and dispersed like as many autumn leaves leaving a leafy pile of leaves.
WEEK 20, DAY 6
IÂ’m leaving Holland.

IÂ’m fed up.

Not one person came up to me after my speech yesterday, and I was a bit nervous giving it too. I can count the times IÂ’ve been nervous on one hand. There was that time I tried to climb the church at Moreton Say after a school friend told me Clive of India lived on the roof. There was the time I stood up at the annual general meeting of the parish council and complained about the inferior standard of the Bingo markers they use at the weekly game, specifically the low tone ink. Then there was the time I accidentally stapled my hand to the desk during an important meeting with Mr Magson, and lastly I remember was the time I got home late from work on Tuesday 8th January 2002 and nearly met my next-door neighbour Sophia in the flesh. Those and the speech yesterday are about it, and I got all nervous yesterday for nothing, no one responded.

IÂ’m going to Germany; see if I can fight some Nazis or something.
WEEK 20, DAY 7
Coach leaves tonight, as a parting gesture to Gorinchem IÂ’ve managed to get a mailing list of every person who lives here from the town hall, IÂ’m getting a local mailing company to send them all my motherÂ’s phone number on a small postcard, maybe she will be able to talk some sense into some of them. SheÂ’s always complaining no one rings her.

I sent Mother a lingua-phone "Learn Dutch" tape and book in the post so she can prepare a few helpful phrases for the 104,392 Dutch people who now have her phone number.

I donÂ’t know much about Germany, but I notice Melvin Bone suggests I give it a go. Melvin also says-
"Here is a quote from Country Life "Anyone who knows Devon could have guessed it would do well in
this contest. Even so, no one could possibly have predicted the county would rub its rivals' faces so deeply in the mud."

Shropshire scored a poor 2 out of 10 for tranquillity, but did better elsewhere scoring 10 out of 10 for burglariesÂ…Â…Â…Â….. Morris, your mission will succeed if you transfer your allegiance to Devon. I'll endeavour to send you some scrumpy and fudge to get you started."

Either Melvin works for the evil Country Life or has been through some sort of sophisticated brain tampering process to say such terrible things.

I would like to respond to a couple of the more hurtful things Mel said.

Tranquillity was invented in Shropshire. Archaeological evidence that I have seen with my own eyes in the Market Drayton secret museum clearly shows that while the people of Devon were still trying to walk upright and build rudimentary dwellings, the people of Shropshire were developing an eco-friendly, peace loving society, pushing the boundaries of tranquillity by sitting in their gardens with a good book and a nice cup of tea.

Scrumpy and Fudge? Obviously it would take much more than apple juice and inferior confectionary to turn anyone from the Shropshire delights of gingerbread and the 130 percent Moreton Say rum that the vicar distills.

As for burglaries, the last reported burglary in Moreton Say was in 1898 when Terrence Threefold broke into Mrs Constance RhetoricÂ’s barn and tried to make off with a spade, a leather water pouch and a sack of flour. He was caught and hanged before he had chance to dig, drink or make a cake.

Where was Mr Threefold from?

Devon.

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