Australian Motorcyclist — January 2018

(avery) #1

CLASSIC MORRIS


eyed while focussing on the match as
he made quite a mess out of lighting
the thing up, often coughing and
spluttering, while thereafter being
wreathed in a cloud of smoke until
the thing was exhausted or went
RXWTXLFNO\ZKHQWKHÀUHUHDFKHG
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inhaled the smoke, so it seemed a
pointless exercise.
To me it was such a comical display
that I sometimes had to leave the
room with a hand clasped over my
giggling mouth.
He was clearly a hopeless smoker, if
there is such a thing, and I could never
understand why he bothered sucking
on a cigarette at all, for I couldn’t help
but note more than a few customers
looking at him a bit sideways as he
VWRRGIXULRXVO\SXIÀQJFORXGVRI
smoke into their faces. The cigarette
never left his mouth until it was
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his sentences around the thing, with
explosive consonants like ‘P’,‘F’,’T’
and ‘V’ emitting even more clouds of
smoke. He never, ever, smoked at any
other time, so I imagine it must have
been a soothing thing for him to do.
But now that I come to think of it, I
suppose it was a whole lot better than
having him sucking his thumb in their
various faces: Gawd help us, how off-
putting would that have been, and not
only for customers either!
He was always immaculately dressed



  • often an odd thing to see in a
    suburban motorcycle store – with his
    wall-toed shoes buffed to a mirror
    ÀQLVK+HVHHPHGWRKDYHMXVWWKUHH
    pair of those brogues; one a light tan,
    another a deeper brown, the third a
    deep, reddish- purple called ox-blood.


I never saw a black
shoe on either of
his feet. Those
lighter coloured
shoes shone so
brightly they
probably glowed
in the dark, and
you could always
see the showroom
ÁRRUDQGWKHJODULQ
front windows
clearly illuminated
upon them.
His nick-name, be
told me once, was
what I thought he
said was the Baron.
But it was actually
the Barren, for he
later said he was
entirely unable to
father children due,
he told me, to a
motorcycle accident
in which his pelvis was busted. This,
he added, had some grim affects upon
what he called his manhood – not his
ability to ‘perform’ well, he hastened
to add, just his fertility. That accident
was the reason, I suddenly realised, for
his very subtle limp, for one leg was
very slightly shorter than the other.
What about the obvious ding on top
of his head, I rudely asked him shortly
thereafter, but he said that was not due
to the same - or any other - motorcycle
accident, but was caused by a small
enemy mortar-bomb exploding on
the very top of his ‘tin-hat’ during his
campaign in WW2 in Europe!!
Other than his odd machinations
with those confounded cigarettes, he
seemed to me to be quite OK after

J

t

Buy it!


Hey, my 196-page book, “Vintage
Morris: Tall Tales but True from a
Lifetime in Motorcycling” is available
for purchase.

To secure your signed copy, please
send a cheque or money order for
$42 ($29 + $14 postage nationwide)
to: L&L Morris, PO Box 392,
Winston Hills NSW 2153. Cheers
for now. LM

such a fearsome thing happening to
him, but he did admit he wasn’t too
sure who he was, where he was, or
in fact what he was for months after
his tin-hat was rent asunder by the
blast. He was always going to bring
the well-splattered metal headgear
in to work, he said (for he had

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