Mark Birley really knew how to live
We had arranged to see Mark Birley at noon on the day he died. But my wife Lucy and I were just too late. He had suffered a stroke that morning. We missed him by a couple of hours and now, forever. I heard confirmation of the terrible news as I boarded a plane for Hong Kong. Not a good time to be pensive, as stewardess after stewardess interrupted my memories of the man with silly patters and wash-bags and pyjamas. Mark would have appreciated the incongruities. He had a Saharan sense of humour, especially when travelling on commercial. Even when he was confined to a converted bedroom on the ground floor of his divine house opposite the Brompton Oratory, he remained funny. I had asked him where he was going for Christmas.
‘I am going home,’ he announced.
‘But Mark, this is your home,’ I said, not letting him get away with being either silly or Alzheimeric.
‘No, I am going home,’ he insisted.
‘Look, Mark,’ I persisted, pointing out of the window. ‘You see the garden out there. That’s your garden. This is your home.’
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