The history books
have it all wrong and it is only fitting that through our
He left the lads to finish the last of the cucumber
sandwiches while he went to get his bearings. He stumbled upon an old shack
where an elderly Saxon was engaged in some sort of primitive craft. "Hey
you, with the lattice-work socks" he shouted What
are you making?" "Trug basket" replied
the local. Whereupon William, who disliked bad language at the best of times,
gave the Saxon's ear a quick massage with one of those spiked balls on a chain
which some of the nastier
"What do you think you are doing my good man?"
He said in his poshest voice. "Don't you
"My good man" me" said William. "I would have you know that
I am William the ruler of all Normandy" "Is that so?" replied
Harold "Well allow me to tell you that I am Harold Godwinson
The ruler of that piece of land you are standing on at this moment, so I would
suggest that you push off before I pull it from under you" "It may
interest you to learn" said William, "That down on the beach, just
out of sight, I have an army of fearless French warriors." "That
doesn't surprise me " said Harold "The fumes from the garlic are
beginning to tarnish my breast-plate, but I also have a large army just up the
road, and as soon as they have finished queueing at
the chip shop they will be down here like a ton of bricks." This news
seemed to make William a little more reasonable. "'I'll tell you
what" he said, "It would be a shame to interrupt your lads in the
middle of their tea. Lets arrange a little
"do" at daybreak tomorrow, just outside the Home and Colonial in the
High Street." "Done" said Harold, and the two men parted until
the morrow.
Picture the scene the next day. There were horsemen, pikemen, archers,
knights, swordsmen, and standard-bearers, all intermingled with the early
morning shoppers. Harold won the toss and chose the end with the steep hill.
From this vantage point they were able to pelt the
Understandably this peeved William somewhat so, brushing
a handful of brussel sprouts from his visor, he convened
a meeting of his think-tank. One of these bright lads had the solution.
"It's like this Guv, if we fire our 'arrers into the air, the English will all look up and shout
"Cor! Look at all them lovely 'arrers" and we will then dash up the hill and sort zem out" "You shove that in the old suggestion
box Gaston" said William "I think you may have a winner there"
For a while the plan looked like succeeding but suddenly
there was tragedy. The carpet of arrows was descending and most of the Saxons
were shouting "Cor! look
at all them lovely 'arrers" but Harold was
shouting "Cor! look at all the lovely omygawd aaargh!" and there
he was flat on his back with his fetlocks pointing skywards in what the
Americans would describe as a situation of negative immortality.
William sprinted up the hill full of apologies "What
a terrible thing - wouldn't have had that happen for the world - my goodness,
is that the time? - must get back to the beach - boats all parked on double
yellow lines"
The Saxons however, were not having any of this. They had
arrived here with a King and now owing to this
From a series of articles by the late Stan Simpson G4ITM