It was hot in the rickety little bus and I was on the wrong side where the July sun beat
on the windows. I shifted uncomfortably inside my best suit and eased a finger
inside the constricting white collar. It was a foolish outfit for this weather but a few
miles ahead, my prospective employer was waiting for me and I had to make a good
impression.
There was a lot of hanging on this interview; being a newly qualified veterinary
surgeon in this year of 1937 was like taking out a ticket for the dole queue.
Agriculture was depressed by a decade of government neglect; the draught horse
which had been the mainstay of the profession was fast disappearing. It was easy to
a prophet of doom when the young men emerging from the colleges after a hard five
years’ slog were faced by a world indifferent to their enthusiasm and bursting
knowledge. There were usually two or three situations vacant in the Record each
week and an average of eighty applicants for each one.
It hadn’t seemed true when the letter came from Darrowby in the Yorkshire Dales.
Mr. Siegfried Farnon would like to see me on the Friday afternoon; I was to come to
tea and if we were mutually suited I could stay on as an assistant. I had grabbed at
the lifeline unbelievingly; so many friends who had qualified with me were unemployed or working in shops or as labourers in the shipyards that I had given up
hope of any other future for myself.
The driver crashed his gears again as he went into another steep bend. We had been
climbing steadily now for the last fifteen miles or so, moving closer to the distant
blue swells of the Pennines. I had never been in Yorkshire before but the name had
always raised a picture of a county as stodgy and unromantic as its pudding; I was
prepared for solid worth, dullness and a total lack of charm. But as the bus groaned
its way higher I began to wonder. The formless heights were resolving into high,
grassy hills and wide valleys. In the valley bottoms, rivers twisted among the trees
and solid grey-stone farmhouses lay among islands of cultivated land which pushed
bright green promontories up the hillsides into the dark tide of heather which lapped
from the summits.
I had seen the fences and hedges give way to dry stone walls which bordered the
roads, enclosed the fields and climbed endlessly over the surrounding fells. The walls
were everywhere, countless miles of them, tracing their patterns high on the green
uplands.
But I neared my destination the horror stories kept forcing their way into my mind;
the tales brought back to college by veterans hardened and embittered by a few
months of practice. Assistants were just little bits of dirt to be starved and worked
into the ground by the principals who were heartless and vicious to a man. Dave
Stevens, lighting a cigarette with trembling hand: “Never a night off or a half day. He
made me wash the car, dig the garden, mow the lawn, do the family shopping. But
when he told me to sweep the chimney, I left”.
Oh hell, that one couldn’t be true. I cursed my fevered imagination. No, it couldn’t be
as bad as that; I rubbed my sweating palms on my knees and tried to concentrate on
the man I was going to meet. Siegfried Farnon, Strange name for a vet in the
Yorkshire Dales. Probably a German who had done his training in this country and
decided to set up in practice. And it wouldn’t have been Farnon in the beginning;
probably Farrenen. He was beginning to take shape: short, fat, with merry eyes and a
bubbling laugh. But at the same time I had trouble with the obtruding image of a
hulking, cold-eyed, bristle-skulled Teuton more in keeping with the popular idea of
the practice boss.
I realized the bus was clattering along a narrow street which opened on to a square
where we stopped. We had arrived.