The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 11

No.128 The Trusty Servant Vintcent’s Break- a Kennyite notion revealed John Vintcent (D, 51-55) explains: Some twenty or so years ago, I was in a train heading for London when a man came into the compartment and sat opposite me. He was wearing an Old Wok tie so I said I had one like it at home and we started to chat. It turned out he was also a Kennyite and, when I told him my name, he asked if I was anything to do with Vintcent’s Break. When he explained what it was I said I rather thought there was a link. When John (‘Fred’) Manisty, our Housedon, told me I was to be Senior Prefect for my last term in the school, Short Half 1955, his brief was simple. I was to be responsible for running the house on our side of his study door, as it were. I would be expected to sort out any problems and make appropriate decisions, but if I needed advice he would always be there. House-specific notions ‘Vintcent’s Break’ is one of many house-specific notions. Break is called ‘swipes’ in Phil’s. The food eaten during it is ‘scrape’ in Cook’s, ‘sweat’ in College and ‘dock’ in Phil’s. The end of toytime in Chawker’s is signalled by a cry of ‘Jackets and ties!’ and one of ‘Lawful time’ in Trant’s. The prefect’s job of putting junior boys to bed is ‘being on course’ in Chawker’s, Furley’s and Trant’s, ‘docking’ in Hopper’s, ‘nursing’ in College, ‘flats’ in Phil’s and ‘put-to-bed’ in Toye’s, where juniors may put their ‘gimpos’ (side-lights) on to read before bed; Trantites complaining that this duty is causing them to do too much ‘torturing’ only mean mugging down to some late work. Waking-up is called ‘long hour’ in Hopper’s, ‘morning Ganges’ in Phil’s and ‘Peal’s cad’ in Toye’s. The job of returning the dirty crockery to the kitchens in College is called ‘Venus’. And the houses are filled with rooms whose names have stuck while their uses have changed: the top years in Chawker’s sleep on a corridor called ‘26A’; the ‘Paper Room’ in Hopper’s now contains a television; ‘Pingers’ in College contains a piano and some moribund computers rather than hosting table- tennis; the explanation for ‘Boot Boys’ and ‘Munery Single/Double’ in Phil’s and ‘Clanger’s’ in Trant’s has been lost. There were many petty little notions which seemed to exist solely to remind you of your lack of status, but which added nothing to the well-being of the house. Everybody had, of course, gone through the same experience as they progressed up the hierarchical ladder and had presumably accepted the situation on the basis that once they had matured, as it were, they would enjoy the privileges they had envied as juniors. I had never been so relieved as when I became a two-year man and escaped the indignities of being a junior and all that that entailed. I really felt free for the first time and I began to enjoy my life in the school. As Senior Prefect I had the opportunity to do something about it and so I discussed my ideas with Fred who immediately agreed with what I wanted to do. One particular irritation concerned a break taken in the middle of toytime in Hall, when we were provided with 11 a mug of cocoa and a bun. Hall in Kenny’s is an L-shaped space with one arm longer than the other and the procedure was that three-year men, then small end, and then large end would be called up to help themselves while the others continued with their work. As each group would chatter and gossip and make noise for about ten or fifteen minutes, the result was that nobody could concentrate on their work for half an hour or more of very valuable time. Given the pressure we were all under that seemed to me to be unnecessary. My decision was to make one single break when everybody took their cocoa and bun together. Nobody complained and the change worked well. What has surprised me is that this seemingly small innovation has been given a name, but so far as I know, not until a year or two after I had left. Maybe a man, junior at the time, liked the new arrangement, and christened it when he had become senior enough to be able to do so? Perhaps relief at the abandonment of some of the other irritating notions, which accompanied this change, contributed to it. I don’t know. Whatever the reason, I am delighted that it has become a notion!