Auberon Waugh in The New Statesman 9/22/75
Something from The New Statesman by Auberon Waugh (1975):
Not far from where I live in Southern France there runs a small
canal called La Rigole. It is a tributary of the great Canal du Midi linking the
Atlantic with the Mediterranean, and its pine fringed towpaths make an ideal
place to ride on a mobilette or French autocycle when one has nothing better
to do. Phuttering along it last week I noticed for the first time a public notice
on its banks:
INTERDICTION FORMELLE DE JETER DANS LA RIGOLE ET SUR SES
DEPENDANCES DES ANIMAUX MORTS (Volailles comprises) ET DES
ORDURES – Decret du 6-2-32 ART. 56
It had never occurred to me before that it might be fun to throw dead animals
into the water but this notice, advertising a formal interdiction, could only be
interpreted as an open invitation to join in what was presumably a traditional
French sport. It was beyond reasonable hope that I would find a dead
chicken or a duck but I remembered seeing a dead hedgehog on the road
some miles back. Unfortunately, it proved inseparable from the tarmac of
which it had already begun to form a part, and it was while I was trying to run
over a huge green lizard, the size of a small crocodile, that I fell off my
mobilette and suffered the sort of injuries which would cause any self-
respecting British worker to draw sick benefit for a year, if not for the rest of
his life.