Thanks, Paul, that was what I was thinking of. I should’ve checked the quote first.
There’s obviously an element of poetic licence there which is quite common in memoirs. I sense it in Ben Leesons book and even more strongly in Arthur Harding’s. They give the impression that they were personally involved in events when they probably weren’t. But that’s part of the charm of them, I think. It’s quite fun to dig about and find out something that catches them out. ‘Gotcha! you old spoofer.’ moments. :-)
There’s obviously an element of poetic licence there which is quite common in memoirs. I sense it in Ben Leesons book and even more strongly in Arthur Harding’s. They give the impression that they were personally involved in events when they probably weren’t. But that’s part of the charm of them, I think. It’s quite fun to dig about and find out something that catches them out. ‘Gotcha! you old spoofer.’ moments. :-)
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