Paddy Leigh Fermor was someone very special, a clever and debonair man, an idiosyncratic writer, someone whose whole personality and career could only be British. Once I went out to dinner in London, and there he was. Another guest has grown up in Communist Bulgaria but had managed to defect. Paddy immediately sang one Bulgarian nursery song after another in the proper language. As a young man, he’d walked through pre-war Hungary and Romania, and I expect he could have sung songs in those languages too. Those walks provided the material for books that evoke Central Europe as it then was, now far away and long ago, before politics destroyed the picturesque.
Real heroes are modest, and Paddy proved it. You could never have guessed that this sociable fellow apparently eager to be friends with everyone had a war record that made him a living legend. Twenty-five in 1940, he was commissioned into the Brigade of Guards and then transferred to special services. He took part in the British fighting and withdrawal from Greece and Crete, but then set about organizing the Cretan resistance to the German occupation. Passing as a Cretan, speaking the language, he turned out to be a natural guerrilla. The great and unforgettable exploit was the kidnapping of General Kreipe, the German commanding officer in Crete. In pure James Bond style, he and Stanley Moss, another Guards officer, disguised themselves as German soldiers, stopped the General’s car, dealt with the driver, put a gun to the General’s head and drove the car through some 20 roadblocks where sentries were deceived by appearances into merely saluting. They then frog-marched the General across the island to a waiting British submarine. At one point, a German search party failed to find them hiding in a cave. At another point as dawn was coming up on Mount Ida, General Kreipe quoted the opening lines of Horace’s ode praising this very snow-capped sight, whereupon Paddy recited the remaining verses.
“Ach so, Herr Major,” was the compliment with which the general ended this exchange, as unexpected as it is chivalrous. Stanley Moss wrote up the whole exploit in a memoir, Ill Met by Moonlight. I could never get Paddy to say much about it, except that he thought the film of the book was not much good. Could there be men like that again? In these thin days I doubt it, which makes me wish I could turn out the guards and give him a proper salute as he passes. R.I.P.
So pleased to see this posting in remembrance of a great man and unparalleled writer, unsurpassed in his erudition and, yes, utterly British.
There is word that the third and last installment of PLF's memoirs on his pre-WWII trans-Europe trek will be published - he was working on them for the year before his death. There is also a biography by Artemis Cooper that may be published sooner than expected, sadly.
For those who have not had the great pleasure of reading PLF, titles to look for include 'A Time of Gifts: On Foot to Constantinople - From the Hook of Holland to the Middle Danube', book one of his journey; 'Between the Woods and the Water: on Foot to Constantinople from the Hook of Holland - The Middle Danube to the Iron Gates', book two; 'Mani' about southern Greece, and a few more.
Sir Patrick was also instrumental in having published the book written by one of his WWII messengers on Crete, 'The Cretan Runner'. There is a shortish film about the Cretan resistance to Germany's invasion here, which includes film of PLF: External Link
There is also a delightful volume of letters between PLF and the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire (Deborah Mitford) written over the past fifty or so years, and published last year, entitled 'In Tearing Haste: Letters Between' etc etc.
I shouldn't be too surprised to see an honour guard of some sort saluting a real hero, as he rejoins the pantheon of Gods whence he must surely have come.
Thank you DP-J for telling more people about PLF.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI just happen to be reading Ill Met by Moonlight at this moment. A really good read. For hundreds of years Great Britain produced men like Fermor. This explains the power, endurance, and legacy of her Empire. It is sad to see what has happened to this once great nation over the past half century.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt's sadder still to see people fail to recognize that her decline was due to her turning her back on God, as will be the case for us if it isn't already, for in no case in history has it been a nation's military that saved them ultimately, only God's unmerited mercy.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI just checked online and my public library has many of Fermor's books. Look forward to reading them.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseFor all his Bonds-like exploits I was a huge fan of his travel writing. I think I recall correctly a scene in one about Germans eating and drinking that is brilliant.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseNow days men do not even know who Horace was, to think enemies in the bloodiest of wars could take a moment's pause to appreciate their common heritage.
Now days our enemy if captured will throw his feces at you. And if he had captured you, your head would be lopped off with a rusty sword.
Our enemies are barbarians and we are doing our best to throw away our heritage...how soon until we descend to barbarity?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseYet the "civilized" Germans perpetrated during this war arguably the greatest barbarity in human history. Many of those directly involved could probably have quoted Horace or Homer in the original Greek.
Knowledge of their classical heritage didn't keep them from acting more barbaric than the worst barbarians.
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