Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - The Coup, the Poet and the Secret to Winning Wimbledon
Episode Date: July 7, 2023“If you can make one heap of all your winnings and risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss..." Those words - from Rudyard Kipling's poem "If" - were based on charismatic nineteenth century doctor, Lea...nder Starr Jameson. In Britain, Jameson was worshipped as a plucky hero: a bastion of courage and mental fortitude. Ironically, he was also responsible for the Jameson Raid, a South African coup that was an unmitigated disaster. Kipling's champion might have spearheaded a fiasco - but could the poem "If" hold clues for triumph in another arena?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Paul Moondin, a poet who over the past several years had the good fortune to spend time
with one of the world's greatest songwriters, Sir Paul McCartney. We talked through more than
150 tracks from McCartney's songbook and while we did, we recorded our conversations.
I mean the fact that I dreamed the song yesterday leads me to believe that it's not just
quite as cut and dried as we think it is.
And now you can listen to our conversations in our new podcast McCartney, a life. So sour.
Uncle Albert.
McCartney's been asked many times to write his autobiography,
and he's always declined.
But as we ventured out on this journey,
line by line, it became clear how much of McCartney's life
is indeed embedded in his lyrics.
It was like going back to an old snapshot album, looking back on work.
I hadn't thought much about for quite a few years.
Listen, wherever you get your podcasts, and if you want to binge the entire season, add free right now. Sign up
for Pushkin Plus on the McCartney Aliphonderic Showpage in Apple Podcasts or at Pushkin.fm-plus.
Your membership also unlocks access to add free binges from Malcolm Gladwell, Dr. Laurie Santos and many other top hosts.
Pushkin
Rudyard Kipling is perhaps best known as the author of the Jungle Book. The story of the man cub moglie raised by animals such as Beluv the Bear and Baguera the Black Panther.
Kipling wrote poems too. When surveys ask the British public for their all-time favourite poem, Kipling's If is routinely at the top of the list.
If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs and blame it on you.
If you can walk with crowds and keep your virtue,
if you can fill the unforgiving minute with 60 seconds worth of distance run.
If is written in the form of paternal life advice, from Kipling to his son, and what will happen
if you do all the things Kipling recommends in the poem?
Well then, you'll be a man, my son.
But when Kipling wrote this poem, he had a particular man in mind as his role model.
That man was Dr. Leander Star Jameson.
Dr. Jameson is known today for two things.
The first is inspiring Kipling to write if.
The second is the utter fiasco that became known as the Jameson raid.
the utter fiasco that became known as the Jameson raid. The year is 1895 and Dr. Leander Starr Jameson is all set to invade the South African Republic.
He has a private army of fewer than 500 men at his command, but he reckons that will be
more than enough to overthrow the country's government.
Anyone could take it with half a dozen revolvers.
I shall get through as easily as a knife cuts through butter."
Roger D'Kippling wasn't alone in his admiration for Dr. Jameson.
By all accounts, the short and balding Scotsman had remarkable charisma.
I suppose he must have done.
A couple of decades earlier, fresh out of medical school and working as a surgeon at a London hospital,
Jameson saw an advert for a doctor to join a practice in a fast-growing mining town in Cape Colony.
Then a part of the British Empire in what today is South Africa.
And now here he is, no longer practicing medicine, but leading a small army and casually plotting
to topple the government of the next country over.
You don't have that kind of career path unless you've got something about you.
It had been so far a life filled with triumphs, but triumph isn't everything, as Kipling reminds
us in perhaps his poem's most famous line. If you can meet with triumph and disaster
and treat those two imposter's just the same, Dr. Jameson was about to meet with disaster. I'm Tim those two imposters just the same,
those words are written above the entrance to Centecourt Wimbledon.
They seem to resonate with tennis players. Before one classic men's final,
the BBC asked Roger Federer and Raffa Nadal to recite the poem for them. Serena Williams
likes the poem too. She recorded a version for International Women's Day and she brought
Kipling's embarrassingly dated closing line into the 21st century. You will be a woman, sister.
It's not hard to imagine why the all-England-Lawm tennis club might have inscribed that line about
triumph and disaster above the entrance to Centricort.
It reminds the players that it's bad form to gloat when you win, or sulk when you lose.
And yet, treat them just the same?
We want to see both winners and losers behave with grace and magnanimity, of course,
but we don't expect their reactions to be emotionally indistinguishable.
But there is another sporting sense in which those words fit better.
Tennis matches are made up of sets and games and points, there's plenty of scope for
mini-disasters and triumphs as the match unfolds.
And high-level sport is at least as much about mental fortitude as physical skill.
Let's visit Wimbledon in 1993 for the Women's Final.
Jan and Avottner is facing off against Steffi Graf.
There's no doubt who's expected to win.
Steffi Graf has established herself as one of the all-time greats.
She's won 12 Grand Slams already, including four of the last five Wimbledons.
She's the top seed. Yarn and Novotna is seeded eighth.
She's never been past the quarter-finals before.
She might never get another shot at a grand slam title. The first set is closely
fought. The underdog Novotna takes it all the way to a tie break, which graph only
narrowly wins. This puts graph in a strong position. She needs to win just one of
the two remaining sets,
while Mavottna must win both.
It would be all too natural for Mavottna to get disheartened at this setback.
She's played hard for over an hour,
and now faces a more difficult task than when she started.
But there's a risk for Graf as well.
She might react to the mini-triump for winning the first set by getting
lulled into a sense of complacency. Maybe that's what happens, because Graf proceeds to lose
the next five games. Novotna easily takes the second set to level the match. In the final
set, Novotna's brilliant play continues. Miss Novotna leads by four games to one final set.
There's nothing Steffi Graf can do.
Novotna is inspired.
She's cruising to victory.
40, 30.
If she wins the next point,
Novotna will be just one game away from the championship.
Novotna's first serve goes into the net. No matter
that happens, generally a player will be more careful on their second serve to
try to make sure they don't lose the point with a double fault, but this
second serve is terrible. It goes both long and wide, missing not by a few inches
but by a good three feet. It's a double fault. In itself it doesn't matter
too much, it's just one point lost, plenty more chances to come. But this will
later be called the most iconic double fault in the history of tennis.
Because of what happens next. Sometimes a sports person just can't put it out of their mind when something's just
gone wrong.
Disaster compounds upon disaster.
Every bad shot makes the next shot worse, until they've somehow contrived to let the
whole match slip away.
There's a word for this.
Several phrases, in fact, getting the yips, bottling it, choking.
When you get within sight of the winning line,
then you inexplicably fall apart.
Jan and Avottna walks back to the baseline,
looking faintly puzzled, wiping sweat from her cheek
on the shoulder of her shirt.
She is about to endure
one of the most mortifying chokes in sporting history.
Rujard Kipling was a tennis fan. When he lived in Vermont with his American wife,
he built the state's first tennis court at his house. But he wasn't thinking about tennis when he wrote his poem,
if he was thinking about Dr. Leandre star Jameson. Although, Jameson didn't always live up
to the values the poem espoused. If you can wait and not be tired of waiting, Dr. Jameson
was very much tired of waiting for the green light to mobilize his army and
ride into the South African Republic.
But what exactly was he invading for?
Bear with me for a bit of colonial history.
The South African Republic was run by bores, descendants of Dutch people who had come
to southern Africa centuries before.
And it was rich.
In the last few years, vast deposits of gold had been found.
A new town called Johannesburg had sprung up as fortune seekers rushed in.
Many of those fortune seekers weren't born.
The Uttlanders, as the boars called them, came from all around the world.
From Britain and Australia, Ireland and America,
this motley crew of gold hunters soon came to outnumber the wars,
but the wars wouldn't give them a vote in how the Republic was run.
The Udlanders began to grumble.
In their discontent, another man spied an opportunity,
Cecil Rhodes.
In Southern Africa, the British Empire and Cecil Rhodes' business empire were much the
same thing.
Rhodes ran a company that controlled vast suites of territory under license from the British
government.
His company employed police.
In effect, kind of private army.
And in charge of a chunk of that army,
Rhodes had put his great friend, Dr. Jameson. Rhodes and Jameson hatched a plan.
They'd quietly encouraged the Udlanders to stage an uprising. The Udlanders would
make a plea for help. They'd say that the dastardly boars were threatening
their women and children. Dr. Jameson would just happen to be right on the border with 500 armed men, he'd ride
to Johannesburg to rescue the Udlanders, topple the Boer government, and get Cecil Rhodes
in on the gold-mining action.
You may have noticed who's missing from this cast of characters. The African inhabitants of this resource-switch land.
And if you're wondering when they're going to get a say in all this,
I'm afraid they aren't.
Neither the Boars nor the British cared much what the Africans thought.
The uprising was scheduled for December 1895.
But as the date grew near, the Utlander conspirators began to get cold feet.
Cecil Rhodes was asking them to risk their lives in a fight against the Boers, but what
exactly was he suggesting would happen if they won?
Would the Utlanders run a new republic, or would it end up as another British colony?
Why would the American Utlanders in particular want to risk their lives for the British Empire?
At the border, Jameson was getting more and more itchy.
Delay came the message again and again.
Damn those dithering Udlanders thought Jameson, and then he had another thought. Perhaps I could spur them into
action if I invaded anyway. We'll hear how that worked out after the break.
I'm Paul Moondin, a poet who over the past several years had the good fortune to spend time with one of the world's greatest songwriters, Sir Paul McCartney.
We talked through more than 150 tracks from McCartney's songbook, and while we did,
we recorded our conversations.
I mean, the fact that I dreamed the song yesterday leads me to believe that it's not just
quite as cut and dried as we think it is.
And now you can listen to our conversations in our new podcast McCartney a life.
McCartney has been asked many times to write his autobiography and he's always
declined. But as we ventured on this journey line by line. It became clear how much of McCartney's life
is indeed embedded in his lyrics.
It was like going back to an old snapshot album,
looking back on work.
I hadn't thought much about for quite a few years.
Listen, wherever you get your podcasts
and if you want to binge the entire season,
add free right now. Sign up for Pushkin Plus on the McCartney Aliphonderic Showpage in Apple
Podcasts or at pushkin.fm-plus. Your membership also unlocks access to ad-free binges from Malcolm Gladwell, Dr.
Laurie Santos and many other top hosts.
Cecil Rhodes and Leander Star Jameson had carefully laid the ground for their invasion of the
South African Republic. They had persuaded some leading utlanders to put their names to a letter addressed to Dr.
Jameson.
The letter was a plaintive appeal.
Our women and children are at the mercy of armed boars.
The circumstances are so extreme that we cannot but believe that you and the men under
you will not fail to come to the rescue.
They left the letter undated.
Jameson would fill in the date.
On the day he crossed the border.
But when was that going to be?
In early December, Jameson received a coded telegram from the conspirators in Johannesburg.
The Polo Tournament here, postponed for one week.
The British government wanted to give the impression that they knew nothing about the
conspiracy. That would have looked terrible, because officially they were on friendly terms
with the Boers. In reality, the British governor of neighbouring Cape Colony knew exactly what Cecil Rhodes was thinking
and so did his ministerial boss back in London.
The British government was serotonously trying to sound out the Uttlanders about just how much empire they might accept.
What if you fly the Union flag but elect your own governor?
Once again, a date for the uprising was set. Once again,
the Udlanders backed out. In desperation, Cecil Rhodes turned to the local reporter from the London
times. Won't you lead them? The journalist politely demured. Then we must stop Jameson.
likely to mure'd, then we must stop Jameson. At last, Rhodes bowed to reality.
The uprising simply wasn't going to happen.
The conspirators sent Jameson a message.
The invasions off.
As Chris Ash vividly describes in The If Man,
they hastily dispatched one of Jameson's friends
to explain the situation.
The friend doesn't seem to have tried too hard to change Jameson's mind. He dutifully
passed on the message to Jameson not to go and then asked,
So, what are you going to do? I'm going replied Jameson.
Thought you would. What are you going to do?
Going with you, thought you would?
What on earth is Jameson thinking?
Perhaps there's a clue in his love of high stakes poker.
One evening, when he still worked as a doctor, he lost all his cash, then his house, his
carriage, horses, and finally his medical practice.
He asked a friend to lend him some money and played on.
By dawn he'd wanted all back, and made a healthy profit.
I knew I would be able to rely on my luck.
Jameson was a gambler.
He'd gathered his men and dramatically produced the letter from
the leading Udlanders, hit filled in the date. Women and children needed them, who would
ride with him to Johannesburg, they'd get through without any fighting at all, probably.
The invasion had been carefully planned out. Step 1. Cut the telegraph lines to Pretoria, the seat of the
Boar government. It would take Jameson's men several days to ride the 170 miles to Johannesburg.
He wanted the Boar leaders to hear the news of his attack as late as possible.
But there were two telegraph lines, and Jameson's men cut only one of them. A rumour later went round that
they had mistakenly snipped a farmer's wire fence instead. In Pretoria, the Bores quickly
heard what was happening. They mobilized their army, helped by another Jameson Blunder,
hid invaded at Christmas, when men of fighting age who usually lived on far-flung farms had gathered
in towns to celebrate. The plan for the uprising called on the conspirators to make a surprise
attack on the Boors' store of weapons, which was usually lightly guarded. But by the time
the conspirators heard that Jameson was coming, so had the Boars, and they'd beefed up security.
The Boar leader reached out to the Uttlanders.
Let's talk about your grievances.
He made some promises.
The Uttlander leaders agreed to a deal.
Jameson, meanwhile, marched on towards Johannesburg, blithely confident that an uprising must
soon be underway.
Cecil Rhodes was in despair.
20 years we've been friends, and now he goes in and ruins me.
The British governor of Cape Colony was equally horrified.
Sir Hercules Robinson, best name ever, worried that his own foreknowledge of the plan might
come to light, so Hercules sent
a messenger to ride through the night and catch up with Jameson's march.
Tell Jameson and the officers with him that her Majesty's government repudiate their
violation of the territory of a friendly state, and that they are rendering themselves liable
to severe penalties.
Jameson debated with his senior officers what to do about this message.
By now, they were more than half way to Johannesburg.
They knew the Boors would have mobilized behind them in the areas they had passed, so they
couldn't turn back without a fight.
May as well keep going then.
Jameson wasn't afraid of a high stakes gamble.
He later shrugged,
if I'd succeeded, I would have been forgiven.
A little further towards Johannesburg,
another messenger arrived from an increasingly shrill
to Hercules.
Her Majesty's government entirely disapprove
of your conduct.
You are ordered to retire at once from the country
and will be held personally responsible for the consequences of your unauthorized and most improper proceeding.
It must have seemed to Jameson that all around him were losing their heads and blaming it on him.
He sent a reply. Of course, I'd like to obey so hercules, but if we turn around now,
we won't have enough supplies to ask us to the journey back. We have to press on to Johannesburg, you see, if only to get
the men and horses a bite to eat.
With 30 miles to go, Jameson received his next set of messengers, two men on bone-shaker
bicycles which they'd ridden from Johannesburg.
They were carrying three messages.
The messages don't survive, but their overall effect seems to have been confusing.
One message correctly informed Jameson that there'd been no uprising, and Utlander leaders
had agreed a peace deal.
But another message apparently suggested that the Uttlanders might nonetheless send reinforcements to meet Jameson at Kruger's Dorp, a village that have to pass on the way to Johannesburg.
The men on bicycles though had just passed through Kruger's Dorp themselves and seen hundreds of bore fighters, apparently lying in wait for Jameson to arrive. What to do?
Charge straight into Kruger's door in the hope of encountering the reinforcements, or
skirt around the side of Kruger's door in the hope of avoiding the boars.
Skirt around the outside said Jameson's second-in-command, an experienced military man.
What was it, Kipling said, about taking advice? If all men count with you, but
not too much? No no, said Jameson, charged straight into Kruger's door. So, that's what
they did.
After losing 60 men, Jameson decided that perhaps they'd better skirt around the outside after all.
As night began to fall, they suddenly heard gunfire in the distance.
It was coming from Kruger's door.
The reinforcements said Jameson will have to turn back and help them fight.
But the gunfire hadn't been reinforcements at all, it had been yet more bore fighters
arriving to join the party and firing
their guns in the air in celebration. By the time Jameson realised there were no reinforcements,
he had no option but to stop where he was and camp for the night.
Morning brought yet another messenger from Sir Hercules. I do command Dr. Jameson and all persons accompanying him to immediately retire from the territory
of the South African Republic on pain of penalties attached to their illegal proceedings.
You can probably imagine how Jameson reacted to this.
One last push to Johannesburg.
There's only 12 more miles.
Come on, we can do this. One last push to Johannesburg. There's only 12 more miles. Come on, we can do this.
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew to serve your turn long after they are gone.
Jameson's men weren't just using their hearts and nerves and sinews, but also their eyes and brains.
They could see that they were surrounded now by boars and heavily outnumbered. Jameson stopped by a stream and got off his
horse to take a drink of water. Standing nearby was an old African woman
wearing a white apron. When Jameson looked up from the stream he was horrified
to see his soldiers surrendering by waving that white apron urgently in the direction of the nearest boars.
It was over. The boar commanded a centre message to Jameson. Lay down your flag and your arms.
I fight under no flag. My arms, I am prepared to surrender, but as I have never done so before, I don't know how to proceed about it.
Jameson had demonstrated many of the qualities that Kipling's poem extolls,
but those virtues weren't the ones that the situation demanded.
The Jameson raid had been an unmitigated disaster.
Horsenary tales will return after the break.
Unpalmoldone, a poet who over the past several years,
has had the good fortune to record
hours of conversations with one of the world's greatest songwriters, Sir Paul McCartney.
The result is our new podcast McCartney, A Life in lyrics.
Listen to McCartney, A Life in lyrics on the iHeHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, Amazon music, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Jan and Avottner has just served a double fault to miss the chance of getting within one
game of winning the 1993 Wimbledon Championship.
But she's still in a great position, well ahead in the deciding set.
She serves again.
Steffi Graf's return is weak, giving Novotna plenty of time to choose where to smash what
should be a routine winner.
But instead, she smacks the ball long, way past the baseline.
Advantage, Miss Graf. She smacks the ball long, way past the baseline.
Advantage, Miss Graff. That's two bizarre errors in two points.
Graff wins the next point and the game.
Game, Miss Graff.
Mr Votner leads by four games to two, final set.
Should have been 5-1, instead it's 4-2.
At this point, any sport psychologist would tell Novotner It should have been 5-1, instead it's 4-2.
At this point any sport psychologist would tell Novotna to forget what just happened.
She's played a few bad shots but she hasn't suddenly become a bad player.
But Novotna seems to be struggling to refocus.
Graf wins the next game, 4-3, and the next.
And the next.
Miss Grave leads by 5 games to 4, final set.
Navottna now has to win the next game just to keep the match going.
But it's not going well, she whiffs a backhand into the net.
A weak lob, and it's all too easy for Steffi
Graf to smash the championship winning point. It's only when
Novotna is receiving the runner's up trophy that the enormity of
her choke sinks in. How on earth did she lose that? She takes the silver plate
from the Duchess of Kent, a minor British royal.
Don't worry, says the Duchess. You'll win it one day.
Novotna starts to well-up. The Duchess reaches out a comforting arm.
Novotna puts her head on the duchess's shoulder and sobs.
What happens when a sportsperson chokes like Jan and Votna?
Psychologists have a few theories.
One is that playing high-level sport demands all your attention, and if you start attending
to other thoughts instead, you'm so close to winning!
Or it's all going wrong.
You can no longer perform at your peak.
Another theory is almost a reverse.
It holds that high-level sport depends on skills that are so well-honed,
you don't have to think about them.
And when you choke, you trip yourself up by consciously analyzing the kind of split-second
decisions that are usually automatic.
Whichever theory is right, Kipling told us how to avoid it.
If you can meet with triumph and disaster and treat those two imposter's just the same,
it's great advice for the heat of a battle on centre court.
You win a point, you lose a point, you should play the next point in just the same way.
That's not easy.
But as soon as we step out of the sporting arena, I don't think it's great advice for
life.
Far from it.
Generally, when you have a disaster, you don't want to shrug it off and plug on doing the
exact same things.
You want to ask why the disaster happened, and what you might learn from it.
Will Hange you over to the government in Pretoria, said the bore fighters to Dr. Jameson?
They can decide what to do with you.
They confiscated a bag of documents
that Jameson was carrying. It contained not only the coded messages from the conspirators in Johannesburg,
but also the code book to decipher them. The conspirators were not happy to find themselves being
rounded up and joining Jameson under lock and key. Back in Britain, though, the Nationalistic public didn't see Jameson as a blundering incompetent. They thought he was a plucky hero.
The doctor had aired, said the Times of London, only through excess of zeal for empire.
The poet laureate rushed out some verses. There are girls in the Goldreeve city, there are mothers and children,
too, and they cry, hurry up for pity. So what can a brave man do?"
In Pretoria, the bore leader resisted demands to make Jameson face a firing squad.
There was no point creating a martyr. Instead, he passed Jameson on to the British authorities
in the nearest colony, and they
put him on the first boat back to London, where he was lionised.
He received many offers of marriage, including one from an attractive and wealthy widow,
who explained that she had two marriageable daughters, and the gallant doctor might make
his choice of the three.
Veterans of Jameson's raid would work the pubs of London,
collecting money and the odd glass of whiskey in exchange for vivid tales of their adventures.
Not just veterans, either.
One newspaper, Archley noted that South African dress was easily obtained from theatrical suppliers,
adding that there are more felt-hatted,
high-booted individuals now working the public houses of London than ever saw Kruger's
door.
The hero worship of Jameson and his raiders gave Britain's government a headache.
He might be popular, but Jameson had invaded an ostensibly friendly state.
They had to put him on trial.
But they also knew Jameson had incriminating messages from Sir Hercules Robinson, showing
that the government had been well aware of the plan to ferment an uprising.
So Hercules sent his deputy to talk to Jameson. Well, said Jameson, I have made a nice mess of it.
I suppose you've come to reproach me.
Certainly not, came the reply.
But I want you to help your country out of the mess.
How could Jameson do that?
Go to prison with your mouth shut, he was told.
Jameson did, stoically taking all the blame
despite some skeptical questioning.
So Hercules must have known of your planned invasion.
Wouldn't it have been the proper thing
for you to have told him?
Indeed it would, said Jameson.
But if I was concerned about doing the proper thing,
I wouldn't have been planning the invasion
in the first place.
For Rujard Kipling, Jameson's cheerful willingness
to trash his own reputation was deeply impressive.
If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken,
twisted by naves to make a trap for fools,
Jameson served his time in prison,
then went back to southern Africa.
He stood for Parliament in Cape Colony and soon worked his way up to be Prime Minister.
A demonstration of astonishing incompetence it seemed was no impediment to success in
British politics.
Some might wonder how much has changed.
But what had Jameson learned from the disaster of the Jameson raid?
If there's an answer to that question, we don't know it.
Jameson never talked about it.
When his friends asked,
it simply laughed that he'd made a bloody fool of himself.
It's hard for us today to see Dr. Jameson through the admiring eyes of Rudyard Kipling.
What, after all, was the Jameson raid about?
Not right or wrong, not some deep point of principle.
No, it was about which set of white men would get to exploit the minerals of black Africans,
which very rich man, the British businessman Cecil Rhodes
or the bore leader Paul Krueger, would get richer still.
It's clear to us that this is all beside the point.
What matters is the inequality, the exploitation, but for Jameson it seems, gaining territory
was little more than a game.
So perhaps it's no coincidence that the famous line about Triumph
and Disaster feels so well suited to playing games. And I don't think that's the only line from
Kipling's poem that's brilliant advice for sports, but terrible advice for life.
If you can make one heap of all your winnings and risk it on one turn of pitch and toss
and lose and start again at your beginnings, pitch and toss is a simple silly gambling
game.
Jameson would probably have loved it, but I can't help feeling that it's generally
a good idea not to risk everything you own on one turn of pitch and
toss if you can help it. In sport, you can't help it, and if the risk doesn't pay off,
then exactly the right response is to start again at your beginnings and never breathe
a word about your loss. Or how about that line about naves twisting
the truth to make a trap for fools. It's a common enough problem nowadays,
but is the right response really to bear it? I'm not so sure. Again, except for sport.
You'll often see a cunning player full of referee into giving an unfair decision.
The best response for the opposing player is generally to suck it up and stay cool-y focused on winning the match. You can complain about the
refereeing standards when the match is over. And when the match is over,
then you can ask what you can learn from it, to stand you in better stead
for next time. That's what Yarn and Avottna tried to do,
after her defeat in the Wimbledon final of 1993.
Novotna said later,
I'm always trying to take only the positive things from that final
and put it in a good way for the future.
Novotna got to the final of Wimbledon again, five years later.
Once again, she walked onto center court,
under the words about treating those two imposter's just the same. This time, she won. There again to present the trophy was the
Duchess of Kent. Before she handed over the big gold plate, not the little silver one. She warmly clasped both of Novotna's hands in hers and said,
I'm so proud of you.
Treat those two imposterous just the same while playing, yes.
But Novotna had learned from her disaster.
You couldn't begrudge her, enjoying the triumph. APPLAUSE
The key source on the Jameson raid is Chris Ash's book, The If Man. For a full list of our sources,
please see the show notes at timhalford.com.
Corsion retails is written by me, Tim Hartford, with Andrew Wright.
It's produced by Alice Finds with support from Edith Husslo.
The sound design and original music is the work of Pascal Weiss.
Julia Barton edited the scripts.
It features the voice talents of Ben Crow, Melanie Gutridge, Gemma Saunders and Rufus Wright.
The show wouldn't have been possible without the work of Jacob Weisberg, Ryan Dilly,
Greta Cohn, Lytel Malard, John Schnarrs, Carly Migliore and Eric Sandler.
Corsary Tales has a production of Pushkin Industries.
It was recorded in Wardle Studios in London by Tom Berry.
If you like the show, please remember to share, rate,
and review.
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And if you want to hear the show, add free.
Sign up for Pushkin Plus on the show page in Apple podcasts
or at pushkin.fm slash plus. I'm Paul Mondein, a poet who over the past several years had the good fortune to spend
time with one of the world's greatest songwriters, Sir Paul McCartney. We talked through more than 150
tracks from McCartney's songbook, and while we did, we recorded our conversations.
I mean, the fact that I dreamed of the song yesterday leads me to believe that
it's not just quite as cut and dried as we think it is.
that it's not just quite as cut and dried as we think it is. And now you can listen to our conversations in our new podcast, McCartney, a life in our
Uncle Lelbert.
McCartney's been asked many times to write his autobiography and he's always declined. But as we
ventured on this journey line by line, it became clear how much of McCartney's
life is indeed embedded in his lyrics. It was like going back to an old snapshot
album looking back on work. I hadn't thought much about for quite a few years.
Listen, wherever you get your podcasts and if you want to binge the entire season,
add free right now. Sign up for Pushkin Plus on the McCartney Aliphanderik Showpage in Apple podcasts or at pushkin.fm slash plus. Your membership also
unlocks access to add free binges from Malcolm Gladwell, Dr. Laurie Santos and
many other top hosts.
Thanks for watching!