I remember
the anarchist, Arthur Moyse very well. He was a great bloke. He wrote a regular
column in the anarchist publication Freedom and often drew cartoons that always
had a little dog in them, stuck somewhere, in the corner of the cartoon. A
London bus conductor, Arthur, was definitely a character and an
eccentric.
In a Guardian obituary to Arthur Moyse, written by David Peers in 2003, Peers writes that "a day out with Arthur was an event." I can certainly agree with that. I can remember a group of us being with Arthur in the Manchester pub, Tommy Ducks, when Arthur had us all in stitches. He told us that he'd once been a member of the Flat Earth Society and had been interviewed by BBC television about his belief in a flat earth. He said shortly before the programme went live; there had been a bit of rehearsal. He said about five minutes before the programme was broadcast, the interviewer suddenly turned to Arthur and said that he'd got one last question. He asked Arthur if he genuinely did believe that the earth was flat and Arthur replied rather abruptly, "of course I fucking do, do you think I'm some kind of nutter."
Arthur described his time serving in the British army as "registered vandalism" because you could get way with almost anything. You don't seem to get eccentric characters like Arthur Moyse these days.

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