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This week’s motif seems to be all about revenge. Christians are of course famously forbidden to seek revenge, a fact that I’ve always found quite distressing as I believe I’d be spectacularly good at it. So before we go on, remember- ‘Vengeance is mine’ saith the Lord, ‘I will repay’. If you are tempted to ignore that, remember the old Chinese proverb- ‘Before setting off on a journey of revenge, first dig two graves’.

The first story of the week of course concerns Lord Ashcroft and the PM. I won’t go into the details of the former’s revenge-fest book as it is unseemly to intrude on other people’s private pain. Suffice to say, Lord Ashcroft sent out his revenge wrapped around a cluster bomb. Response from Downing Street? ‘This sees like just an act of revenge’ and ‘This was a stab in the back’. You don’t say? Two weeks before the Tory conference where the PM should have been basking in the rapturous adoration of his party; 4 months into a 5-year election term. Pal, if 700 million people across the world are reading about your alleged peccadillos, you can safely conclude that you have been stabbed in the front, and stitched up like a kipper by a master tailor.

Which brings us to the second story of the week. David Tepper worked under Jon Corzine at Goldman Sachs. When Jon refused to promote David to senior partnership, David quit and went off to start his own hedge fund. 20 years later, David is worth $8 billion and Jon’s post-Goldman Sachs company is bankrupt to the tune of $45 billion losses and Jon is being investigated for fraud by the Futures regulatory body. The house in the pictures? David bought Jon’s former home from Jon’s ex-wife and razed it to the ground before building a Master of the Universe-style mansion on the site. Talk about your scorched earth policy; I’m surprised he didn’t salt the earth.

The kicker? When questioned about these swings of outrageous fortune, David Tepper said ‘ I guess you could say there is a little justice in the world’ Isn’t that hilarious? Divorce, bankrupty, the threat of jail, and he considers that to be “a little justice”. There’s a man who knows how to hold a grudge. I get the distinct feeling that until he personally gets a chance to give Jon Corzine a smart tap on the Occiput with a lead pipe, David isn’t going to feel his wrongs have been righted.

These are prime examples of the people who are in touch with their Inner-Berserker. You cross them at your peril. They never back down from a fight, and all fights are conducted in ‘last man standing mode’. When you are tempted to humiliate or bully that unassuming person who just seems to smile and take it, be careful. You may be dealing with a Berseker in sheep’s clothing, and he’ll be waiting for you in the tall grass. I leave you with a splendid story from Grace Jones’ new autobiography.Told by one of the fashion movers and shakers in New York that she was wasting her time trying to be a model in Paris because a black model in Paris would be like ‘trying to sell them an old car nobody wants to buy’, our Gracie replied with the words ‘I hope you die of cirrhosis of the liver’. Berserker, through and through.

Do you ever have days when the Universe does not feel impersonal? When it actually feels like it’s a sentient being who’s having a laugh at your expense? Oh, you have entire weeks which feel like that? I totally sympathise. I have to admit that there is no shortage of friends and family who would line up to attest to my occasional estrangement from reality, but sometimes they are really out to get you. My nutso computer is seriously messing with my head at the moment. It resizes my pictures of its own accord, loads images that are not even in the media library onto the website and I’m beginning to feel as though I am in one of those mind-control experiments I’m so fond of talking about.

I have decided to adopt the only option that does not involve a hammer and a lot of shattered glass — fix what I can and then walk away. This explains the picture of the lovely chandelier from the market in Grand Central Station currently serving as our shop page image. That is because I’ve spent two days trying to upload the images of our new swanky bespoke bags and grosgrain ribbon and have now lost the will to live. If you are in a similar ninth circle of hell, take my advice and walk away. It’s not worf it (please insert cockney accent). Instead, I am going to show you pictures of some of the loveliest and most interesting new products from Decorex 2015.

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(products: Curiosa & Curiosa; Moritz Waldemeyer; Marcin Rusak; Katharine Morling;Enemark and Thompson)

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London Fashion Week and its intoxicating  mix of inspiration, craziness and verve is upon us. The manner in which the London branches of the design shows have accrued respect and influence over the last two decades is truly amazing. This has given a real fillip to the quality of work being produced by artisans and craftspeople in the UK. Today’s blog features the excellent collection of pocket squares from Rampley & Co. Find them at www.rampleyandco.com

It is wonderful to be able to showcase a quintessentially British company whose products are manufactured in the UK; Macclesfield to be precise. The re-invigoration of traditional industries in areas such as Shoreditch, Hackney and the textile-producing areas of Northern England has been nothing short of miraculous. Not only do Rampley & Co manufacture in the UK, their designs are often based on the work of British artists such as J.M.W Turner and William Swainson. We are particularly keen on the Harris Tweed collection which utilises the fabrics made by another example of a resurgent industry. Those wonderful muted and sludgy colours are deeply gorgeous.

You know how dear to our hearts art is at AlaraApothecary, so our love for beautiful silk squares printed with images from paintings in the National and Tate Galleries will come as no surprise to anyone. It is about time the British male re-acquainted himself with his inner dandy. The nation that gave the world Regency fashion and Beau Brummell has been reduced to dressing in toddler-wear and trackies. It is truly distressing. First impressions count, and if you don’t believe that to be true then we have a lot of work ahead of us. Below are pictures of some eye-candy rocking pocket squares. I rest my case.

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Obviously an obsession with one’s image is not an attractive trait. However, once you decide that looking the best you can given your resources is a public service, giving the rest of us something fabulous to look at, it all begins to make sense. For all would-be nonpareils and nonesuchs out there, get thee to Rampley & Co. You could also demand their squares for birthdays, Christmas, Bar mitzvahs. There’s even a handy guide for the multifarious methods of folding your pocket square. Who knew? This confirms our suspicion that men are just as vain as women are. Fact.

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Conde Nast has recently published a list of the most over-rated hotel perks on offer to the discerning traveller who already has everything and then some. Personal favourites include provision of your own butler, a 6-person dining room, 2 head- shoulder massages and 2 Dolphin encounters etc etc (Thank you, Atlantis Palm, Dubai), a Fashion Butler( Mandarin Oriental, Miami), 3 free Porsche test-drives( Rancho Valencia, San Diego) and my personal all-time winner, free Burberry Macs in the wardrobe of every suite at the Connaught in London. English weather can be sooo unpredicatable, what, what.

They think they’re so swanky. Pah! We are not impressed at AlaraApothecary. What we wish to know is, is there a person whose only job is to peel our grapes and check our teeth for stray spinach after every meal? No? Call that a luxury hotel? I don’t think so. By the way, that photo is from a film called ‘Thor & the Amazon Women.’ It sounds like quite the cultural experience.

Meanwhile, on the other side of town, BA indulged in their very own little escapade in Las Vegas last week. One of their planes caught fire on the runway. Fortunately, all aboard are safe and sound so we can go ahead and make merry with the incident. What tickled our ribs at AlaraApothecary was the statement by the BA spokesman which said that the plane had experienced some ‘technical issues.‘  Below is a photo of the plane:

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Now, is it just us? At what point does a ‘technical issue’ become, oh say – a catastrophe, a disaster, a debacle, a travesty, a fiasco? Well, if the windows have melted, the cabin is on fire and the air stewards are screaming ‘Get out, get out’, technical issue is well behind you. So, maximum kudos to the insouciant BA spokesman – Master of understatement extraordinaire. As far as we’re concerned, he’s already won the Spokesman of the Year trophy, and it’s only September. Be careful out there.

Mamos 48x30, Sun Jun 06, 2010, 3:55:41 PM, 8C, 7448x11388, (63+357), 150%, bent 6 stops, 1/40 s, R80.2, G57.3, B66.9

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Latest gem from Rick Stein while he was filming in Laconia, Greece. The word laconic comes from the taciturnity attributed to the people from that region. He retells the story of Philip II of Macedon threatening to invade and destroy Sparta after invading Greece. He sends a message to the leaders in Laconia saying,’If I invade Laconia, it will be destroyed never to rise again’. The Spartans replied with a one-word message ‘If’. He never invaded Laconia. I really must read Herodotus again. If you’ve never encountered this master historian and teller of tall tales, I urge you to rectify that error ASAP. He’s a hoot. I love that story. It almost overthrows my favourite example of a pithy message which is that sent by General Napier after he disobeyed orders and occupied Maini in the Sindh region of India. He sent a message home saying ‘Peccavi’. If you are not a latin-mass attending Roman Catholic, you need to do some research to find out why it’s such a good message.

Battlefield stories are full of these yarns. It is sometimes difficult to reconcile the indomitability of the human spirit with the agony and horrors that we are capable of. Deploring man’s warlike nature does not seem to have any effect on our behaviour. Of course, there will always come a time when we have to fight for our beliefs, in micro or in macro, with physical weapons or not. It brings to mind the old Chinese curse,’May you live in interesting times’.

Gallows humour is nothing new. One of my favourite stories is told about the US Commander Chesty Puller during the Korean War. Finding themselves outflanked by the Chinese army in the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, he said,’We’ve been looking for the enemy for some time now. We’ve finally found him. We’re surrounded. That simplifies things. Great. Now we can shoot at those bastards from every direction’. Talk about accentuating the positive. To all the warriors out there, no matter what your circumstances are – never bow down and never give in.

I leave you with another story about the Spartans. Their main meals consisted of a stew called Melas Zomos ( black broth). This gastronomic delicacy was made from pig blood, pig legs, salt and vinegar, and nothing else. Hmmmmm. Apparently the addition of vinegar was considered to be a sissy step too far, but it was included to stop the blood from clotting. That fact alone is wrong on so many levels. There’s an apocryphal story about a traveller from Sybaris (source of the word ‘sybarite’.The people from Sybaris loved their pleasures). After tasting Melas Zomos, presumably at spear-point, he said ‘No wonder the Spartans do not fear death. ‘