born and brought up as I was. Because another thing people like the governor will never understand is that I am honest, that Iâve never been anything else but honest, and that Iâll always be honest. Sounds funny. But itâs true because I know what honest means according to me and he only knows what it means according to him. I think my honesty is the only sort in the world, and he thinks his is the only sort in the world as well. Thatâs why this dirty great walled-up and fenced-up manor house in the middle of nowhere has been used to coop-up blokes like me. And if I had the whip-hand I wouldnât even bother to build a place like this to put all the cops, governors, posh whores, penpushers, army officers, Members of Parliament in; no, Iâd stick them up against a wall and let them have it, like theyâd have done with blokes like us years ago, that is, if theyâd ever known what it means to be honest, which they donât and never will so help me God Almighty.
I was nearly eighteen months in Borstal before I thought about getting out. I canât tell you much about what it was like there, because I havenât got the hang of describing buildings or saying how many crumby chairs and slatted windows make a room. Neither can I do much complaining, because to tell you the truth I didnât suffer in Borstal at all. I gave the same answer a pal of mine gave when someone asked him how much he hated it in the army. âI didnât hate it,â he said. âThey fed me, gave me a suit, and pocket-money, which was a bloody sight more than I ever got before, unless I worked myself to death for it, and most of the time they wouldnât let me work but sent me to the dole office twice a week.â Well, thatâs more or less what I say. Borstal didnât hurt me in that respect, so since Iâve got no complaints I donât have to describe what they gave us to eat, what the dorms were like, or how they treated us. But in another way Borstal does something to me. No, it doesnât get my back up, because itâs always been up, right from when I was born. What it does do is show me what theyâve been trying to frighten me with. Theyâve got other things as well, like prison and, in the end, the rope. Itâs like me rushing up to thump a man and snatch the coat off his back when, suddenly, I pull up because he whips out a knife and lifts it to stick me like a pig if I come too close. That knife is Borstal, clink, the rope. But once youâve seen the knife you learn a bit of unarmed combat. You have to, because youâll never get that sort of knife in your own hands, and this unarmed combat doesnât amount to much. Still, there it is, and you keep on rushing up to this man, knife or not, hoping to get one of your hands on his wrist and the other on his elbow both at the same time, and press back until he drops the knife.
You see, by sending me to Borstal theyâve shown me the knife, and from now on I know something I didnât know before: that itâs war between me and them. I always knew this, naturally, because I was in Remand Homes as well and the boys there told me a lot about their brothers in Borstal, but it was only touch and go then, like kittens, like boxing-gloves, like dobbie. But now that theyâve shown me the knife, whether I ever pinch another thing in my life again or not, I know who my enemies are and what war is. They can drop all the atom bombs they like for all I care: Iâll never call it war and wear a soldierâs uniform, because Iâm in a different sort of war, that they think is childâs play. The war they think is war is suicide, and those that go and get killed in war should be put in clink for attempted suicide because thatâs the feeling in blokesâ minds when they rush to join up or let themselves be called up. I know, because Iâve thought how good it would be sometimes to do myself in