Me and my monocle

George Arliss with monocle
Actor George Arliss with a monocle. Credit: George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress

Lent is a time for confessing sins, and I must confess I have committed a social sin. I bought a monocle. And I use it.

It’s been a long time since the monocle enjoyed any kind of welcome in our culture. It was done in, I suppose, by the combination of snooty intellectuals and movie Nazis. I recently saw a photo of some leader of the alt-Right (I don’t remember his name and don’t care) who’d had himself photographed in dramatic black and white, with a monocle in his eye. Semiotically (that’s a fancy word for the symbolic meanings of everyday stuff. I know this because I’m the kind of guy who wears a monocle) the monocle is a red flag waved at egalitarian society. I can’t actually think of any beloved character, in the real world or any fictional one, who wears a monocle. Except for Lord Peter Wimsey. And he wore it so criminals would think him a fool and underestimate him.

The trouble is, I find my monocle extremely convenient and useful. It comes with a lanyard, which means I don’t have to worry about losing it. I only need vision correction (for reading) in one eye. So the monocle is just what the doctor ordered (Almost literally. When my eye doctor told me, during my last visit, that I might try wearing reading glasses with one lens removed, I asked him about monocles and he laughed. Then I checked to see if I could buy one on Amazon, and behold, they sell them there. It was the work of but a moment for me to get one all my own).

I do have the grace to be discreet about it, though. I don’t walk around wearing it all the time. I pull it out when I need to read small print, and put it away when it’s no longer needed.

Also, I work at an institution of higher learning. I consider it a solemn duty of the staff at any school to try to be as eccentric as possible, in order to create stories and legends to be recalled at class reunions. This is one of the foundations of institutional loyalty. Eccentricity at the universities made England the world’s greatest empire at one time.

I’ll let you know when I acquire a valet to complement my eyewear.

0 thoughts on “Me and my monocle”

  1. A few loveable monocle-users:

    Charlie McCarthy
    Count von Count (Sesame Street)
    Mr Peanut
    I think Mr Micawber (of David Copperfield) used a monocle.

    In any case, I find all your reasons to be sound. Would that everyone took his societal responsibilities so seriously. Good luck finding your Jeeves.

    1. Alas, we have lost Photobucket capability and can’t do personal photos at this point. My Facebook friends, however, have enjoyed this questionable delight.

  2. Our beloved Plum’s character Psmith also wore a monocle.

    (BTW, this:
    https://66.media.tumblr.com/1f78ef39975054b02f75d9206eb588bf/tumblr_pd1ovyQWlT1r9164to1_1280.jpg
    … led me to your blog, hence to
    Psmith – Wikipedia
    … and on to
    Richard D’Oyly Carte – Wikipedia
    … which will keep me busy for hours (“… American law then offered no copyright protection to foreigners …”), until my phone crashes because I have too many browser-tabs open.

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