Day Twenty
If all the world were paper
The Covid Crisis has brought
out the worst in some people with shoppers fighting, actually hand to hand
fighting, over toilet rolls.
As far as I know, no
one has descended to fisticuffs for fish, or offered violence to get the last
pack of spinach or fluffy slippers.
Tissue is always the
issue.
When I was a child in
Bradford, the lavatory was outside and while Mum allowed us to use the po in
the bedroom for early morning wee-wees, anything else meant a cold, often dark
and rainy trip down the yard.
There I’d sit,
dangling my little legs and screwing up pieces of newspaper to make them soft.
Typically, you had to
screw and smooth a square of Telegraph & Argus six times before it achieved
the requisite gentleness.
Newspaper was
infinitely better than the Bronco tissue we were forced to use at school.
This shiny, rough
paper, named after an untamed horse (!) was strangely non-absorbent and had the
order NOW WASH YOUR HANDS! Printed on every sheet.
It was totally unfit
for purpose and its advertising slogan, ‘Bronco for the bigger wipe’ only compounded
the consumers dislike of it.
Image courtesy of the Science Museum, London.
Image courtesy of the Science Museum, London.
In ancient times,
depending on where you lived and when, a visit to the loo meant taking leaves,
grasses, clay, moss or wood shavings (how on earth did they keep them together?)
Other wipers included corn and maize cobs, fruit skins, seashells, stones (ouch) and for the wealthy English, lace, wool, cloth
and, much later, paper from books
and music scores.
I cringe to think this
is why Shakespeare’s plays were lost.
The Romans used a
sponge often soaked in vinegar (or if you were
wealthy, rosewater), attached to a stick.
When I first learned
about this, I wondered if this implement, offered to Jesus on the cross was not in fact to
assuage his thirst but as a kind of bizarre insult, the fore-runner of the Abu
Ghraib scandal.
In many countries,
even today, the left hand is used, which is why some cultures will eat only
with the right. NOW WASH YOUR HANDS!
The first people to
use paper were the Chinese, the earliest known toilet paper or 衛生紙 was recorded in AD 589.
Yan Zhitui (I promise
I’m not making that name up) wrote that he dare not use any paper for wiping
which contained classical Confucian texts.
During the 14th
century, Emperor Hongwu’s family used 720,000 sheets (2ft x 3ft) per year of a
special soft and perfumed paper fabric
in their luxurious loo.
Here he is on the throne.
Here he is on the throne.
It
wasn’t until the 1850’s that that a New York entrepreneur, Joseph Gayetty produced the first commercially
available sheets as, ‘The greatest necessity of the age!’
However, despite being softened by aloe vera, or maybe
because of it, they tore into holes when used.
NOW WASH YOUR HANDS!
It would be 20 more
years before toilet paper would be produced in perforated rolls and even then
the quality of the paper, made from wood chips, was so poor that people often risked
splinter in the bottom.
We’ve come a long way
to get to the ultra-soft stuff worth fighting for but stories have emerged
recently that thanks to Covid-19, many
of us are still not on a roll but have been reduced to using cloths, newspaper
and even junk mail. Best thing for it.
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