Priddy’s Tale
Foreword
Extract from Wild Southwest—Legends
of the Cornish Coast, by Dr Christopher
Berryman
There was once a young man who did a favour for a spirit of
the sea.
That’s
how a story like Priddy’s should start. But that sounds like
another legend, a tall fish-tale in a land already bursting with
them. So I’ll begin more quietly, like this...
There have always been Priddys at Rosewarne Cove. They don’t
have the best reputation. Hard-nosed land-dwellers say it’s
impossible to get a good day’s work from them: they embody the
Cornish concept of dreckly, roughly equivalent to
Spanish manana. There’s even a rhyme about them, best roared out in the pub
with a burring, piratical Penzance accent: I’ve seen Gweek and Truro City, but I’ve never in my life
seen a working Priddy!
Harsh
judgement, and not entirely accurate, in my experience of the clan.
It’s fairer to say that they’re dreamers, poets. Work’s not easy to
come by in the far southwest, and when they find it, they tend to
be fishermen, boat-builders, ferry crew. The occasional plucky
lifeguard thrown in. They don’t seem to thrive away from the sea,
and if they do leave, they always return.
Well,
read the story, and then you can decide for yourself if you believe
Priddy’s tale. I’m a little ashamed to be telling it, respected
academic as I am now. But I’m retired, and not so concerned with my
reputation as I used to be, and I’ve seen some things in my years
among the whales, sharks and dolphins that perhaps I shouldn’t take
to my grave with me. It all began in the summer of 2016, when Jem
Priddy was no more than a boy, and a lost boy at that, down in
beautiful Porth Bay...