THE VERDICT -- robert gardner
There used to be a fad that prompted people to hire a genealogist out of
the Yellow Pages and buy a family tree done up on fake vellum with fancy
red and gold calligraphy.
You could go back as far as you wanted, depending on how much you wanted
to spend and how much wall space you wanted to cover.
I read somewhere that Charlemagne was a favorite ancestor to whom people
liked to trace their roots. However, if those rumors about his incest
with sister are true, I’d be a little leery about that line of descent,
unless you wanted to use it as an excuse for some loony member of the
tribe.
My family never had to indulge in such nonsense. Uncle John took care of
it for us -- and he never got close to Charlemagne.
My Uncle John was the scholar of the family. Consistent with the practice
of his time, he spoke both Latin and classical Greek. I guess he had cold
legs because I can dimly remember him as a bearded old man sitting in a
corner with a shawl over his lap spouting Latin or Greek. Of course, he
could have been speaking Urdu or Esperanto for all I knew. After three
years of high school Latin, all I could do was proclaim that all Gaul was
divided into three parts.
Sometime long before I was born, the family sent Uncle John back to
Scotland to trace the Gardner family tree. This he did in his usual
scholarly manner. I understand he winced a little when he came upon the
ancestor hanged for stealing sheep, but gamely set his Gardner jaw and
persevered. Hard work and deep research finally paid off. Uncle John
finally found the man who started the Gardner line -- and it wasn’t
Charlemagne.
It seems that sometime back in Scottish history, a young man worked as a
gardener on the grounds and behind the walls of the castle of a Scottish
chief. This gardener had no name because his father had declined to
identify himself. As I remember the story, his mother was some kind of a
scullery maid, and she, too, had been born on the wrong side of the
sheets. I guess the modern generation doesn’t have a corner on
carelessness about marriage vows.
Well, one year there was a famine. The villagers went to the castle and
begged the chief for some of the food he had hoarded in the castle or
something from the castle vegetable garden. The chief, being a typical
chief, would have none of that kind of nonsense. If he did, he, too,
would be hungry, which wasn’t his idea of the chiefly thing to be.
Nevertheless, when my ancestor, the gardener without a name, would cut a
head of cabbage for the chief, he would throw the root and stalk over the
wall to the starving villagers. Whereupon, they would yell (in Gaelic, of
course), “That bastard gardener just threw us some yummy cabbage roots.”
The gardener then dropped an ‘E’ from his name and capitalized the ‘G’
and was thereafter known as “Gardner the Bastard,” or “that bastard
Gardner.”
Somehow, Uncle John never mentioned his first name. In my childhood, I
always assumed it was Robert, after Robert Bruce, but that is childish
wishful thinking with no foundation in objective research.
The appellation of ‘bastard’ was rather common in those days. William the
Conqueror was originally named William the Bastard. I have always thought
the reason he left Normandy and conquered England was just to get a more
dignified name.
Uncle John’s quest ceased at this point. Why go further? For that matter,
how could he go further? After all those years, the real father of
Gardner the Bastard wasn’t going to come forth and fess up.
Be that as it may, it has been a matter of great comfort to me throughout
the years when I have heard the lawyers refer to me as “that bastard
Gardner” to know they were using the word ‘bastard’ in a historical, not
a pejorative sense.
This bar sinister in my background probably explains why I was
mysteriously sent a membership card in the International Order of Old
Bastards. I gather there is some kind of great Doomsday Book that keeps
track of the nullius filius (sons of nobody) in our backgrounds.
Uncle John would be proud of that Latin phrase, which I picked up in law
school.
* JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His column
appears on Tuesdays.
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