The only other thing about him [his father] is this, that he fought in the Austro-Hungarian Army, in, in the First World War. And he was injured and gassed and all sorts of things. In fact, in 1914 he was opposite the British when they stopped fighting. And I remember him saying he swapped cigars with a British officer. So that’s by the way; it amuses people in England. I find that, I find…[half-laughs]. But, but… when I was a child, I was never allowed to have guns or tanks or rifles. I was not allowed to have anything to shoot with. At all. I could have tractors, and he just wouldn’t allow it. And then when the war started, as soon as the war started, he came in one day and gave me a box of tin soldiers. Which to me was a real sign of, you know, defeat. You know, in a way that… he decided there’s no point in my not having weapons of – weapons of war, because there was a war anyway.
