For the most part I avoid blogging about work but some of you will know that I am a barrister specialising in Employment Law. One thing barristers learn quickly is the power wielded by the ushers. The essence of an usher’s job is to call the parties into court and settle them down so that when the judge makes his or her grand entrance everyone is silent and rapt. Where there is more than one case to be heard, being on the right side of the usher can result in your matter being promoted up the list and ensuring you are done by lunchtime rather than sat disconsolately in a waiting room for 5 hours with a fidgety client.
My favourite usher was Len. He worked in the President’s Court in the Employment Appeal Tribunal. Len was somehow always pleased to see you. His welcome was extended just as warmly to first-timers as to old-timers and he was as respectful to those representing themselves as to the most self-important of Silks. He had a calm and an easiness about him that allowed you momentarily to forget the stressfulness of the situation. He made sure that you got an early warning if the Judge was fractious and, if there was time, would pause to tease you about your football allegiance.
You will have guessed from the tense that Len has died. Today, at 10:30 in the President’s Court, we gathered to pay our respects. On the dais, below the Royal Seal, sat the judges. In the well of the court were his colleagues and large group of barristers all of whom had had reason at some point to be thankful to Len. There was, as you might expect, much eloquence deployed in praise of him. Every elegiac compliment was deserved. There were grand people present; people who have consciously developed their careers and reputations and have craved such glory as the Law allows. Len did a job for over 10 years that involved no glory, but by being constant in his kindness and spendthrift in his consideration for others he filled a room with people who will miss him terribly and whose affection and respect he will have as long as memory persists.
You’ve painted a wonderful picture of Len. What a wonderful guy to have around.
I had the misfortune to work for a solicitor specializing in employment law. Somehow I can’t see anyone standing up and giving him the same eulogy!
A beautiful tribute. Len sounds like he was a wonderful man.
Lovely tribute indeed.
What a lovely tribute to Len. I never knew him but know many ushers cut from the same cloth. Their normality makes our legal world bearable. I’m sure he will be greatly missed.
a lovely tribute to Len. It’s the little guys, the one of little glory, who so often get overlooked. That’s why its so heartening that Len was appreciated through his lifetimes and celebrated at his funeral.