Sarah Harris: Penguins say it in black and white

There are times, we all know, when words are woefully inadequate and it seems even more diabolically so to those of us who fling them about for a living.

When one of my oldest mates Dave was dying, the words I couldn’t say to him or his wife — both also journos — morphed into penguin-inspired objects, as they were always both quite partial to the creatures.

There were penguin bookmarks, penguin books, penguin ornaments, penguin pencil sharpeners, a penguin pendant, penguin chocolates all posted interstate wordlessly. When the shops ran out of penguins – as being nowhere near the sea they very soon did – I began rewriting the great works of literature to include penguins.

There was the long lost Penguin Prologue to the Canterbury Tales. I rediscovered Esperance — the nanny penguin cut from the balcony scene in Romeo and Juliet by censors after the Great Penguin Pogroms of the 14th century.

When Dave died, I flew across for the funeral with a five-kilogram glass penguin swathed in half a kilometre of bubble-wrap.

The sheer absurdity of it gave me strength, especially when airport security stopped the X-ray conveyor and demanded to know what was in the suspicious parcel.

“A very heavy glass penguin,” I replied.

The guard looked me with an expression that said, ‘Sure, it’s a heavy glass penguin’.

He then insisted, quite nastily, that I unwrap it — presumably just in case it went off.

And as I held it out for inspection it was clear to everyone that this was a penguin of mass destruction.

Someone behind me snickered.

I didn’t cry, but I didn’t laugh either because I didn’t want the penguin to miss the plane.