Thursday, September 18, 2014
A
cold spell early in 1956, brought an end to my stint at the hospital.
Before that, there had been snow, with reports of emergency
deliveries to stranded farms and villages. One day, as we worked our
way up the ward in the morning, an aircraft flew so low overhead we
thought it was coming through the roof. Everyone ducked, except for
Mr Dollery, propped up straight on his pillows. ‘That’ll be the
bread,’ he said.
It
wasn’t snow but ice that stopped me short. There was a lake near
where we lived. Now it was frozen and a group of staff and boys from
my old school came over to play ice-hockey. Health and safety rules
were more lax in those days, and freeze-ups more frequent. It was
eighteen months since I had left school and the boys on the ice were
ones I’d supervised for prep, now grown as big as me or bigger.
I
wasn’t a bad skater, after years on roller skates at an earlier
school. I think it was a collision, rather than showing off, that
brought me down and my ankle folded under me. My pride was hurt, and
I made light of the break, using my hockey stick as crutch to get
back to the car (my parents’ car, which I’d borrowed for the
afternoon). I drove home with one good foot hopping between pedals.
The
plaster came up to my knee and stayed on for two or three months.
Apart from finding new ways of scratching my leg, I can’t think
what I did with that time. My mind’s a blank, except that I
remember using the plaster leg as a pivot in a jive routine, and some
evenings when the pain got through to me. Try as I will, those three
months is blank. Perhaps it was then that I first read Camus, or
listened to Charlie Parker.
A
broken ankle doesn’t rate high on the scale of Pains. My broken
ankle was bearable if only because it was such a long way away.
Toothache and earache are closer and less easily forgettable. As a
small child I remember lying in bed with earache and not knowing what
to do. One moment I tried to bury it in my pillow, the next to shake
it out into the air. When my mother came to comfort me, we both knew
there was nothing she could do. But perhaps there was, she did it by
being there and I recovered . My teeth were bad. At the dentist,
most fillings were done with no anaesthetic. I used to grip the chair
arm as hard as I could and look around me or out of the window. The
drill was driven by a long thin belt or cord that snickered as the
drill ground in. Later I learned to relax my hands. When I go to
the dentist now, it’s easy. Most of the roots are dead, injections
are routine so drilling doesn’t hurt. The dentist must be
Christian, he still takes NHS patients and has a bible in the waiting
room among the magazines. He's also into films, with old film posters
on the walls. From Here to Eternity, Roman Holiday and African Queen.
From my reclining seat, I look up at another poster, a version of
spot the ball, except that what I'm supposed to look for is a little
boy in a striped jersey, one of hundreds in a crowd of rather
similar. One dentist I went to as a child had a glass-sided beehive
set into the window so patients could lie and watch the workers work.
The
next thing I can both remember and locate in time is an improbable
workcamp in the Swiss Alps. That accounts for most of May and June
1956, but that still leaves a gap of three months in spring. The best
I can do is describe a couple of events that I know did happen at
about that time.
My
mother annoyed me sometimes: when as a child I forgot something I
wanted to say and was still trying to recall it, she would cut in ‘It
cant be important if you cant remember it.’ Might it not have
beenTOO important?
Two
events concern an army camp, the Arborfield REME base across the
fields from our redbrick Field House, Barkham. When I got home from some a work-camp before or after that spring, the
wood at the bottom of our own little meadow had disappearedi.
It was only when I got down to writing about my past that I realised
how many big event events took place while I was away from home, like
two brothers and a sister being born.
The
wood was disappeared because news got out that the the army had
selected the site for a firing range. Farmers and other neighbours
who had hardly talked to each other before now got together in a
flurry of common purpose. My father's legal and civil service
background helped. The surest way block the army's access to the wood
was to get the site reclassed as agricultural land.
I’m
sad and glad I wasn’t there when the wood was destroyed. It had
become a playground for Martin and me. We had a golf-like game with
bows and arrows, selecting a target as far away as we could see, and
aiming for that. We also risked our necks by climbing up young birch
trees until they bent beneath our weight, until we got to within
dropping distance of the ground, or the top of the trunk snapped off
with one or both of us on it.
I
was sad to come home and find the wood gone, and sad to miss the
drama of its going: cha-nsaws, bulldozers and gelignite for
intractable stumps One splinters, a yard long and thick as a thigh
came in through our roof. By the time I came home and the public
planning enquiry was due, the land the army's designated land was
green with barley shoots.
Perhaps
we did something to make up for it nearly 40 years later. Very
cheaply, and with Martin's help, we bought a bit of clear-felled
Forestry Commission land behind our house in Wales. Replanted it with
borrowed, begged and stolen broad-leaved trees, and went on to
establish a much larger 'commonwood' along the river valley belowI
(www.Troserchwoods.co.uk)..
My
other ‘imported’ memory, which may date from just before that spring, begins and ends at a Christmas dance put on by REME officers' families. Perhaps they didn't know that my parents voted
Labour and that I had refused military service. Perhaps suitable
boys were in short supply. Or it may be that some army families are more open-minded than is generally assumed. More recently, I have
often felt that army officers talked more reasonably than the
politicians commanding them.
At the Sandhurst (?) hall where the dance was held, we found a polished wood
sprung-floor that rose and fell beneath us. The tall young woman I
spilt my beer over didn't fuss when I tried to mop it off and stop
the stain from spreading down her long blue dress. But the girl who
captivated me was smaller, younger, lighter on her feet. When we
danced and talked it felt as though we'd known each other all our
lives etc. She had smooth dark hair that round an oval face, wide
eyes and soft clear voice. She seemed to take in what I had to say,
and open it up for me. There seemed no impediment between us. By the time the music stopped,
after the usual cloying last waltz, I had learned this apparition was
still at school and her father due to leave the following week, with
family, for a military attache post in South America. I could have
asked for an embassy address, or the name of whatever boarding school
she might still attend in Britain. But that didn't occur to me.
Perhaps because she was so young, or it might have felt like
cheating: if our first meeting were providential, why not a
meeting-again? Except that it didn't happen, or we didn't notice when
it did.
I
didn’t fall to writing poetry until some years later when I got to
know a woman who already did. An early effort of mine may have
stemmed from ‘You’re skating on thin ice,’ which I can hear ast
said by the teacher who organised the ice-hockey that day, who had
also been my housemaster and taught me A level French – which I
duly failed, My early poem was a rush of short lines, brittle light
above, cold depths below and a blind white fox that swam and gnawed.
I gave my poet-playwright friend the manuscript and she lost it. More
surprisingly, she rewrote most of it from memory on two foolscap
sheets, with blanks for bits she couldn't recall. By the time I got
this labour of love in the post, I couldn't recall them either.
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