Saturday 12 December 2015

Not-Quite Thoughts on Scented Candles



As leader of the writing group I set a homework task
Designed to stretch creative minds, not really much to ask
Of intellects the size of yours, the Worcester Literati.
The rivals of such eggheads as Stan Laurel and O. Hardy

I try to set a subject that will offer lots of scope
For dramatic flights of fancy, or nostalgia, or a joke
That may be funny, may be not, depending on the mood
Of those who sit in judgement on your work’s ineptitude.

But sometimes, in capricious mood, with motives quite impure,
I ask that you will bend your minds to something quite obscure.
So I guessed that scented candles would quite likely give you grief
And give you hours of torture as you struggled with the brief.

Now, the problem for a smart-arse, is that one can be too clever,
And ask for gems of literature, when he himself could never,
Not in a thousand million years, well not by Friday’s deadline,
Come up with something readable and quite brilliantly sublime.

I have toyed with scented candles, now, and tossed them round my mind
 I’ve lit their wicks and sniffed their pongs but nothing can I find
To raise a laugh or squeeze a tear, so I’ve had to give it best
And confess that being over clever has caused great mental stress.

Not even curried candles, though they briefly flickered brightly,
Could inspire me to the heights to which my aspirations rightly
Soar, the Booker prize the lauded lion, these gems I’ve had to pass.
And I’ve stuffed my scented candles up the proverbial Khyber Pass.





Saturday 5 December 2015

Sealed With a Kiss


“We’re going frog snogging,” announced Princess Mistral, “by the lake.” It’s a lovely day so we’ll take a picnic.”
            “I thought we were having a pub lunch,” grumbled Lady Sharon, as the ladies-in-waiting twittered their disappointment. “It’s two-for-one at the Old Lion today.”
            “Sorry, Shazzer," said the Princess, "but you know very well it's Frog Prince day; one  hundred years exactly since Princess Elvira kissed the enchanted frog, broke the spell, and restored him to Princeliness . So today, to celebrate, we will snog the frogs in the lake in case another prince is lurking.”
            Lady Sharon was horrified. “Snogging frogs is unhygienic and totally gross. The only recorded case of fin-rot in humans was caused by a frog snogging, it’s a health and safety issue.”
            “I’d have thought you’d jump at trying to pull a frog prince, Shazzer,” jeered the Princess. “Let’s face it, dear, you’re famously doggy, and it’s your chance to find a bloke.”
            The ladies sniggered, but Lady Sharon shrugged. When your career progression demands you suck up to your local princess, you take the rough with the smooth. “I’ll come, if you insist, but you can do the snogging, dear, count me out.”
            So the royal party processed to the lake, accompanied by flunkies carrying hampers filled with exotic delicacies and fine wines. The wine was necessary to bolster the resolve of those ladies for whom frog snogging might be a challenging experience, and it was a mellow party that later commenced the search for enchanted amphibians. They were immediately rewarded by the discovery of a small emerald green frog, lounging on a lily-pad, who whooped a cheerful greeting.
            “Over here girls,” it croaked, “on the lily pad. I’m Prince Emerald, just served a long enchantment but out on license. Just one kiss and one of you will be happy ever after”
            “Good grief,” said Lady Sharon, “it’s Kermit, would you bloody Adam-and-Eve it?”
            Princess Mistral was ecstatic. “I knew it! Another enchanted prince, and gorgeous me is here to break his spell. Come here my little emerald beauty, let me make your day.”
            “Sorry, Princess” croaked the frog, “ not you, dearie. I’ve been assigned to the care of that grumpy-looking chick on your left.”
            “Shazzer?” Princess Mistral was dismayed. “Surely not Shazzer?
            “Shazzer it is,” croaked the frog, hopping on to Lady Sharon’s shoulder and kissing her firmly on the lips. There followed a flash of light and a pall of green smoke which cleared to reveal Lady Sharon engaged in mouth-to-mouth combat with a reconstituted Prince, the only evidence of his amphibious origins being an unfortunate odor of pond-water and his emerald green complexion.
            The news of Prince Emerald's transmogrification spread rapidly.Bells rang, there were street parties, commemorative mugs, chat show appearances and State banquets, and Prince Emerald conducted himself in an exemplary manner, apart from  croaking “ribbit, ribbit,” and hopping up and down when excited.
            The Princess was peeved at the attention Lady Sharon was getting and anyway she fancied Emerald herself, right down to his boxers. She couldn’t let it go on.
            “Look, here Shazzer,” she said, “I’m the Princess. I’m the beautiful Mistral that everyone loves, so it’s me that marries Prince Emerald and lives happily ever after. I’m announcing my engagement to Emerald in the Old Lion next karaoke evening. Deal with it.”
            Lady Sharon was heartbroken, as was, to a lesser degree, Prince Emerald. Twitter sank beneath outraged trolls, but it was standing room only in the Old Lion on karaoke night, because the Princess was buying the drinks.
            Princess Mistral took to the stage, hand in hand with Prince Emerald, and acknowledged the cheers of the crowd.
            “Thank you, thank you all,” cried the Princess, joyfully. “A bit of a mix -up to start with, but the beautiful princess gets the enchanted prince, which is how it should be. And now, Prince Emerald and I are going to celebrate our betrothal with our karaoke version of Sealed with a Kiss. Enjoy.” And as the music began, and to rapturous applause, she placed a loving kiss on Prince Emerald’s lips.
            The ensuing flash of light and pall of green smoke greatly surprised everyone, not least the newly transmogrified emerald green frog, formerly known as the Princess Mistral.           
            “Ribbit,” she croaked, hysterically, then, “ribbit, ribbit, ribbit”, she croaked inconsolably, as she hopped towards the exit.
            And Shazzer and Prince Emerald lived happily ever after.






Sunday 29 November 2015

My Holiday Romance







Day 1. Malaga

I had to wait until we landed at Malaga before I could get an idea of the potential. There are so many different tour parties on an Easy Jet Charter flight that you have no idea who will be in your party until you get on the coach to the hotel.

            I was first on the coach and got a seat near the back so that I could clock everyone getting on and identify likely prospects. There was the usual mix of middle-aged and elderly couples, but I thought that there were at least three lone females who might be looking for action. The problem is that lone females usually cluster together for safety and it’s difficult to prise them apart once they’ve bonded.

            I cruised the hotel pool and the bars after dinner. As I’d anticipated, the three singles had teamed up and a fourth, a pale undernourished forty-something, was in the company of a bad-tempered elderly couple, the frustrated spinster daughter, thirsting for romance and excitement in foreign parts. Spinster daughters are always a good bet for the practising lounge-lizard, not usually over blessed with beauty, but at that stage in life where natural inhibitions are in daily conflict with increasing sexual desperation. I sat near her in the bar, smiled wanly, nodded respectfully, and raised my glass. She made meaningful eye-contact, but Mother frowned and tutted and Daddy glared with intent, so I left it there and went to bed.

Day 2. Ronda

            The three lone females were now joined at the hip and I realised that ingratiating myself would be difficult. The eldest, fiftyish, looked very much lived-in and was doggy even by my standards, but might do as a last resort. The younger women, although not spring chickens, would pass as half-decent in a poor light and the blonde one had decent legs, so I decided to try and cut her out from the flock.

            I tagged along with the guided tour of the bullring, lurking near the trio and injecting witty if uninvited comments in to their conversation; comments which they surprisingly, and I thought rudely, ignored. My big chance came after the tour when the one with the legs decided she wanted to visit a particular shop and arranged to rejoin the others later, at a Tapas bar.

            I skulked inconspicuously for a while, giving Legs a start, then followed her, staying out of sight until she entered a shop. Spying my chance I followed her in, expressed joyful surprise at meeting her, and hadn’t the Bullring tour been interesting? She smiled nervously and muttered a reply that I couldn’t quite understand, so I loitered while she made her purchases, then followed her out of the shop. I laughingly suggested that we take lunch together, somewhere quiet, where we could perhaps discuss how we would spend the rest of the holiday. She stopped, turned to me with a radiant smile and said that she would rather amputate her left foot with a rusty bread saw than be seen dead in my company, and why was there always a creep like me on every tour she went on?

            I interpreted her reaction as a ‘no’, apologised for the temerity of my suggestion and for failing to recognise her true sexual orientation, and wished her joy and fulfilment with her new lesbian friends.

Day 3. Seville
            I have conceded that my failure with Miss Legs has adversely affected my chances with her associates. Consequently, I turned my attentions towards the desperate spinster, corralling her  in an alcove near the ladies toilets in the hotel bar, and whispering lewd nothings in her welcoming ear until violently interrupted by her parasol-wielding mother. This good lady informed me, between blows, that her naive, immature, and vulnerable daughter was plagued by men of my ilk, and that her husband, a retired police superintendent and judo black belt, was watching me closely.

Day 4.  Seville

A free day, intended for sight-seeing, but which I utilised to treat the worst of my parasol bruising in the privacy of my own room.

After dinner I chatted with Mr and Mrs Felix in a discrete corner of the hotel bar.



Days 5 and 6. Cordoba and Granada

            Mr and Mrs Felix are accompanied by her sister Delores, a loud, large lady of uncertain vintage, whose true identity is disguised under many layers of trowelled-on make-up. She is not a pretty sight.

            But she likes me, and she is very rich.

            I’ve always been a pragmatist






            

Saturday 21 November 2015

On Stanford Bank



Photo courtesy George Barker




     If you leave the village of Stanford-on-Teme by the Bromyard road you will pass, high on your left, the Gothic style Georgian church of St. Mary, and the seat in its churchyard dedicated to the memory of Jack Clements., long time President of the Beacon Roads Cycling Club.

      Jack was Irish gentry, Master Jack to the folks back home, but a respected member and hard-working official of the Midlands cycling fraternity and ‘one of the lads’ out on the bike, and the seat overlooks the Teme valley, and the long, steep climb up Stanford Bank, reflecting Jack’s twin loves of fishing and cycling.

   Stanford Bank has been, for nearly 70 years, one of the most feared climbs on the Beacon RCC Mountain Time Trial, regarded as a classic in the cycling world, and still attracts entries from some of Britain's top time-trialing talent. In his younger days, Jack competed, but in later years be found at the top of the climb, watch in hand, recording the painful efforts of those in search of glory. Sometimes, he recorded mine.

           I’ve been up Stanford several times in anger in the Mountain Trial, always experiencing the same grim enjoyment that I presume one gets from self flagellation. One of the worst aspects of the climb is that you can see a long way up it, and from the Church it appears to be about as vertical as it can get without you toppling over backwards, so you drop down a couple of gears, whimper pitifully, and mouth vile obscenities to cheer yourself up until you reach the top. One year the pain was worth it, because Pete McHugh and Jimmy Arnold and I won the Handicap team award, along with bragging rights for several years. Jimmy’s long dead now, and Pete has joined UKIP which I suppose is much the same thing.

            Stanford, though is not just a pain-in-the-arse in time trials but often features in road races, and my most enduring memory concerns an eighty-mile road race more than fifty years ago.

            The course included two ascents of Stanford Bank and two of Ankerdine, and on the first ascent of Stanford the bunch split in two immediately the climb started, and I found myself in the wrong half,watching the leaders ride away. At the top, the stragglers regrouped, probably twenty or more of us, and I was surprised to find Johnny Pottier among them. John was an ex-pro of some reput and had been the travelling reserve with the British Tour-de-France team in 1955, the year that Brian Robinson became the first Brit to finish that race.

            We started to organise a chase and worked well together over Bromyard Downs and down to Knightwick where we started the first climb of Ankerdine. Mayhem ensued, and at the top there were only about a dozen riders left. The hard grind back to Gt. Whitely reduced it even more and by the time we started the second climb of Stanford Bank,  Johnny and I had blown everyone else away, and oh joy, the race leaders were now in sight, not far up the road. I upped my place slightly, to close the leaders down but Johnny came past me out of the saddle and sprinting hard. By the time I reacted, he’d bridged the gap and joined the leaders, leaving me wallowing despairingly down the road. The group was out of sight before I’d reached the top and I didn’t see them again that day.

            I have borne Pottier a grudge over that callous act for over fifty years now, and whenever I see him now I make a point of mentioning it and ask him if he is ready to apologise.

            Johnny always grins, and said he cant remember it, but he bloody well does.

            You bastard, Pottier.







Saturday 14 November 2015

The Spirits in the Flames

Mummy and Daddy took me and Jason to the bonfire on Saturday. Daddy said that it was safer than having our own fireworks, but that afterwards we could stay up late and have hot-dogs, and a special bedtime story.

            The bonfire was lovely, all red and golden flames that kept spitting and changing shape. Some flames jumped from the fire and threw off crackling sparks that vanished in to clouds of swirling white smoke. And I could see fiery caves inside the fire, grottoes filled with wispy shapes that I imagined were elves and fairies.

            Suddenly, a big red star exploded overhead, spreading more coloured stars in to the sky. Then there were some little bangs and more stars flew up in huge circles that floated apart and then faded away, The stars kept flying up and then I heard loud bangs, like thunderclaps, and saw shooting stars flying in all directions. Then, after a long while, the stars disappeared and it went quiet, and all that I could see were the stars in the sky and the embers of the fire.

            “That was lovely,” said Mummy, “now let’s go home for our hot-dogs.”
           
            We had barbecue sauce with the hot-dogs, and ice cream, and when we’d washed and cleaned our teeth, we got in to bed and Daddy told us a story

            “Long ago, when the world was new, there was no moon or stars so the nights were completely black.  People couldn’t see and kept bumping in to things, talking to complete strangers by accident and tripping over cats. So they went to the Wise Men for help."

            "The Wise Men nodded and said, 'Light at night? Interesting concept, we’ll come back to you on that.' But they didn’t come back, because that didn’t have an ‘O’level in light creation between them."

            "Then someone said, 'How about Mr Zang, he knows everything?' and everyone went 'Ewwwwww!' because Mr Zang was very smelly and had been sent to live by himself in the woods. But they went, and Mr Zang said, 'You lot must want something real bad if you’ve come to see me. Light at night? Not a problem,' and he picked up his backpack and led everyone back to the village."

           " Mr Zang made everyone collect lots of wood, and they built a bonfire in a clearing. At sundown, they formed a circle around the bonfire and Mr Zang lit a brushwood torch, shouted 'Abracadoppoluss, Abracadoppolus,' very loudly and set the bonfire alight, and smelly black smoke started billowing out. Mr Zang said the black smoke was evil spirits who were being chased away by the good spirits in the fire, Mr Zang then took out lots of brightly coloured packets from his backpack. The packets were filled with different coloured dusts that he threw on to the flames, and masses of crackling sparks shot in to the air. The sparks flew higher and higher and everyone went 'Ohhhhhhhh' and 'Ahhhhhhh', because they looked so beautiful. Then the sparks faded away and everyone stared in amazement because the sky was now full of twinkling lights which were casting a strange and beautiful light over the earth."

            “'Those lights are called stars' said Mr Zang, 'not good enough to read by, but you can see to avoid tripping over the cat.  I’d do you a moon, but I’m not due moon dust till Tuesday.'

            "Mr Zang said that the stars were good spirits who had chased the evil spirits from the fire, and gone to live in the sky so that they could watch over the earth at night and keep little children safe."

            “'More than you deserve,' said Mr Zang, who was as grumpy as he was smelly, “Try not to bother me again please. Goodbye,' and he went back to the forest to be smelly by himself."

            “'Did Mr Zang make the moon?" asked Jason.


            “Yes,” said Daddy, “but that’s another story.”


Tuesday 23 June 2015

Flickering Lightbulbs on the Road to Damascus.

I've written some passable stories along with some half-decent blogs, but never before blogged about writing. This is probably because the machinations of my creative processes are a mystery, even to me, and a lot of the time I'm not really sure what I'm doing. That is especially true right now, with reference to my now-you-see-it-now-you-don't novel, Brockberrow.
            
        Brockberrow has been bugging me spasmodically for twelve years, the first draft reaching 66,000 words, but progress ceased about two years in when a well-meaning associate murmured, "It's amusing, but nothing ever happens,"  I sulked for a couple of years, then had a fresh look, cut out lots of crap and several characters, and ended up with just 25,000 relevant words, but although I had a plot outline right through to the finish, it stalled again. After two or three more false starts, I shrugged, curled my lip and shelved it in perpetuity, but one morning recently, in those surreal seconds between waking and actually becoming functional, I had a lightbulb moment, which I knew immediately would Change Everything.                                                                                                              
              It was suddenly obvious that two early chapters of Brockberrow, chapters that I regarded as priceless literary pearls, were completely irrelevant, and that Griswold, my main character, was a boring sod, although crucially, not sufficiently boring to the point where he ever became interesting. Griswold would have to completely re-invent himself if he wanted his contract renewed and the book would now also need a New Beginning. Imbued, now, with the zeal of the newly converted, I set about the task -  only to find three brand new opening chapters that I'd written twelve months ago, this following a Damascene experience, (same as a lightbulb moment, but experienced when fully conscious) during which it was revealed that I'd not started the book at its logical beginning and that All Would Be Well if I remedied that. 
            
           I'm not quite sure how I managed to disremember my Damascene experience, or the three(beautifully crafted) chapters, but at least it proves my earlier statement that a lot of the time I'm not really sure what I'm doing
           
          Still, all is not lost. My much loved chapters will edit down nicely to make a 4000 word short story and I've found a competition calling for entries that combine humorous with weird, three goes for a tenner. I have humorous and weird in my files in spades. What can possibly go wrong?

Thursday 26 March 2015

Don't forget the Gaviscon.

At precisely 3.37AM on Saturday morning, the chicken vindaloo and five pints of lager that had been coexisting uneasily in Wayne Burkenshaw’s digestive tract, ended their truce and fell upon each other with unbridled ferocity.

Wayne, long since rendered insensible by the anesthetic properties of the lager, now awoke in alarm, emitting an unworldly raucous snort as the titanic clash between lager and vindaloo assaulted his chest with stiletto-sharp pains, while a deluge of curried bile engulfed his gullet. He sat up abruptly, sweating and palpitating, and overwhelmed by a violent bout of vindaloo hiccoughs

 “Sodding indigestion,” gasped Wayne, instinctively groping for the Gaviscon tablets, usually in residence on the bedside cabinet. They weren’t there.

He switched on the bedside lamp, truculently contemplated the Gaviscon-free cabinet, then remembered he’d put the tablets in his trouser pocket before leaving for the restaurant. He leaned down, fumbled for his trousers, concertinaed by the bed, and hastily explored the pockets. Not there, either.

 “Sod it,” said Wayne, now realising that on arriving home, he’d taken the tablets and his keys from his pocket, and left them on the coffee table. He left his bed, staggered along the landing, and flicking the light switch, discovered that the bulb had expired. He swore irritably, and still hiccoughing, started impatiently down the dark stairwell, tripped on the sleeping cat, and arms flailing desperately, descended head first to the sitting room.
                                                                 *
Wayne’s mate, Jason, alerted the police after Wayne failed to appear for three consecutive curry nights, and they found Wayne still clutching the pack of Gaviscon that he must have grasped involuntarily as he hit the coffee table.

 “Broken neck,” said the paramedic, “died instantly.”

“What a bloody pain,” said Jason, “the tight sod never paid me for his last curry.”

Monday 9 February 2015

Happy Birthday Charles Dickens! (Part the First)


The Hop Pole, Tewkesbury
 Charles Dickens would have been 202 yesterday if he'd made a more determined effort to cling to life, and Charlie and me have a lot in common. Not just the obvious bit about about him being just about the greatest novelist this country has ever produced, with me a red-hot cert to run him a close second when I get round to publishing Brockberrow, but also a very similar taste in Inns and public houses, specifically those visited by Samuel Pickwick in the Pickwick Papers.

There is an inn in Tewkesbury, called the Hop Pole where Mr Pickwick and his companions stopped to dine en route from Bristol to Birmingham, They had previously lunched at The Bell at Berkley Heath, becoming marginally legless, and had continued tanking up at the Hop Pole, with bottled beer, Madeira and port along with some 'take out' to see them through to the finish at the Old Royal in Brum.

My first visit to the Hop Pole was on a beautiful early summer day in 1953. I had cycled down from Birmingham with Diane, to operate a checkpoint in a cycling club event. Diane was the epitome of an 'out door' girl, dark hair, rosy cheeks, and gorgeously plump. I can still see the buttons straining on her tartan shirt as her shapely, tanned, legs turned the pedals, and I was totally besotted by the time we reached Tewkesbury

I was only 16 and still very wet behind the ears and Diane, I guess, would have been 18 or 19 and totally beyond the reasonable aspirations of an acne scarred adolescent like me. I remember that we sat outside the Hop Pole and shared a big bag of cherries while I desperately tried to come up with a foolproof chat up line, but of course, I couldn't come close, and that was the only cherry-sharing we ever indulged in.

Mr Pickwick , however, had no such feminine distractions and eventually arrived in at the Old Royal in Birmingham, a hostelry with which I became well acquainted.
The Old Royal, Birmingham.

I used to go there on Thursday nights, straight after work, along with Johnse, Stockton and a guy I can only remember as The Mole Man, so called because he was short, squat and without anything that remotely resembled a neck,. He also squeaked rather spoke, although I'm not sure if squeaking is a moleish characteristic.

 We would stop at The Old Royal until kicking out time, getting steadily rat-arsed, consuming meat pies and pickled eggs and playing seven card brag and a card game called Stop the Bus, the object of which, apart from it being a speedy way of loosing money, I disremember We actually knew the Old Royal as 'George's', after the accommodating landlord whom we had followed there when he moved from the St Pauls Tavern in St Paul's Square, although our original watering hole had been The White Horse Cellars, from which we had been barred following an acrimonious dispute over the quality of the meat pies. Meat pies loomed large in those bygone days.

Charles Dickens stayed at The Old Royal whenever he visited Birmingham, but there is no record that he ever played Stop the Bus.

(Part the Second will concern itself with The Bull at Rochester and The Great White Horse at Ipswich.)







Saturday 24 January 2015

A Weekend Tinged with Sadness.

I spent last weekend at Llangrannog, Cardiganshire, with my niece, her husband, three dogs, two cats, three horses and a donkey.

     We were celebrating the birthday of my late brother, who would have been 89 this year and who might even have been there with us if he had taken a little more exercise and a little less Famous Grouse. The tight sod also failed to make provision for these gatherings when he ordered his affairs, so we spent the weekend in the Ship Inn and the Pentre Arms, entirely at our own expense.

The Pentre and the Ship are both extremely civilised hostelries with sensibly flexible opening hours and one can while away a whole day there if one has a mind. Both offer excellent real ales and the Ship, as I remember, once served wine in three glass sizes, the largest being ‘Oh Go On Then’.


The Ship Inn. Llangrannog
All day pub drinking is all very well, but best not indulged in if one has already downed a half bottle of red over lunch and follows it up with another half bottle over dinner as I did. Later, my attempt to access the bathroom, two steps before I got to the top of the stairs, resulted in unplanned contact with the landing carpet  and persuaded me that my days of serious carousing were over, so it was with some sadness that I later announced my permanent retirement from all day drinking.

This life-changing decision forced me to reflect on my long past bacchanalian adventures; adventures  that, if undertaken by anyone else, would have been regarded as a shameful catalogue of drunken degeneracy, rather than the youthful exuberance and (mostly) jolly good fun that they really were. It was a difficult choice, but one really has to know when to quit
The Pentre Arms, Llangrannog.


I am of course, left with a whole lifetimes memories. All night parties, some of which carried on to include a whole Bank Holiday weekend; people paddling in my fishpond on Christmas Eve, much to the distress of the neighbours: prowling Malvern YHA in the early hours of a winters morning in the vain search for a loo, and perhaps, most nostalgic of all, after a dreadful session in the Cabaret Andalus mislaying myself, along with three comrades, on a Baghdad traffic island to be eventually rescued and escorted back to the YMCA by a kindly local.

I could write a book, but no bugger would publish it, anymore than they publish anything else I write.