Tuesday, 12 December 2017

Eleanor Rigby: An Obituary

ST. JOSEPH’S REST HOME NEWSLETTER


ELEANOR RIGBY:  AN OBITUARY
Father Michael McKenzie

  Eleanor Rigby (Lennon & McCartney)


Eleanor Rigby, picks up the rice in the church where a wedding has been. Lives in a dream
Waits at the window, wearing the face that she keeps in a jar by the door. Who is it for?
All the lonely people where do they all come from?
All the lonely people where do they all belong?
Father McKenzie, writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear, No one comes near
Look at him working, darning his socks in the night when there's nobody there. What does he care? All the lonely people.......

Eleanor Rigby, died in the church and was buried along with her name. Nobody came
Father McKenzie, wiping the dirt from his hands as he walks from the grave, No one was saved, all the lonely people......


My friend and former housekeeper, Eleanor Rigby (b. January 28th 1944 – d. January 26th 2016), who has died two days before her 72nd birthday was a quietly inspiring woman who spent her life working in the background serving others. Unassuming, but with a gentle and infectious sense of humour, she was little noticed by those she served but her quiet determination and kindness ensured that she touched and enriched the lives of many. Asking little of life, she never sought recognition or fortune but simply made the world a better place.
I first met Eleanor in 1949 whilst training for the priesthood here at St Joseph’s. Eleanor was, at the time, five years old and living with her mother who was housekeeper at the presbytery. Their home had been bombed in 1944 when Eleanor was only a few weeks old and the church had provided emergency accommodation in the presbytery for the mother and baby. When her father, John Rigby, who Eleanor never met, died in the Normandy landings in June 1944 the family were left homeless. Eleanor’s mother (also Eleanor) was offered the post of housekeeper – cleaning, cooking and washing for the Priest in charge and the three young priests who lived in the presbytery. Little did I know when I left St Joseph’s at the end of my training that our paths would cross again, but in 1959, on the death of Father O’Connell, I was appointed Priest in charge at St Joseph’s.

When I took up my post Eleanor had just left school and spent much of her time nursing her ailing mother until she finally passed away in 1965. While other teenage girls enjoyed the swinging 60s she was caring for her mother or attending to us priests and I have often reflected on life’s cruelties; Liverpool in those days seemed capital of the world but the swinging 60s passed Eleanor by. We priests had chosen a life of service; she had no such choice, it was her lot in life – although she never viewed it that way. On her mother’s death Eleanor, with no family, asked if she could take over her mother’s work. I had no hesitation in agreeing. It was the best decision that I ever made.
Like her mother Eleanor took a huge pride in her work. Nothing was too much trouble; cleaning, mending, washing, ironing and cooking were all done with gusto and love. She believed profoundly in the maxim “cleanliness is next to godliness” – many’s the time she would gently chide me for some small misdemeanour in my dress or shake her head, in resignation and say “No, no, no  Father, you can’t go out like that – let me sort you out”. Gradually she spread her efforts into the church, although the church itself was not part of her remit – nothing gave her greater pleasure than to polish the altar table, dust the pews or ensure that the notice board was up to date and looking cared for. She would spring clean the vestry at the drop of a hat and nothing missed her eye. Hymn books were always repaired, stored neatly, candlesticks brightly polished, the Communion wine always topped up, cassocks cleaned and repaired and faded flowers quickly removed and replaced. I was proud of my Church – and increasingly grateful for, and dependent upon, Eleanor.

In her personal life Eleanor was the same; always smart and well turned out, even when cleaning, polishing or cooking. It was an essential part of her being.“You never know when you are going to meet your maker” was a favourite saying – and one she had inherited from her mother. Never once, in all the years I knew her, did she leave her little flat under the presbytery eaves without first checking her appearance in the mirror by the door and, most important for her, making sure that her make-up was intact. “After all” she would mischievously smile “I don’t want to give the good St Peter a fright when I arrive at the Pearly Gates do I? That would never do, now would it Father!”
Eleanor was a quiet stalwart of our church – indeed, in many ways its heartbeat and its strength. Every Mass, wedding, christening or funeral bore her mark – the church gleamed and she was an unseen, unknown yet vital ever present. At every wedding she would be there before the ceremony checking that all was well, and as it should be but as the guests arrived she would quietly disappear. Often, after the ceremony, I would catch her face gazing wistfully from her bedroom window onto the presbytery lawn as the guests gathered for photographs. At christenings, as the proud parents showed off their new baby I would see her face smiling benignly, almost longingly, at the family group. But when everyone had departed, as if by magic, the confetti and rice would disappear, the font emptied of Holy Water and all would be as before. When trainee priests lived at the presbytery she was a second mother; variously spoiling and chiding them as her mother had done to me all those years before - and as any good mother would do.  I once asked if she missed not having a family of her own but with typical stoicism she replied “Lord, Father, what a question! I suppose once I hoped that I’d meet someone, I’d have loved children of my own you know but it wasn’t to be. No point dwelling on what we can’t change now is there Father? And anyway, look at me, I’m so lucky with all the weddings and brides and grooms and then their children I’ve got my own big family haven’t I.” And it was true; they might not have realised it but Eleanor had indeed been a part of their lives – she made the important days of their family life successful and special. Weddings, christenings, funerals – all made days to remember and cherish. With these and with the motherly care she lavished upon me and my young priests St Joseph’s was indeed her family.

But by 1990s the area  was being cleared as part of the city’s slum clearance programme. Families were moved away and re-housed on new estates and our congregation dwindled. It was not uncommon for me to lead a Mass where only a very few were present so it came as no surprise, when I learned that St Joseph’s would close and re-open, refurbished as a multi-faith community centre serving the 21st century needs of a regenerated multi-ethnic district. It was time for me to go so in 1999 I took retirement and was offered a flat here in St Joseph’s Rest Home For Retired Clergy. I requested a place for Eleanor, too, and this was granted – her flat being just along the corridor from mine – until, that is, she passed away two days before her birthday.
Our retirement years were good years. Eleanor, ever busy, cleaned, shopped and increasingly cared for me as my arthritis worsened. These weeks since her passing have been lonely. I miss the evenings when we listened to the radio – me reading my newspaper or re-reading old sermons, Eleanor busying herself with some little job before making us both a drink. Then at 9 o’clock on the dot she would announce “I’m away to my bed Father – my beauty sleep you know!” So now, I’m learning to attend to my own needs – but I often feel her presence as I iron a shirt or darn a sock: “No, no, Father that won’t do” she whispers “You can’t go out looking like that”- and I smile and perhaps shed a tear; like the good shepherd, she is still watching and caring for me.

It was perhaps not inappropriate that Eleanor passed away suddenly whilst doing what she loved best - helping with the cleaning in the little chapel here at the rest home. She had volunteered for this on becoming a resident. I took charge of her funeral and it was indeed a privilege to lead her service. It was sad that after a life of quietly serving the community and the church that the congregation comprised of just a few officials from the home and the undertakers but perhaps that is how she would have wanted it – no pomp or ceremony, just a quiet and dignified. That was, I think, what Eleanor would have wished – to be remembered as  quiet, and dignified.
Just before her funeral I made a last visit to her flat. By the door was her little tray with her jars of make- up, comb, brush and so on. I bundled them up to take to the undertaker – “After all, Father” I seemed to hear her whisper, “you can’t have me arriving in heaven frightening the angels or not looking my best when I meet my maker. That would never do, now would it?” From the day I first met her as a child Eleanor always called me ‘Father’ – never once did she call me Michael. Perhaps that was her natural reserve but, standing by her grave reflecting upon this woman who had been so much part of my life, I did wonder if, to Eleanor, I had indeed become the father that she never knew. I’d like to think so. I would have been proud to call her my daughter.


Tony Beale: 2016

A Modern Day Take on a Traditional Story

“Oh....You’re the new skivvy, thank God for that!”

 A modern day take on a well known traditional story

Elana Poniatowska looked at the grubby, dog eared, printed card pinned to the notice board in the run down discount store. Although obviously printed on a computer in different inks and fonts and with an official looking logo Elana thought the clumsy and rather false wording was not written by a native Polish speaker. There was no doubt, however, about what it said and as Elana read it her heart quickened. Taking out her shopping list she scribbled the main points onto the back of the scrap of paper, pulled her thin anorak around her and went out onto the windswept street, her purchases, in the polythene bag, banging against her leg.

Two days later, Elana stood in a long queue that wound its way up a narrow staircase. The stairwell smelled of stale urine, the walls peeling and a feeling of cold and damp permeated all. In her hand she clutched the scrap of paper on which she had written the details of the notice. In the inside pocket of her anorak she could feel her passport, her birth certificate and the envelope containing her short life’s savings, just over 1200 zloty, which she had just drawn out of the hole in the wall near to the flat where she lived with her mother and two younger brothers. Two hours later Elana stood handing all the money that she had in the world across an old battered table to a surly, middle aged, chain smoking woman. The woman counted the money and then, without taking the cigarette from her mouth, said in heavily accented Polish, “Next Wednesday, six in the morning. Don’t be late, we won’t wait”.
v   
The windscreen wipers on the battered mini-bus struggled to keep the windscreen clear as the rain fell from the sky. Crossing the Channel had been long and rough. Elana and the three other young girls in the group had pooled what little money they had to buy coffee and sandwiches as the ferry battled across the waters. Now, they all sat, ten of them plus the driver at English immigration control. The driver handed over the eleven passports and the immigration official looked at the van, peering at its occupants through the grimy, rain spattered windows. But then, to everyone’s relief, they were waved on their way – England! London! Suddenly the mini-bus was filled with relaxed faces and chatter. Soon they would have the work they had been promised when they had paid to the middle aged woman. Soon they would have money to spare. Elana would enjoy London and be able to send money home to her ailing mother and younger brothers. Who knows, thought Elana, maybe I will find a rich English man to marry! Throughout Elana’s young life times had been hard, an ailing mother and young brothers to care for and little money coming in to the tiny flat where they lived. Schooling had been hit and miss, so often was she needed to care for her little family and she had left school with few qualifications – the result being that finding well paid work had been difficult at the best of times. But now all would be different - London! Elana put her head back and watched the rain drenched countryside slip by, the old engine struggling to keep going as it followed the M2 towards London. She smiled as she remembered the story once read as a little girl about a man called Dick Whittington who went to London and became rich because, the story said, the streets were paved with gold. Elana knew the story wasn’t really true – the bit about the gold streets anyway – but she knew for sure that very rich people lived in London and so there would be plenty of work. The woman with the cigarettes had promised her. Elana would earn lots of money enough to send some home and still enjoy the bright lights and life of this great city and everything would be good.
v   
Clutching a scrap of paper Elana walked up the street lined with smart German cars – Mercedes, Porche and BMWs. Eventually she came to number 47. She checked the scrap of paper and stood looking at the imposing looking house.  Three storeys, steps going up to the front door and steps going down to a door below street level. Nervously, Elana bit her lip. She knew that her English was far from perfect; she had always done well enough at school with languages but this was something different. Would they understand her? Would they laugh at her attempts with the language? What would they be like? What would be expected of her? All she knew was that she was to look after two teenage girls and do a little general housekeeping for their mother who worked in the City. She had asked how much she would be paid, how many hours a week she had to work, what time she would have off but had received little back from the woman with the cigarette who had been waiting in the rain in central London to greet the mini-bus on its arrival. Each of the young passengers had been given scraps of paper with addresses, basic directions and a few coins for their bus fare. That was it and Elana suddenly felt very alone.

Here she was in a strange city and deep down Elana was a little troubled. Her life savings had gone to the chain smoking woman and the mini-bus driver had handed the passports to this woman. She had told the group of anxious young faces standing on the pavement in the rain at the side of the mini bus that she would look after the passports – for “safe keeping” and anyway, “it’s the law in England” she had said. No one dared question this.  One of the other girls had asked how and when they would be paid. “Don’t you worry none about that – your wages are paid directly to me at the agency” said the woman – “You’ll get what you’re entitled to after I’ve taken my commission each week”.  Elana was a little troubled as she climbed the steps to the front door and knocked.

The door opened. “Yeh, who are you? You can piss off if yer selling anyfink or if yer one of them Bible punchers” said the scowling, large featured, teenage girl who opened it. In the background the pulsating beat of rock music.  Elana stood there unsure of what to say. “I have come.......I am au pair. My name Elana” she struggled with these few English words that she had practised as she had walked down the street. The girl, heavily and clumsily made up, her brilliant red lips a gash across her face looked down at Elana, standing nervously on the door step. “Watcha say? – can’t hear yer”. Elana repeated the words. “Come again, can’t ya talk proper I can’t understand you bleedin’ foreigners. You’d think you’d learn proper English before you come ‘ere”. Elana again repeated the few words and the girl scowled – “Oh, right.... you’re the new skivvy, thank God for that – come in then and get yer skates on, the place is a bloody tip. Mother’s a lazy cow – never does nothin’ – up in the City all day poncin’ about with them banker friends of ‘ers. Whatcha say your name was?” Elana, understood little of what the girl said, her English lessons in Poland hadn’t included English spoken like this. She had, however, picked out the word ‘name’ so she repeated it slowly: “E..l..a..n..a,....... Elana, Elana  Poniatowska”.  The teenager emitted a cruel, braying laugh: “Christ, that’s a right bleedin’ mouthful!.....I’ll call you Ella Ponsi.....Well come on then, don’t just stand there like a wet weekend”. Picking up her back pack, Elana stepped into the hallway and tried to smile at the girl to give the impression that she understood and was friendly. The girl merely scowled and then shouted at the top of her voice “Sis, the new skivvy’s ‘ere – foreign cow with a stupid grin and can’t ‘ardly speak no English. Think she’s called Elli Ponsi or somefink – can’t understand a word she sez.” A voice bellowed from deep inside the house “Well tell the dozy tart to get busy – Mother’s fancy man is coming round later. She’ll go ape if the place is still a mess after last night’s bash.”

Elena, her doubts now changing to real anxiety, tried desperately to piece together the strange conversation in this alien language and nervously smiled again at the girl. “Don’t know what you’re so bleedin’ ‘appy about, Cinderella, or whatever yer friggin’ name is. You’ll be smilin’ on t’other side of yer face when you’ve been here a few hours” scowled the girl and she emitted another braying laugh as she shoved Elana along the hallway. Elana, hugged the back pack containing the few things that she owned to her chest; she was alone with this terrifying teenager and her family with no passport or money and nowhere else to go in this frightening place. Elana was suddenly very worried. 


Tony Beale: Jan 2017                                                                                                                                 

A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE AIRPORT

A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To.......The Airport; or Independence Day?

She stood in her pyjamas looking out into the darkness from the fourteenth floor, double glazed window. In front of her the twinkling lights of the city, her city – now asleep. Except for her. The digital clock showed 2.45 a.m. She looked at the illuminated face of the mobile phone gripped tightly in her hand. What time would it be now in New York she wondered. She pressed her finger to the keypad and began dialling.... but, half way through, biting her lip, a tear welling in her eye she stopped and closed the phone. She looked again out of the window at the silent, sleeping city; so close and yet so far from her as she stood in her air conditioned, sterile hotel room almost in the clouds. Far below she could see but not hear the night traffic – taxis, police cars with blue flashing lights – but up here, almost in the clouds, she was alone – so alone. Another tear ran down her cheek, she wiped it away with the sleeve of her pyjama and sat down on the edge of her unslept in bed. At the side of her bed lay her suitcase packed and ready – just a small space left for her pyjamas and her toiletry bag. On the hanger by the wardrobe hung her clothes for later; everything neatly laid out and ready, exactly as she had been brought up to do. Again, she opened the phone. She would do it. She would ring, she told herself. She would tell them. Then it would be done. But even as she started to dial her finger trailed off – in the end she could not speak to New York. And she lay back on the bed and sobbed. She was in one of the world’s great cities, Tokyo, her city; a city teeming with millions of people just like her and yet as she lay sobbing, she felt completely alone.
*********
We stood in the marbled reception hall of the four star hotel. Our two bulging suitcases besides us, eyes bleary from a disturbed night’s sleep and an early morning wake up. I looked at my watch: 5.45 am. The shuttle bus was due at 6.00 am to take us, and half a dozen other travellers, across Tokyo on the two hour trip to Narita airport. We had paid our bill and stood, nervously checking our passports and tickets waiting to wave goodbye to Tokyo and to fly back to Heathrow after a wonderful holiday of a lifetime. Our cameras were filled with photographs, our minds with a myriad of wonderful memories; we did not know that one of the most poignant memories was about to unfold.

As we waited for the shuttle bus we couldn’t help but notice the young Japanese woman standing alone at the side of her suitcase. She was probably about 18 years old, pretty, petite and beautifully dressed and made up. But, despite the make-up, she could not hide the agitated anxiety in her face and the tears that had obviously been recently flowing. Nervously, she checked and rechecked her watch. She flicked on her mobile phone and looked about to make a call and then put the phone away again. She went to the reception desk and was soon involved in animated discussion with the receptionist but then returned to her suitcase looking disconsolate. As we watched, we came to the conclusion that she had missed an earlier shuttle bus and was now worried that she would miss her flight. Then the bus arrived.

A smartly dressed attendant entered the hotel reception and we were called to the bus. Our cases were collected and stored in the luggage hold and we, like the other half dozen passengers, took our seats. The bus was empty apart from we few and as we sat down we watched as the Japanese girl anxiously talked to the attendant as he stowed her case beneath our window. She climbed aboard paper tissue in hand, and despite the mostly empty bus, sat immediately in front of us. The driver climbed aboard, and, as is the custom in Japan, stood at the front and bowed to us all before taking his seat at the controls. Pat and I smiled at each other – the formality, gentleness, reserve and politeness of the Japanese would be something that we knew we would both remember and treasure. And, as the bus drew away, we looked back at the hotel, mentally waved goodbye and then turned to look out of the windows to watch as Tokyo woke up and the streets filled with the busyness of the day. 

A few minutes into the journey the young lady sitting in front of turned and in perfect English said to me “I think that you are English” and she went on “Could you please help me; I need to know what to do”. We were nonplussed but smiled and said “If we can”. Biting her lip and close to tears she told us her story.

She had been in Tokyo – her home city - for about a month visiting friends and relations. Her father and mother lived in New York – her father, a business executive, had a seven year contract there so the whole family had moved to the USA. With tears in her eyes, she confessed that she hated New York and America. People were very kind, she told us..........but, she complained, everywhere seemed so loud and dirty and people were so rude and brash. Unlike Japan they had no manners. Everything was too casual, no-one seemed to care about dress, speech, school and so on. She attended a college but because she carefully attended all the classes, worked hard for good grades, did all the set reading and handed work in on time she was mocked by the other students. In short, although she had a family she loved and American friends that she was fond of she was desperate to leave and return to the Japanese life style that she loved.

Her parents seeing her unhappiness had allowed her to return home for a month to visit friends and relations. Her father had given her his credit card and arranged hotel accommodation. For a month she had enjoyed her home city again but a few days before she was due to return to New York a friend had told her that a job was available in the office where she worked and that if she stayed in Tokyo she could move into the flat where the girl lived. “Why go back to New York”, her friend said, “you’re life is here?” 

We nodded, trying to understand her predicament. “What shall I do” she asked. She told us that she had not slept that night and had packed an unpacked her suitcase whilst trying to pluck up the courage to ring her father and tell him that she was staying in Tokyo and would not return to New York. As she talked it seemed to become clear to us that the predicament was, to a large degree, a cultural one. We knew little of Japanese culture but from what we did know it seemed that the parent/child relationship was crucial; respect for the wishes of elders and one’s parents in particular was sacrosanct. Had she been an English or American or German girl we might have said that she should call her father and discuss it – he might understand and wish only for your happiness and may be pleased to see his daughter seeking her independence. But, increasingly that seemed to be a very difficult option – she was unhappy not only because she had to return to a place that she hated but if she put her case to her father, or simply didn’t return to New York, she was breaking a cardinal social  rule of Japan – going against one’s parents’ wishes. She stressed again and again how kind and loving her parents were – she had spent so much money with her father’s credit card – she not only owed him allegiance and respect but she also owed him money.

And so, as dawn broke over Tokyo and we got closer to Narita airport, we listened, trying as best we could to be a sounding board for her distress. I felt totally inadequate faced with what increasingly seemed to be an intractable cultural dilemma. We simply didn’t know what to say except that whatever she decided she must keep talking to her parents. “You should go back to New York and talk with your parents – you have the chance of a job and good accommodation, perhaps they will understand that you want to be independent. Maybe they will be pleased” we added hopefully. To us this made abundant sense and I think it did to her – but  in the back of her mind was also the knowledge that in her culture one simply didn’t do this. Going against the wishes of one’s parents was cultural ‘no-no’; to even think of it was risking bringing disgrace upon the family. As a dutiful daughter she had an obligation to always recognise her parents’ (and especially her father’s) ambitions and expectations and behave in such a way that befitted these. To even think of breaking the family code was upsetting; it seemed to me that she was castigating herself for having these thoughts that she feared would bring her parents distress and maybe disgrace.

At last the bus pulled into the Departure Terminal. We took our suitcases from the bowing driver and the three of us entered the Terminal anxiously looking for our flights on the Departure Board. Relieved we saw that our Heathrow flight was on time and she looked for her flight to JFK.  We shook hands and Pat and I wished her well – again saying that she should talk about things with her father – “We are sure” we said that “he will understand and be pleased that you have given it so much thought”.  She smiled a thin smile and said thank you for our advice, her face still puffy from her night without sleep and from crying. 

And then she was gone, disappeared into the airport throng towards, we hoped, the Departure Desk for JFK. We looked at each other – both still feeling helpless; the cultural ties and bonds beyond our experience. What must it have cost her, I thought, to seek the advice of two complete strangers on a bus? How anxious must she have been? Maybe she chose us because we looked of the same generation as her parents and we would know what her parents might think or do. We would never know. So, rather pensively, we wheeled our cases to the Departure Desk and joined the queue. And later, as our flight climbed high into the Tokyo sky, I wondered if she too was climbing into that same sky en route to JFK?  Or, had she at the last moment, plucked up the courage and decided to seek independence by taking a taxi back to Tokyo. 

Tony Beale July 2016

Fluttering & Flying

Fluttering and Flying

Written on a theme of “Interpretations”(The action of explaining the meaning of something: OED)

The boy stood silently in the afternoon sun looking over the man’s shoulder. The old man’s callused fingers and gnarled knuckles gripped the pencil tightly and carefully scribed ticks, crosses, strokes, numbers and an occasional beautiful cursive script into the columns on the book’s page. He had watched as the man had placed the book on the rough table, opened it with a kind of reverence (although the boy would not have understood that word) at a blank page and then drawn up the chair before taking out his penknife and with a deft skill born of years of practice sharpened the lead to a fine point, the shavings falling to the floorboards of the wooden verandah. Then, putting the lead to his lips he had licked it and begun to write. The boy was mesmerised, this was completely out of his experience and although he was not yet ten years old he knew that this book and this writing, these marks on the page, meant something important to his grandfather who sat, concentrating, in front of him. But, what did they mean and why was it important to the old man? And, despite his tender age, the boy also knew that there was a certain incongruity in what the old man was doing; the care he was taking had a loving gentleness about it completely at odds, with what little he knew of this man who he had not long known and who he was still a little afraid of.
v
Victor had come to the small mining village of Pegswood in Northumberland ten days before, brought there by “Grandda” and “Grandma” after his mother had died. The old couple, on receiving a telegram from London had taken the train from Newcastle to the capital and after the service at a church in an East End still showing the scars of the blitz had packed a cheap suitcase, bought by his Grandma at Woolworth’s in Bethnal Green Road, and brought him to a world he did not know. They were the only relations that the boy had; his father, their son, had died during the evacuation from Dunkirk and his mother, never healthy at the best of times, had finally succumbed to the scourge of TB. Victor’s world had changed – the bombed out streets of the East End had given way to rows of little terraced houses in the shadow of the pit and the slag heap. From the big city, he had come to a small, tight knit community where, it seemed, everyone knew everyone else and where the hours of the day and the days of the week  were marked by the sound of the colliery horn signalling the ends and beginning of shifts and where even his Grandda and Grandma spoke in a language that Victor struggled to make sense of, although deep down he knew it was some kind of English. 

Victor, until now  had lived his whole life in two drab upstairs rooms of a bleak terraced house in a street still with the boarded up shells of other houses scarred by Hitler’s bombs. The toilet and bathroom, such as they were, they shared with the family who lived downstairs and at nights, as Victor lay in the bed that he shared with his mother, he would listen to the drink fuelled rows that came from the rooms below.  His mother, he knew, worked as a machinist in what she called the “rag trade” and Victor’s only knowledge of his father was of him standing smartly in his uniform in a creased photograph which had stood on the window ledge. He knew that his father had met his mother while on leave in London soon after the war began and he, Victor, had been born almost a year later. His mother had rarely spoken of his father and the only wider family that Victor knew of was from the small Christmas present to him and Christmas card - “To Elsie and Victor. Happy Christmas from Ma and Da Chapman” - that had arrived each year and then the 2/6 postal order and birthday card “To Victor with love from Grandma and Grandda Chapman XXX” that had arrived each April.  

That world had ended ten days before when he had stood by the side of a smartly dressed lady who he knew was from “the council” and who had arranged his immediate care while his mother lost her struggle for life in hospital.  He had stood by the woman’s side, unsure what he should do or how he should behave, and gazed at the four or five other people that stood in the empty pews of the church. He had listened to the priest’s words, unaware of their meaning, but when his young ears caught the words “Our Father who art in heaven.....” his lips automatically moved as they did each morning in the school assembly “Ou....Ou....Our F...F...F...Father...wh...wh...who..............”. And then the service had ended, and the lady took his hand and led him across the aisle to the old couple as they stood in the pew and said, “Now Victor, this is your Grandfather and Grandmother, they are going to take care of you now”. And the old woman had bent down and kissed him on the forehead and said “Hello Pet. We’ll look after you now, lovely boy” and the old man had stood stiffly and shook Victor’s hand but said nothing.

So, here he was, far from his home, in a strange world with people that he hardly knew, and who seemed kind but who he had difficulty understanding. When they arrived after the long train journey it was already dark and he was taken upstairs to an empty room: “This is your Da’s old room, where he slept” Grandma had said “It’s yours now, Victor” and he had watched as the old woman unpacked his case and then said, “Now you get some sleep, Pet, it’s been a long day”. Obediently, he had climbed beneath the cold sheets and closed his eyes tightly; it seemed to his young mind that he was lost, adrift in a wild and terrifying sea, unable to make sense of who or why, unsure of what he should do and what he should cling on to. But, he was not yet ten and it was far beyond his bedtime and so Victor slept, he slept heavily. He had never before had a room of his own but his dreams, if he did dream, were interrupted early in the morning by the sound of a horn. Confused and rubbing the sleep from his eyes he stumbled to the window. It was still not fully light but the early sun showed him men moving and he could hear the chatter of voices. As he watched he realised that they were all coming from or going to the dark skeleton like building at the top of the hill and in the half light he could just make out the framework of a huge wheel slowly turning in the dawn sky. And as his eyes took this in he realised something else – those coming down the hill all had dark faces, black almost, whilst those going towards the big wheel had faces white under the dawn light. “What have I come to?”  Victor thought  as he stood looking down on the scene.  And a tear ran down his cheek.

In the days that followed Victor had slowly got used to the Geordie accent of his Grandma but his Grandda said little and Victor realised that the old man was almost completely deaf. He wore a heavy a battery pack  clipped to the waist band of his trousers and an ear piece connected  to the pack by a twisted cord. Occasionally, the old man fiddled with the battery and suddenly the room was filled with a loud whistle which caused Grandma to raise her eyes to heaven and rush over and adjust the instrument. Grandma had whispered to Victor “Now don’t you worry about Grandda, Pet, he’s just a bit deaf – came back like that from the Somme after listening to them heavy guns day and night and then spending his working life in yon pit laying explosives at the coal face.” Afterwards, in the quiet of his bedroom Victor thought about this and realised something else; Grandda’s deafness ensured that he spoke little – there was no point speaking, Victor reasoned, when you couldn’t hear the answer. And when Victor’s young mind realised this he instantly knew something else: he and his Grandda were alike. Victor was not deaf, but for as long as he could remember he had stammered – his lips so often failing to utter the words that that his brain demanded. At school he had been mocked and bullied by other boys and his teachers had had little patience with his attempts to say even the simplest sentences, the words getting stuck on his tongue so that he often could often not even pronounce his name without a hard staccato coming from his lips. So, Victor had quickly learned one of life’s lessons; just as his Grandda had learned to say little because his deafness, so too, Victor had learned to say little for fear of ridicule or worse. In the little terraced house in Pegwood Grandma was the voice of the household while he and his Grandda were largely locked together in silence; the young boy who couldn’t speak and the old man who couldn’t hear. Like two wounded birds in a cage, unable to sing, they occasionally fluttered and collided but rarely sang together.
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As the days passed, Victor learned to interpret and understand more Grandda’s long silences – they were not, he realised, unfriendly – and he learned a little, too, of Grandda’s daily routine.  The old man would disappear each day and when he returned three or four hours later he would be clutching books which he would then sit and read voraciously. One day, while his Grandfather was out, Victor picked up one of the books. Inside was a sticker with the words “Newcastle  Library Service” printed on it and underneath an erratic list of blue writing  “13 Jan 1947, 24 Sept 1947, 3 Feb 1948” none of which Victor understood. He flicked through the pages, it was full of small writing and photographs of men in white, each  carrying bats and balls with names underneath: Herbert Sutcliffe, Walter Hammond, Don Bradman, Harold Larwood, Jack Hobbs, Len Hutton, Hedley Verity.... . Victor asked his Grandma about his Grandfather’s habits: “Oh don’t mind him, lovely boy – he goes off for his walks in the country, always has done since the war and since he retired from the pit. Likes the quiet, likes to think, y’see, it’s his way of coping....all the pals he lost on the Somme, all the pals he lost in the pit.....and then there’s yer Da yer see....... aye, yer Da most of all.” The woman’s voice trailed off but then she continued “Grandda’s walks help to stop him thinking about all the guns and the dying and such. And then, there’s his cricket – them books he gets from the library, always cricket......I sometimes think that he thinks more o’ that game  than he does me....... Yer Da again, y’see..... lovely cricketer he was....Grandda always said that he could’ve played for England........” And the woman turned away to the sink and carried on scrubbing the clothes and Victor thought he saw a tear in her eye. Victor nodded, he didn’t understand all that the woman had said but he knew it was kindly meant. Slowly this new world was starting to make a little more sense.

No more was said on the subject but on the following Saturday morning, Grandma suggested that Victor might like to go with Grandda to see the cricket on the field. Victor smiled and agreed although he had little idea of what cricket was and he was still a little uncertain of going out alone with this man who spoke rarely and showed little sign of friendship or even awareness of him.  So, early that afternoon Victor walked, hand in hand with the old man, neither of them speaking, along the street, while Grandma waved to them from the doorstep. Grandda carried under his arm a large leather bound book and from the breast pocket of his coat peeped a pencil tip and a row of pens. The old man’s boots were polished to a mirrored perfection and he was wearing the brown suit that Victor had last seen at the funeral, and on his head Grandda wore a grey cap similar to the ones that Victor had seen some of the cricket players wearing in the book’s photographs. They walked past the pit, the great wheels slowly turning and as they did so Victor stopped and pointed “ W....W....What’s that G...G...Grandda?”. The old man followed the child’s eyes and without perhaps hearing the boy’s words replied “That’s the gateway to hell...lad...where I spent most of my life and where some of the best mates in the world still lie......tha doesn’t want to go down there, Victor, so learn thee lessons at yon school, listen to yer teacher when tha starts there after t’olidays”. And with that Grandda tugged on Victor’s hand and they continued under the brooding shadow of the slag heap. After leaving the pit and the last of the terraced houses behind, they came to the cricket field with its little white pavilion standing in the corner.  Already some young men dressed in white were standing in front of the pavilion throwing a ball to one another and from the moment they arrived at the field it was clear to Victor that Grandda was a respected figure amongst these young men – they each called him Mr Chapman and touched their foreheads briefly with their finger tips as they greeted the old man. Victor, for the life of him, couldn’t imagine his Grandda playing a game with them – he was far too old – and any way, Victor reasoned, where was his kit, his bat and his ball and what was the big book for?

As Victor watched, Grandda busied himself setting out a table and chair on the pavilion verandah and then opened a large locked box to take out piles of square pieces of wood each containing  a large black number on a white background. These he set at the side of a large board that he leaned against the pavilion wall. Victor watched, desperate to understand but still afraid to speak and so he turned away and peered through the doorway into the pavilion. The walls were covered with faded photographs, men in white, many sporting ancient beards and grasping bats or balls, others standing proudly to attention or sitting in group with a shield or silver cup in front of them. Drawn like a magnet Victor wandered into the empty room and gazed at the photographs, the sun light shining through the window and casting shadows and reflecting the dust in the air. Victor’s limited reading ability took in the names and dates under each one and as he wandered along gazing at these players from yesteryear he suddenly stopped. His young eyes fixed on a single photograph and its legend: Harry Chapman: Season 1937-38: Leading Wicket Taker. Chapman – that was his name, Victor Chapman, and it was his Grandma and Grandda’s name.........and, and...... the man in the photograph looked a lot like the uniformed man in the photograph that had stood on the window ledge in London – and who, his mother had told him, was his father. Victor knew that his father’s name was Harry. Without thinking Victor ran outside and grabbed the old man’s hand, dragging him to the open doorway. “Grandda, Grandda  look, look” in his excitement the words easily falling from his tongue – all stammering momentarily gone. He pulled the old man into the empty room and pointed to the photograph. “I – I – Is th - th- that my D – D - Daddy?” The old man looked at the photograph and then down at the boy; he didn’t need to answer, Victor knew it in the old man’s gaze and in the tear that ran down his cheek. The silent moments passed and at the back of his mind Victor remembered a hymn that they sang at school; he didn’t really understand it but some of the words said “How to master self and temper, How to make their conduct fair; When to speak and when be silent, When to do and when forbear” and as these words ran through his mind he suddenly understood them; this was a time to wait and be silent. After what seemed an age the old man, still looking at the photograph spoke: “Aye, that’s yer  Da, Victor – good player ‘e was......best we’d ever ‘ad in this club.....’ad a trial for Durham but the war came and ‘e was called up. E’d have played for England if e’d lived tha knows.” The old man looked down at Victor and smiled – it was the first time he had shown any affection for the boy – “Does tha think y’might be a cricketer......as good as yer Da maybe?”. Victor looked at the man and, thinking of the hymn again and sensing that he should say what the old man wanted to hear, he nodded and mumbled “Th....th....th....think so Grandda” and the old man ruffled the boy’s hair with his hand and smiled again. 

They stood, the two of them, in the shaft of sunlight in the pavilion. In the room next door Victor could hear men’s voices and then there was a slamming of doors and through the window he saw men all dressed in white pour out onto the grass. Two older men wore white coats and trilby hats and two others carried bats. Most of them wore grey caps like his Grandda and they walked towards the pitch tossing a ball between them.  Grandda put his hand on Victor’s shoulder “Come on lad, can’t stand ‘ere gassin’ all day.....there’s work to be done” and he led the boy outside and sat down on the chair at the table.

That sun filled afternoon seemed to Victor like peeping into some wonderful fairy tale, a new world into which he might enter. He stood in silence, engrossed, watching his Grandda painstakingly and lovingly write in his book.  Then, every few minutes, his Grandda would rise from his chair, walk  across the verandah and place the  white squares of wood with the black numbers into the slots on the big white board that leant against the pavilion wall. And slowly, very slowly, it all began to make a kind of sense. Grandda was keeping score as the batsmen scored runs and the bowlers got them out.  Victor watched, his eyes squinting in the sunlight as the players and umpires stood, brilliant white, against the dark green of the trees at the far side of the field under the cloudless blue sky. He stood entranced as the fielders settled into their crouch, the batsman took guard and the bowler began his run. Almost too fast for the boy’s eyes to register the red spot that was the ball flew through the air and suddenly the afternoon calm would be disturbed by a click as leather struck willow or when there was shout from eleven throats “Owzat” as the batsman’s wicket crumbled, destroyed by the red missile and the batsman turned to see the fallen stumps. The batsman would shake his head and in frustration pump the earth with the end of his bat and begin his walk back to the pavilion while the umpire stood with his arm raised and the bowler received the congratulations of his team mates. And when the batsman arrived back at the pavilion his friends clapped him, as did the besuited old men with watch chains across their waistcoats just like his Grandda’s. They sat puffing on their pipes on the three slatted benches outside the pavilion or on deck chairs that they had brought from home and placed around the edge of the field, and Victor could hear them say “Well done sir” or “Well played, young man” or “Fine innings Jack” ......... and they would clap and smile. Victor began, too, to learn a whole new vocabulary as he listened to the quiet chatter of the old men: boundary, over, maiden, full toss, yorker and most mysterious of all LBW; what did it all mean? But even though he understood little in Victor’s young mind  it all perversely began to make a magical and mysterious  sense;  and as he watched, trying to understand more, the old man made more pencil marks on the page. 

Then, as the shadows lengthened and the sun dipped towards the tree tops the players walked back to the pavilion, and the old men clapped. “I....I.....Is the g...g...g...game finished Grandda?” he asked. Without looking up from the book, the old man replied “Nay, bonnie lad – it’s tea time. Would tha like a sandwich?”  and Victor suddenly realised that in the room behind him where the walls were lined with photographs and where his Da was on the wall stood his Grandma and other women. Unseen they had arrived and laid a long table with plates of sandwiches and two huge tea pots hovered over cups as tea was poured into them. Holding his Grandda’s hand Victor took a sandwich as the players came into the room and his young eyes took in their white flannels some stained green from the grass; he saw that one or two wore cable knit sweaters with a grey stripe around the V neck and some of the fielders still wore the grey cap like the one his Grandda had worn as they walked to the ground. He looked in awe at the two batsmen and the wicket keeper standing with their leg pads like knights in armour ready for battle and as he rubbed his hand against one of the pads he could smell smells that he had never experienced before – the blanco from the pads and their boots mixing with the linseed oil that shone on their bats.  From that moment Victor was hooked; more than anything in the world he wanted to wear those pads, to have a sweater like theirs and to swing those bats and live this life that he was experiencing for the first time. But above all he wanted to be as good as the man he had never known and that his Grandda said could have played for England. As if in a dream, his eyes looking at these sporting giants, he  sought out his Grandma as she served tea behind the table and pulled on her skirt and when she bent down to hear him Victor whispered “Grandma will Grandda teach me to play cricket like my Da?” – and the old woman smiled, kissed him on the forehead, and wiping away a tear with her apron said, “I don’t know bonny lad, but I’ll ask him.”
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It was the start of a new life for Victor and a new beginning for Henry Chapman. The old man cut a thin piece of wood to make a small bat for Victor and in the tiny back yard of their house he would bowl an old tennis ball at the youngster as the child stood against the coal bunker with wickets drawn in chalk on the bricks. The old man endlessly bent over the child showing how to grip the bat, how to stand to defend his wicket, how to cup his hands to catch the ball, how to bring his arm over correctly to bowl, and the boy never tired. Each Saturday, they would walk to the ground together and after a week or two Victor was given a job – the official scoreboard operator – under Henry’s instructions, putting the white pieces of wood with the black numbers in the correct slots. Victor never took his eye off the field and the players, watching learning, making sense of this new world and this new love. The language of cricket – “owzat, long on, short leg, silly mid off” – became his language. He quickly learned to interpret the arm signals of the umpire and from his signals was soon able to alter the score board before his Grandfather had even the opportunity to tell him. And the old man watched and smiled in wonder to himself as he saw the boy grow and so quickly learn. Henry often found himself  wiping  away a tear as his experience told  him that the boy had a rare talent, a gift given only to a few – just like another boy so many years ago.

On the occasional wet day or when there was no cricket to watch or play the two would pour over the books that they had borrowed from the library.  Grandda had taken Victor to Newcastle on the bus and the boy was now the proud owner of a library ticket. Looking at the photographs in the books Grandda would talk wistfully of these men: of Bradman’s poise, power and manic pursuit of runs, of Hobbs’ deft, graceful flicks of the wrist to send the ball skittering to the boundary, and Grandda’s eyes would glaze over as he described what he called “the poetry” of Verity’s spin on the ball as it jinked towards the wicket. Then, his voice would drop in awe as he described the two fearsome Nottinghamshire miners Harold Larwood and Bill Voce, their fast bowls “faster and deadlier than a cheetah – they were a sight to see in their prime Victor..... the only men to put the fear of God in Bradman.....does tha’ know, Victor, after the Ashes in Australia in 1932 these two near brought the British Empire to an end”. On those wet days, in the kitchen or in the tiny back yard, Grandda would re-enact Hobb’s strokes or Bradman’s cover drive; he would twist his fingers around the ball to show Victor how Hedley Verity gripped the missile before sending it on its spinning way down the pitch towards the chalk wickets on the coal bunker. And as the ball bounced back from the wall he would say “Hedley Verity – a true gentleman Victor and the finest left arm spinner you’d ever see, Victor....he’s another like yer Da though, he didn’t come back...buried in Italy now” - and for a few moments the old man would lapse into silence, remembering a different age and other loves.

And as the old man spoke Victor’s young mind understood; cricket gave Grandda comfort: the grace and controlled power of the players, the neatly clipped grass of the field, the meticulous, painstaking detail of his score book, the arcane routine of lunch and tea, the sound of the creaking roller on the pitch and the marking out of the boundary and popping creases, the ordered rituals of the game, the gentle applause and acknowledgement of merit, the clean whiteness of the kit. These were his escapes, his convalescence from the nightmares of his mind – the chaotic hell and filth of the Somme and the black desperation of the pit, the death of his son in battle – they took him to a better place, an ordered, sane and peaceful world where he felt safe and at home. Victor, only a child, understood for he had felt the same way.

The long summer days came and went and one Wednesday tea time as the three of them sat around the kitchen table Grandda spoke. “Tha needs to get off to bed early tonight Victor, tha’s got to be up early in’t  morning we’re off on a long trip”. Victor asked where they were going but Grandda and Grandma smiled and said nothing. The following morning Grandma roused Victor soon after dawn and he was packed off with Grandda who carried a shopping bag filled with flasks and sandwiches. They took the first bus into Newcastle and then the train and by 10 o’clock they were walking along crowded streets in Leeds. Grandda still would not tell the boy where they were going and whenever Victor asked the old man simply tapped his hearing aid and shook his head as if deaf. Victor knew that Grandda was feigning deafness but he said nothing and as they walked he realised that everyone seemed to be walking in the same direction. As the crowd grew thicker they came upon their destination and on the brick wall along which they stood in a long queue Victor read the words on the poster that was stuck to the wall: “4th Ashes Test England v Australia Thursday July 22 – Tuesday July 27 1948 Headingly Cricket Ground Leeds”. Headingly, Victor’s heart leapt, he had seen pictures, he had heard his Grandda talk with quiet reverence of Test Matches and especially the Ashes games. His Grandda had told him the story of the Ashes – the remains of stumps burned to ash and placed in a little urn – and how, ever since, the two greatest cricketing nations, the greatest players in the world, had fought over them. Victor looked up at his Grandda and in a whisper said “Is this Headingly Grandda, are we going to see a Test match?”. And the old man, his hearing miraculously recovered, looked down at the boy and smiling said “Aye bonny lad – tha’s here, and it looks like we’ve got a good day for it.”

Grandda was right; in glorious sun they sat on the boundary, Victor gazing in wonder at the velvet green pitch and the crowd, his eye eager to miss nothing. He watched, spellbound  as the two umpires walked out onto the pitch in their white coats and trilbies and then gently but officially placed the bails onto the tops of the wickets.  Like twenty thousand others he gazed in wonder, his eyes wide, and clapped with the rest of the great crowd as the mythical  Don Bradman led out the Australian team to field and when the England opening batsmen Cyril Washbrook and Len Hutton strode out onto the pitch carrying their bats like great mediaeval swords and Victor clapped even more; he sat mesmerised as Hutton and Washbrook punished the Australian bowlers and scurried between the wickets, their scores slowly mounting on the scoreboard in the midday sun. 

From the first bowl he sat awe struck, unable to drag his eyes away as the great Australian bowlers Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller, whose black and white pictures he has seen in his Grandda's books, hurled the ball so fast at the England batsmen that his eyes could not follow it; and he even, without thinking,  shouted “Owzat” and cheered when at last, mid way through the afternoon, the England captain Len Hutton’s wicket fell to a glorious catch by the greatest cricketer in the world “the Don” – Donald Bradman. Then, late in the afternoon and just before tea, Victor found himself rising to his feet, again without thinking and with 20000 others and the whole Australian team, too, clapping with a gentle fury as Cyril Washbrook  stood in the middle of the pitch, his bat raised and doffing his cap in acknowledgement, as the scoreboard showed 100 at the side of his name. How grown up Victor felt, to be standing with all the men showing their appreciation of a fine innings, and again, without thinking, he found himself shouting “Well played sir, a fine innings, sir”. And then he sat down again, Washbrook took guard and the mighty Australians, their baggy green caps pulled low over their faces to hide the late afternoon sun’s glare, settled into their fielding crouches ready to pounce on the smallest mistake that the great batsman might make. Throughout that long day Victor patiently wrote all the details of the scores down on the scorecard that his Grandda had bought him for a penny – each time he wrote he licked his pencil as he had seen his Grandda do - and as he wrote he marvelled at the list of names on the card: Bradman, Miller, Hutton, Lindwall, Edrich, Bedser, Compton, Evans, Laker, Loxton, Washbrook....... a magical cricketing who’s who of names that Victor had learned over that summer and who he could see now on the pitch or sitting outside the dressing room waiting to enter the field of play. Victor turned and looked at the old man sitting beside him; he could see his Grandda’s rheumy eyes glorying in what was unfolding and of what his memory was recalling and Victor stretched out and clasped the old man’s hand and smiled at him. The old man looked down at Victor and smiled and taking the grey cap from his head placed it on Victor’s. The boy took the cap off and looked at it, he knew the cap was important to the old man, and when he looked inside he knew why – along the leather band running around the inside edge of the cap, neatly written in black was written “Harry Chapman Pegwood CC”. It was Victor’s dad’s cap; the boy ran his fingers along the writing uncertain what to do or say, it was another time to be silent and say nothing, so he put the cap on his head and squeezed his Grandda’s hand again and turned to the cricket. And the old man smiled.
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Victor slept soundly, his capped head resting on Grandda, on the train going back to Newcastle. His dreams were of great cricketing deeds, of standing like Cyril Washbrook,  with his bat raised in acknowledgement of the crowd’s applause and of men saying “Well done Victor, fine innings young man” as he walked back to the pavilion at end of play, doffing his grey cricketer’s cap to the applause.
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And the summer slowly drew to a close.  Victor’s new school clothes hung in his bedroom, his Da’s old room.  He had already made one or two friends with other local boys who came to watch the cricket and they all knew that he was the grandson of Mr Chapman the scorer at the club so despite his East End accent he was accorded respect amongst these miners’ sons.  August turned to September, and as summer’s green and blue turned to autumn reds and golds Victor and his Grandda would walk together across the moors above the village, the pit below them, its great wheels turning. As they walked rarely a word was spoken, they ambled along each wearing a grey cap – Grandda had bought a new one for Victor and along the inside edge was written in black ink “Victor Chapman Pegwood CC”. Over the long cricket filled weeks of that long summer Victor’s stammer had almost disappeared and the old man no longer fiddled with his hearing aid, it seemed less important to him now, the rattling guns, the mind splitting bombs and demons of a life in the pit calmed if not silenced. Talk was unnecessary in the bond that had developed between the boy and the old man; like birds no longer wounded they fluttered and flew in unison, singing together when the feeling took them, happy in each other’s company: the boy dreaming of one day walking out bat, in hand at Headingly or Lords and the old man, his hopes and dreams rekindled, seeing in his mind’s eye, a grandson fulfilling that lost dream so long held for his own lost son.


Tony Beale: December 2017

Sunday, 29 October 2017

It's All In Shakespeare!

I love this clever reminder from theatre critic Bernard Levin of all the words and phrases that have become part of our language and national (and international) conscientiousness - all of which were first penned by the Bard, William Shakespeare

SHAKESPEARE
“If you cannot understand my argument, and declare "It's Greek to me'', you are quoting Shakespeare; if you claim to be more sinned against than sinning, you are quoting Shakespeare; if you recall your salad days, you are quoting Shakespeare; if you act more in sorrow than in anger; if your wish is farther to the thought; if your lost property has vanished into thin air, you are quoting Shakespeare; if you have ever refused to budge an inch or suffered from green-eyed jealousy, if you have played fast and loose, if you have ever been tongue-tied, a tower of strength, hoodwinked or in a pickle, if you have knitted your brows, made a virtue of necessity, insisted on fair play, slept not one wink, stood on ceremony, danced attendance (on your lord and master), laughed yourself into stitches, had short shrift, cold comfort or too much of a good thing, if you have seen better days or lived in a fool's paradise -why, be that as it may, the more fool you, for it is a foregone conclusion that you are (as good luck would have it) quoting Shakespeare; if you think it is early days and clear out bag and baggage, if you think it is high time and that that is the long and short of it, if you believe that the game is up and that truth will out even if it involves your own flesh and blood, if you lie low till the crack of doom because you suspect foul play, if you have your teeth set on edge (at one fell swoop) without rhyme or reason, then - to give the devil his due - if the truth were known (for surely you have a tongue in your head) you are quoting Shakespeare; even if you bid me good riddance and send me packing, if you wish I was dead as a doornail, if you think I am an eyesore, a laughing stock, the devil incarnate, a stony-hearted villain, bloody-minded or a blinking idiot, then - by Jove! O Lord! Tut tut! For goodness' sake! What the dickens! But me no buts! - it is all one to me, for you are quoting Shakespeare.”

Bernard Levin

Friday, 27 October 2017

Worth Every Penny

Memories of a long ago day and its unsuspected impact upon my life

Spring 1958: He had stood for several minutes in the late afternoon sun gazing intently into the shop window. Had any passer-by or keen observer of humanity taken note they would have known that it was not the first time that day that he had stood there. The money, saved from the few shillings earned each week from his seven days a week newspaper delivery rounds at Joe Unsworth’s newspaper shop in New Hall Lane, Preston or coaxed  from his mother, his auntie and his uncle was almost burning a hole in his pocket so keen was it to be spent.  And if any passing shopper had stopped to look and had followed the boy’s gaze they would have known at once the objects of his interest. The boy, however, was oblivious to passing shoppers, his eyes, heart and mind were solely concentrated upon the objects of his desire in the shop window.

The side window of H. Seed’s Hardware shop in New Hall Lane, was filled with fishing tackle – every item (and a few more besides) that one might ever associate with the gentle sport (some say “art”) of angling: rods, floats, reels, hooks, ledgers, line, nets; the boy’s eyes took in the cornucopia squashed behind the plate glass but his eyes kept returning to the green, red handled rod labelled “Special Offer”. The label informed the boy that the nine foot telescopic metal rod was made from the rust proof metal of an American Sherman tank aerial and that these telescopic rods were “all the rage” amongst the anglers of far off America. And the price? – a snip at £1/7/6.

The boy again did the calculation – rod £1/7/6, reel, 12/6, floats line hooks and lead shot about 9/0, bait tin 1/6, child’s river licence 7/6 and Lancaster Canal licence 5/-..............£4/3/0! He had plenty with the £5/0/0 that was positively straining to burst out of his pocket to be spent in Mr Seed’s small but magical emporium. At last, his decision made, he walked in through the open door, past the step ladders for sale and the stacked tins of paint and twenty minutes later, his pocket almost empty of his savings, the boy left the shop clutching his purchases and made his way back to the little terraced house in Caroline Street.

July  2017: That visit to Mr Seed’s – the first of many – I still recall with absolute clarity. I still remember him passing the rod and me trying to look knowledgeable as I weighed it in my hands. I can recall him advising me which types of float and what strength of line I would find best, what the most useful sizes of hooks were and how I should tie the line. As I stood in the tiny shop crammed with mops, buckets, hammers and screws, my nose taking in the smell of paraffin, firelighters, candles and furniture polish I remember him asking if I intended to fish in the River Ribble?  As the Ribble was only a 20 minute walk up New Hall Lane and then down Brockholes Brow the answer was yes – so he suggested that I might need some ledgers as they were the best thing to use in that fast flowing and current filled river. Needless to say I spent another couple of bob and came out with a range of ledgers! And finally, I watched him completing the paperwork on the two licenses that I needed – my full name, address, his signature, and an official stamp - his flowing hand seeming to my young eyes to be the very epitome of officialdom and importance. I felt that I had joined an exclusive club!

It was the start of a love affair which lasted throughout my teenage years. Several of my friends were keen anglers and I was desperate to join them. As the months passed my knowledge, my fishing tackle and my trips to the waterside built up, and with my friends Mick Cunliffe, Bas Laycock and, my best friend, Tony Clarkson (who lived a few doors away from me and went under the nickname Nebber, because of the flat cap he always wore) I journeyed by bus far and wide in the search for that elusive giant of the deep. Despite all my efforts, my reading of the Angling Times and my slowly improving skills, however, the dreamed of submarine monster never took pity on my hook! It was rare that we returned home without having caught anything but in reality what we caught was rarely more than a few tiddlers. Size, however, didn’t matter! Something deep inside stirred my soul as I watched the float drift in the current or squeezed my eyes together to concentrate upon the end of the rod, waiting for the merest tremble to indicate that some bright finned leviathan was feasting upon my maggot, worm or bit of cheese sandwich! It was the same feeling that primeval hunters must have experienced as they tracked ancient beasts with their spears and stones – and throughout each school day or each week my mind was driven by that ancient hunting instinct; I couldn’t wait to be free to indulge my instincts and seek out the giant fish that was waiting to surrender itself to my skills! Every time I walked down Brockholes Brow or caught the Ribble bus to Brock my optimism knew no bounds – I was bound to catch something that would put me on the front page of next week’s Angling Times. But hours later as I packed my gear away on the river of canal bank, my maggot tin empty and no silver finned monster in my keep net, only a few little perch or roach or minnows to return to the water I was never disappointed – it merely confirmed to me that the next expedition would be the one when my undoubted angling skills would be proved! I was nothing if not an optimist!

And now, sixty years on as I look back and think of the few pounds that I spent that evening it seems, as each year passes, to be worth every penny.  I didn’t just buy a fishing road and few bits of tackle that night. Nor did I buy a few years of pleasant activity. Unknowingly, that evening I bought a treasure trove of memories, a passage to adult hood and, ultimately, a bond with my father.

I spent innumerable hours sitting, rain or shine, on the banks of the Lancaster Canal or the River Ribble. I would catch the Ribble bus to Brock and sit all day in the rain on the bank of the Lancaster Canal or in the school holidays I would travel further – to Garstang. A family relation was the village doctor in Garstang – Doctor Jackson – and he lived at the surgery there. His house backed onto the River Wyre, his land running down to the banks of the river and he had fishing rights so I would spend days there feeling very privileged to fish this well known trout stream. I rarely caught anything of note but have many happy memories of long summer days spent in the shade of the trees watching my float swim in the current waiting for that twitch of a bite.

I well remember on day at secondary school (Fishwick Secondary Modern) when I was about 14 when my school work and my hobby became one! Each week we boys went off for either a woodwork or metalwork lesson. I had little skill in either of these areas and so envied one of my friends, Les Churchman, who seemed to be able to produce glorious pieces of woodwork or metal work like some guild master craftsman; Les’ tenon joints fitted together perfectly, mine fell hopelessly apart no matter how much wood glue I stuffed in the joint. Mr Miller, the woodwork teacher would walk past my bench and shake his head in bewilderment at my efforts. I was a little better in metalwork and one day the teacher, a kind, gentle man named Mr Leach told us that we were going to use the forge, to bend metal and join pieces of metal together. We could choose what we wanted to make and he made a few suggestions – one of which was a fishing rod rest! My heart leapt, I didn’t have a rod rest and I knew that I would make the best rod rest that had ever been produced!!

My dad made me a tackle box so that I could carry my gear and had somewhere to sit and Nebber and I would often go off with Ron, the local chip shop owner. Ron’s shop was on New Hall Lane near the end of my street and just a couple of blocks away from Mr Seed’s hardware shop. When I looked on Google maps recently I see that it is now Harvey’s fish & chip shop, so the trade lives on half a century later! Ron was a keen salmon fisherman and after he closed the shop late on Saturday night or during the school holidays we would speed off in his car to arrive in the early hours at the River Lune near Lancaster or Tebay. Ron was an expert and it was rare not to come back with a salmon or a few trout that he had caught. Nebber and I might get lucky and bring a couple of trout home but it was the excitement of staying out all night and doing this “man thing” that was the draw! I still smile when I recall how once we all three hid in the moonlit bushes on the riverbank when the inspector came along checking fishing permits – which we didn’t have! Ron had a large salmon hidden beneath his coat as we, poachers all three, crouched unmoving in the moonlight until the inspector passed! Then salmon disappeared into the boot of Ron’s old Ford Consul.

In Preston the anglers’ shop was Calderbank’s, tucked away in Moor Lane just outside the town centre. So, wanting a new rod more suited to my burgeoning skills, I decided, when I was about 15, to make the trip to this mythical anglers’ Mecca. One Saturday morning I stood outside looking at the treasures, my eyes huge at the beautiful kit on display – this was a definite step up from Mr Seed’s general hardware shop! All the labels and price tags beautifully written in a copperplate hand and, to my amazement, all prices were in shillings – no pound signs used! I could see rods that my maths told me might cost £15/0/0 – a fortune to me - but the price would be marked as 300/-. Clearly, this was the Harrod’s of the angling world where only the angling elite ventured; just the place for me, I had no doubts!  Clutching my few pounds I opened the shop door – the name over the door told me that the proprietor was one Cyril Calderbank – and stepped into this Aladdin’s Cave. I stood, my fingers running along the beautifully varnished rods, my eyes admiring the delicately whipped and richly coloured trout and salmon flies – truly an angling wonderland! Then a movement behind the counter and a quiet “Can I help you?”.........and to my complete amazement, and no little horror, there stood my Technical Drawing teacher from Fishwick Secondary School, Mr Calderbank.

Highly embarrassed, I managed a stumbling “Oh, Hello Sir” and tried to explain what I wanted, the words tumbling over themselves as my tongue failed to keep pace with my spinning brain. It had never occurred to me that Mr Calderbank was the Cyril Calderbank.  Although I had long known that his name was Cyril I had never put two and two together and arrived at the requisite four! What a tale I would tell when I got to school on Monday morning! Mr Calderbank, however, soon put me at my ease and kindly showed me the rods that I might be able to afford and explained the benefits of each – and from that day on I became one of his regulars. From that point hardly a Tech Drawing lesson went by without a whispered aside from him as I left the room at the end of a lesson: “Where are you off to this weekend Beale?” or “Have any luck at the weekend?”. Fortunately, I had a talent for technical drawing and when I left school and took a job as a trainee draughtsman in a local drawing office: Mr Calderbank was one of my referees.  Whenever I visited his shop, he would ask me about my work and the night school courses that I was attending to gain my ONC. One day when I was about two years into my new career he invited me back to school to talk to the boys who were about to leave to tell them about my work and what it might offer them. As I stood in front of that class of boys in Mr Calderbank’s room telling them of my life as a trainee draughtsman I really felt as if I was moving up in the world. Little did I know then that in a few years time I would change career and spend the rest of my working life standing in front of classes of children as a teacher.

 And still today, as then, I like to believe that it was my fishing hobby that somehow gave me that first little chance, and helped me to enlist the support of Mr Calderbank in getting my first job. But there was more: the gentle art gave me something else – something very personal and very much in my thoughts in recent months.

In my office and behind me as I write, sits an urn containing my father’s ashes. Since they came into my possession I have pondered long and hard what to do with them. There are a number of options but one that keeps returning is Dinkley, a remote and beautiful area popular with local fisherman on the edge of the Trough of Bowland  between Preston and Blackburn.  The upper reaches of the Ribble flow there and as my teenage interest in fishing grew my dad, slowly became part of it. He bought a cheap rod and a few bits of tackle and on summer evenings when he was not on the road in his lorry we two, often with Nebber, would take the half hour drive to Dinkley. For me this became an increasingly important part of my life. I had had few opportunities to do things with my dad and in all honesty our home was often filled with arguments mostly inspired by my mother who, sadly, I knew was not the easiest of women. So this time with my dad was important and although we rarely caught anything of note it was, I think, hugely enjoyable for both of us. For dad it was an opportunity to have a few cigarettes while my mother was not present – she had been a smoker all her life but had given up and was pressuring (nagging!) dad to do the same, so a couple of hours on the river bank was an opportunity for him to catch up with his “fix”. I, of course, was sworn to secrecy and again, this was important – having a secret with my dad was, I suppose, a growing up thing, a man thing. These trips were events for which I will be forever grateful. In a small way they made up for the many nights when, as a long distance lorry driver, dad had been away on the road and I had listened to my mother’s continual criticism of him.  In modern terms I suppose we might call it bonding. Today, they are treasured memories and for that reason alone I think my dad’s ashes will be scattered one day at Dinkley. 

When I left home as a twenty one year old to attend teacher training college in Nottingham my love affair with fishing gradually waned. The rods and tackle lay dormant until my own son and I went to try our luck but slowly life moved on. It was not, however, in vain.  Still today if we walk along a river bank or pass an angler sitting there with today’s hi-tec gear my heart beats a little faster.  I cannot stop myself from peering into his keep net to see what he has caught, I cannot pass without again feeling that primeval twinge of excitement as I see his float drift and he waits, still, concentrating, looking for that little tremble or dip of the float. The old instincts are still there and in recent months the old memories have, with my possession of my father’s ashes, been stirred. I could never have imagined that the few pounds that I spent in Seed’s hardware shop that spring tea time in 1958 would still be very much a part of me, instrumental in making me what I am today...........they were, undoubtedly, worth every penny - and more!

Tony Beale