I chose a place next to the wall. I could lean my bare arm
on the tiles for some cooling respite from the heat of the afternoon. The
scuffed, well-worn desk reminded me of school. I put two spare pens, facing the
same way, in the groove next to the empty ink-well. The hinged lid lifted
easily. Well, I couldn’t resist. Who would, faced with such nostalgia? It was
empty, as expected. Inside, it smelt of a classroom freshly cleansed with that
disinfected brown sawdust sometimes used on floors. Eric Wright, form 3 alpha
had this desk in 1959, according to the neatly scratched detail on the
underside of the lid. Initials in a heart shape had been obliterated with red
ink, or paint. Identity lost forever.
It was almost time. The room had filled up. A couple of
desks at the front remained empty. I read and re-read the exam rules on the blackboard.
Papers were given out and we had reading time. I was relieved to see the
question I had hoped for. My answer to that question covered everything and
amounted to two and a half sides of A4 and earned me top marks in a mock exam. I
knew it word for word, including a four line quote. Apprehension began to melt
as I allowed myself a tiny hint of confidence.
Time to begin. I held my favourite Parker pen with a new,
fine-point refill, poised to start with my well-versed question, only I couldn’t.
The answer had gone, almost every part of it, like something had erased it from
my memory, paragraph by careful paragraph. I couldn’t remember the quote beyond
the first word. Some self-counselling, deep breaths, don’t panic, answer
something else and come back to it, this is an exam paper, not the end of the
world.
I muddled through the exam. I managed other parts of it and
returned to ‘my question’ praying for my brain to bring my memory back. It didn’t.
I answered it in the best way I could, which proved to be enough as I passed
with a good grade.
That was more than forty years ago. I still can’t remember
that ‘perfect’ answer or the quote. I still have my mock exam papers showing the
marking of 100%, but even now I can’t bring myself to refresh my memory. The
blip didn’t hold me back.
Here’s something from Simon Armitage,
Paper Aeroplane
The man sitting next to me on the flight
was reading a blank book, keen eyespanning left to right across empty leaves, fingers
turning from one white space to the next.
Sometimes he’d nod agreeably or shake his head,
or painstakingly underline some invisible textwith red ink, or decorate the margin
with an exclamation mark or asterisk.
It was a hefty-looking tome, hand-stitched
but wordless front and back and down the spine.Coming in to land he laid the silver ribbon-marker
between two bare pages to save his place.
I was wearing noise-cancelling headphones
listening to fine-mist, when he leaned acrossand shouted, ‘Forgive the intrusion, but
would you sign this for me? I think it’s your best.’
Simon Armitage.
Thanks for reading, Pam x
3 comments:
Very good Pam - and another nice slice of Mr Armitage :-)
It's horrible when your brain just drains like that. Mine does it all the time these days!
I enjoyed this reminiscence. Thanks for the Simon Armitage poem too, very amusing.
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