Yellow is the colour of sunshine, something there is so
little of in these bleak, January days. Thinking of yellow and sunshine brings
back treasured memories of my childhood and Nanna Hetty’s spotless, shiny
kitchen in her bungalow at Heald Green. Perhaps the cupboards were yellow, or
the Formica topped table, I’ll never remember, but the coffee pot with the
pointed handle definitely was. I don’t think for one moment it was a Clarice
Cliff, but whenever I see one it reminds me of Nanna’s sunny kitchen, her
delicious fruit cake and the perfect scrambled eggs she made for me.
I hope that sunshine isn’t too far away. It’s almost
impossible to imagine when it’s so cold, there’s scarce daylight from a dark
grey sky and everlasting rain. Dreich. And, there is still the Covid pandemic
hanging over us all.
Being surrounded by such doom and gloom at the moment, my
recent choice of television viewing, BBC 4’s The Victorian Slum could be
considered questionable. To give a brief outline, modern day families have
taken up the challenge of living in the slum building exactly as the Victorian
slum dwellers did, cramped in one room, two if it could be afforded and with
the most basic of facilities. The lucky ones who found daily unskilled work
could earn a meagre amount of money, every penny needed for rent and food. In
the beginning, it is 1860, moving along a decade with each episode, exploring
changes and differences and the hardship each family faces. Social history is
very much my thing, so I’m glued to it and at the same time, thankful that I’m
living now and not then. The only cheerful looking things were the artificial
flowers that the children were making to sell. Within the slum is a doss house,
somewhere to sleep, nothing more, for a penny or fourpence a night. The next
step down is the workhouse.
One thing leads to another so with my head full of slum life
in the 1860s I did some Google research on workhouses in the U.K. at that time.
I was instantly transported to Bristol workhouse to be horrified at how people
were treated so cruelly yet fascinated at what I was reading. The uniform for
unmarried, pregnant women was a red tunic style dress. Prostitutes wore yellow.
I smiled eager to share this snippet of information.
Don’t bother to tell me that’s how it was in all workhouses,
not just Bristol.
Dad’s favourite colour was yellow. His mother was my Nanna
Hetty, so maybe the colour yellow had significance. It was at Easter time when
he suddenly passed away. Daffodils in full bloom filled each side of the front
path that curved from the drive to the door. They became symbolic. Each year,
I plant daffodils in remembrance of him, making sure there are some rich yellow
ones. Some Tete-a-Tete are already in bud.
My poem,
I smoothed the cotton as I sat, and thought
Who wore this dress before me?
What became of her? Good fortune or death?
What happened to set her free?
Others were watching me, nudging, judging,
Nodding and whispering low.
My nervous hands gathered the threadbare skirt
As I glanced along the row.
Young women, not much older than children,
Some were dressed in washed-out red
With swollen bellies straining at the seams.
Those, the sinful un-wedded.
And me, I needed to feed my children
And pay the over-due rent.
There was no other way I could recoup
Money I shouldn’t have spent.
So I stood in the doorway, shoulders bare,
Brassing it out, being bold.
Closing my mind to demands of the men
While I shivered with the cold.
There’s no love lost in the Bristol Workhouse.
Pleading eyes, tear-stained faces
Cut no ice with those in authority
Looking down on the disgraced.
Downfall has brought me to sit here in a
Faded yellow dress of shame.
Of all the men who happily paid me,
No one even knew my name.
PMW 2021
Thanks for reading. Stay safe and keep well, Pam x
6 comments:
This made for compulsive reading...
H.M, HRH Laxmiben Hirani Poems From The Heart Books 1 & 2.
Real as life, poetic with its beauty, hardships, scenery, action, it is as a novel that you cannot put down....Happy Days just right to pick you up!
A lovely blog. For all our woes at the moment, who would want to turn the clock back 150 years?
Thank you for your lovely comments, very much appreciated 🙂
That's a fine blog, Pam. I enjoyed your poem which is beautifully written and has great emotional power. Bring on the daffodils :-)
What a great poem.
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