written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 October 2016

Things My Father Told Me

My Dad was born in Blackpool in 1914, the son of a small eccentric mother and a talented musician father.  He lived to be 83 and had a tale to tell about almost everything.  He was a story book with a long lifetime of experiences that he loved to share.  When I think about his tales, it reminds me of the television series 'Friends'.  I could tell you 'The one about Palm Toddy'; 'The one with the flying ants'; 'The one about beautiful Anglo-Indian women'; 'The one where he met and proposed to Dorothy Lamour'; 'The one where he sold a seagull to a holidaymaker on the promenade'; 'The one with the séance.'  There are so many stories and so little time.  I have recounted some of the best moments from my childhood in a series of short stories and hope to interest a publisher one day soon ...

My father was gregarious, good with his hands until late on in life when arthritis made dexterity difficult. He was a fixer: A fixer of things and people. Dad loved life and he wanted everyone to be happy. On Christmas day in 1973, the bar was open until 2pm and Mum was busy preparing lunch for our blossoming family, four of us, her and Dad, our new Sister in Law, my brother's girlfriend. As usual, she had cooked a very large bird. The table was set in the dining room of the 16th century pub, the tree was beautiful and the family were assembling for pre-dinner drinks.

Dad handed me a brown pay-packet and said, "I owe old Bert some money and I want you to take it round to his house before lunch." I ran round as fast I could. The man who I immediately recognised as 'old Bert' was not seasonally dressed when he opened the door. He was wearing his usual old, grey, long coat and dirty, old trousers. He left me standing at the open door and went inside, sat down at his table and drank soup from a bowl.  He was alone, there was no fire in the grate and no Christmas in the cold, damp house. I asked him where his wife Winnie was and he responded, "Back in Wesham." Wesham was the nearest psychiatric hospital.  I gave him the wage packet and went home. I cried all the way.

When I got back, Dad was still just seeing the last customers out before lunch. He asked me what was wrong and I blurted out what I had seen. Then he went into the kitchen and did something extraordinary.  He asked Mum not to serve lunch for half an hour, poured everyone a glass of wine and left. When he came back old Bert was with him, still in his dirty old clothes. He set a table for him and gave him a pint of beer.  That Christmas 'old Bert' shared our family meal and my father's love for me. 

My father told me many things but the most important things he taught me didn't need words.




You told me ...

You told me that leaves show their backs
when it is going to rain,
You told me that the Mackerel sky
brings high winds from the sea,
You told me in Australia,
water goes anti-clockwise down the drain,
You told me tales of India,
of maharajahs, Sikhs and Ghandi,
but you showed me everything I need to know.

You told me about Blackpool
and the value of fresh air,
You told me I should wash my feet
as often as my hands and face,
You told me there were times
when life would seem unfair,
You said some folk won't like me -
that's just the human race
but you showed me how to shrug it off and smile.

You told me that you loved my mother
from the moment that you met,
You told me that you loved her
until the day you died,
You told me that I must not live
a life filled with regret,
I loved that when you listened
to Debussy, that you cried,
I know that there were things you couldn't tell.

And I loved you for the things you didn't say as well.


Thanks for reading. Keep smiling. Adele

Thursday, 27 August 2015

Pennies from Heaven.


If you are living in a green place, filled with trees, verdant pastures and arable, productive farm land then you have been lucky enough to have enjoyed rain.  Lucky?  Oh yes people, you are the luckiest in the world.  Like the words of the song, “Every time it rains, it rains pennies from heaven.”  Without rain, we like many other people in arid locations, would have to mine water from underground. When I lived in Tenerife, the mined water was yellow, infused with sulphurous volcanic rock. We get ours straight from the sky, falling in great torrents into natural lakes, reservoirs, streams and mighty rivers.  

Our well watered land supports 65 million people. Imagine that.  65 million baths/showers a day and none of us had to walk five miles to get the water and bring it home. We just turn on the tap.  For many people in Africa, that would be a miracle but how we British love to moan! My Dad, (known to the family as Fearless Fred), spent five years in Burma and India during the war. We think we have rain, certainly we have a lot more in Summer time than we used to.  I always joke about English monsoon being the first two weeks in June but Dad spoke about monsoon as a gift to India. It brings the life that supports a vast population. Even though he lived mostly under canvas, sitting waist high in water, he still appreciated rain. He often said, “Britain has the best climate in the world…and the worst bloody weather!”
 
As a child, afraid, having been woken by a thumping great thunder storm, he sat me on his lap to watch the natural firework display until it dissipated. He told me a story about nature showing us that our own paltry attempts at putting on a show were nothing compared to the power of the earth. He explained the rules in the words of the song “…so if you hear it thunder don’t run under a tree" and "...make sure that your umbrella is upside down”.  The song is about optimism, not letting things get you down and above all appreciating the gift of life. He was a wonderful man. I miss him every day.  

I love vintage umbrellas and am the proud owner of two 1950’s beauties. They are a lot smaller than modern versions. One is a dainty monochrome, dog’s tooth design, the other tomato red and grey. They feel just right in the rain and I almost look forward to showery days so that I can use them.  I have a small face and fine curly hair.  If I wear a coat with a hood, I look like Hilda Ogden, so a lovely umbrella is essential to my happiness.  However ... 

I do love the heat. This year we have had a plethora of rain. I dug out a poem that reminds me of holidays.  I haven’t been able to get away for a couple of years.  This was written in Calpe, along the coast from Alicante in 2013. 
 
 
 

 

 
Beach Parade
 
Rows and rows of polka dot and pinstripe parasols,
parade along the sand, inside the bay.
Yellow, red and turquoise blue,
greens  of every tone and hue:
Vivid chess-board checks; diagonals in each and every way.
 
Bathers, shading from the heat, point naked feet,
on beach towels, strewn like postcards through the door.
Deep cerise with orange stripe,
lime and lemon,  citrus ripe.
Bodies dip and drip and dive from the rocks around the shore.
 
Children run and splash and scream, toddlers chuckle
as ice-cream, drips down elbows, pebbling on the sand.
Berry blush, banana cream,
choc-mint chip or strawberry dream,
wolfing down the Summer as it’s melting in their hand.
 
Roaring surf and silver spray, swirling currents ebb and sway,
Seagulls caw and soar across the blue,
Surfers ride with sun-kissed locks,
Time moves slowly round the clocks,
Music drifts and fades, siesta softly sleeps an hour… or two.
 
Our senses store the memories of holidays beside the sea,
We soak them up and poet them away,
Bronzing skin and sun-kissed hair,
baking sand in salt-filled air.
Sensations on a postcard: a place we can escape to on a cold, dark, rainy day.
 
 
 
Hope you get out there and enjoy the Bank Holiday - rain or shine!
Adele