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Wednesday, 1 July 2020

I wish I could live longer


I wish I could live longer


By Sujata Narang

I wish I could live, I wish I was alive.
I wish I had a longer life and had more time by my side.
It wasn’t that I wanted to travel across the world or
desired to make a world record of any kind.
I only wanted some years to cherish life, spend time with my little daughters and walk along for a few more miles.
Be there for them when they are off mood, cook my girls some ordinary food.
Wake them from bed, knot their hair and wave them off to school.
I wish I had some time to live.
My girls needed me and I needed them.
I wish I wasn’t only considered only a female
A unit capable of reproducing, specifically a male.
I wish I was strong enough, to stop the vicious trial of child rear.
I wish I had a longer life and had more time by my side.
I wish you could understand my girls needed their mother,
instead of a younger brother.
I wish I could have gathered some courage.
To save my soul experiencing the fierce rage.
I wish I had some time to live.
I wish I had a longer life and had more time by my side.

Here I lay my life, leaving behind desires unsatisfied.
Now that I am gone forever, I say the same prayer.
I wish my girls can have a better life.
And, I sincerely hope they live longer and have more time by their side
After giving birth to a girl child.
Copyright Sujata Narang

The Dark Half Chapter 4


The Dark Half Chapter 4

By Janet Baldey

ALEC 1953
He lay on his back in front of the fire. His skin felt hot, but he couldn’t be bothered to move.  Slowly, his lids closed, and he began to drift.  He could hear the background mumbling chant of his mother droning on and on, boring her hairdresser into a coma. “Natter, natter, natter”, he thought but, for a change, she wasn’t irritating him.  Nothing could stop his slow slide into sleep and even as the thought surfaced, it was snuffed out as he closed his eyes. His lips parted, and his breathing deepened and he was transported into a technicolour dream-world as he slipped into his favourite fantasy.  
         Mouth open, sweat streaming down his face, his muscular body pounded down the track as his tanned legs flew towards the finishing line - a narrow strip of luminous white stretching across a backdrop of brilliant green grass. Beyond the tape, a blur of pastel coloured shapes leapt in the air.
         “Alec…Alec…Alec….” As he drew nearer, the surf-like roar of the crowd deepened and screwing up his eyes, he caught a glimpse of his friends pogo-ing with excitement. As quick as a blink of an eyelid, he turned his head and saw his rival, scarlet faced and desperate, a hair’s width behind him. “No chance,” Alec thought exultantly and lengthened his stride. The tape broke against his chest and the crowd surged towards him, slapping his back and deafening him with congratulations.
         A shutter-click later and he was slicing through the pool, drops of glittering water spraying from his cartwheeling arms. “One lap to go, one lap to go, one lap to go,” the mantra ran through his head as he forced himself on. Adrenaline coursed through his veins and he could almost feel the weight of the heavy gold cup as he raised it above his head in a salute to the crowd.
            A heavy hand shook his shoulder and in slow motion the image first rocked, shimmered, then disappeared.
         “Wake up, son. Yer too near the fire. Yer clothes are scorching. I can smell ‘em.”
         Alec opened his eyes to see his mother’s fleshy face looming above him. For a moment he lay motionless, relishing a tidal surge of white-hot hate. Dreams like that didn’t come very often. Why couldn’t she have left him in peace instead of dragging him back to his horrible life and this horrible room? 
          Rolling over, he first levered himself to a kneeling position then brought his good leg up and grasped the side of a chair, straightening his body until he was on his feet.   Crablike, he dragged himself towards the window seat.
         He took a moment to recover and then his eyes flicked to the clock. Almost four-thirty. Anna was late. Perhaps she’d been given another detention. He wriggled with glee as he thought about what he’d done. Clenching his fists, he pressed them against his lips to hide his smirk as his imagination played out the scene.
         “Anna.”
         His sister would have looked up to see her teacher’s crooked finger beckoning her forward. Miss Tutt’s face was expressionless but there were deep grooves running from nose to chin and her eyes were cold.
         “What’s happened here, Anna?  How am I supposed to mark this?” She’d slapped her hand against the open copybook and Anna would have gasped. The page was a ruined mess. Her essay, which she’d toiled over for hours, was almost totally illegible, the ink smeared and blotched as if it’d been dunked in water and smeared dry with a towel.
         “Anybody can have an accident, Anna. But you can’t turn in work like this. Can you give me a good reason why you didn’t re-write it?”  
Moments passed and Miss Tutt’s face hardened.
         “I’m waiting, Anna.”
         Alec imagined his sister’s mouth opening and closing as if she were a fish. Anna was so careless. Her reputation had followed her from primary school. There were so many times she was late because of missing plimsolls, library books or pencil cases, all of which she swore she’d packed in her schoolbag the night before.    
         “But I did Mum, honest.” The sound of her whiny, tear clotted voice had always made him feel sick and even the memory turned his stomach.
         Best of all, had been the money. His face brightened. Somehow, she’d managed to lose the cash for her longed-for school trip. Mum and Dad had saved up hard for that.   Even Dad had been angry with her that day.
         He wondered if Anna had guessed why she was so unlucky? If so, she’d kept very quiet about it. But then that was just like her, the snob. Always pretending she didn’t care. Well, she would in the end. He’d make sure of that.
           His eyes lit on something and he held his breath, a small figure was turning the corner heading towards the house.  He watched as it drooped along, shoulders slumped, feet dragging, regretting every step. He glanced towards his mother, her mouth was still moving, as it had been for the last hour. She hadn’t even noticed the time. He leant forward and rapped, three times, on the window with his knuckles, the sounds echoing like pistol shots through the fug of the room.
         The hairdresser started and dropped a perm curler. His mother slopped tea in her saucer.
         “Here she is, Mum. It’s Anna. She’s so late. I was worried in case she’d had an accident.”
         His mother’s head, covered in marching lines of pink and blue plastic, turned towards the window and then swivelled towards the clock. Her lips disappeared.
            “That young madam had better have a good explanation,” she muttered as she levered herself out of her chair.
***
         The strap of her leather satchel cut into her shoulder and she paused for a moment, running her finger under it, trying to lighten her load but the satchel was so heavy a few steps later she had to stop again. There was extra homework that night, it was part of her punishment and that meant extra books to carry. Her eyes started to fill and she blinked rapidly, determined not to cry again. If she went home looking like a pink-eyed rabbit there’d be no sympathy, just more questions. She licked a finger and rubbed it around her face to erase any trace of tears and took a deep and shaky breath.
In a determined effort not to think, she looked upwards, past the chimney pots with their plumes of smoke coiling into the air.  She was searching for Venus the first star of the evening and at last, she saw it, a tiny speck glittering in the sky. Hurriedly, she made a wish before any other stars appeared. “Star light, star bright, the first star I see tonight.  I wish I may, I wish I might, have the wish I make tonight.”  Then closing her eyes and pursing her lips, she blew her prayer heavenwards despite knowing that it wouldn’t be answered.  How could it be when the person she wished for had died two years before?
 To calm herself, she lowered her head and looked around, but the houses with their trim front gardens shimmered as her teeth chewed at her bottom lip.  
         “Oh Gran” and then she just couldn’t help herself. Sobbing helplessly, she slumped against a nearby wall and pressed her face against the cold brick that drained all warmth from her body. She remembered the very last time she’d seen her Gran.  She’d crept into the ward and there she was, lying in bed, her face almost as white as the starched linen, her hair spread about her head in a delicate explosion of thistledown.     Suddenly, her eyes had opened and found Anna. The faintest hint of rose had coloured her cheeks and her lips parted in an echo of her familiar smile.
         “My bird…” was all she’d said and Anna had flown into her arms.
         Afterwards, Anna had pulled away and looked at her. Gran’s flushed cheeks had made her eyes sparkle even, and Anna was sure she hadn’t imagined it, the one made of glass. Long ago her Gran had told her how she’d lost her eye.  
         “In those days, my love, we wore leather boots in the winter. They reached to well above our ankles and were tightly laced all the way up.  It always used to take ages to undo the blessed things and one day those dratted laces got into a knot. Try as I might, I couldn’t unpick it, so I went and got a fork from the kitchen. The next thing I knew was my mother screaming and passing out and me sitting there with a fork sticking out of my eye. They tried to save it, but there wasn’t any penicillin in those days.  It got infected so, in the end, they had to take it out…”  
         Ever since her Gran had one eye brown and the other hazel, but Anna still thought she was beautiful and she’d never looked more so than on that day.
         “Oh Gran, you do look pretty,” she’d said.
         Fascinated, she’d watched the wrinkles melt and caught a glimpse of Gran as a young girl.
         A week later she’d opened the front door to her mother who’d come clumping down the path, her legs moving slowly like a mechanical toy that needed winding.  
         “Yer Gran’s dead.” Her face expressionless, she’d pushed past Anna, dumped her bags in the kitchen and heaved herself upstairs.
         Anna hadn’t been allowed to go to the funeral. Instead, she’d sat through a geography double period listening to the dry rasp of Mr Wilkinson’s voice as he recited something about the Continental drift. The only thing that she ever remembered of that lesson was the hollow thud of soil landing on wood.
         With a determined effort, Anna pushed herself away from the wall and started to walk. The paving slabs were a maze of cracks and she remembered happier days when she was little and Dad used to take her to the sweetie shop at the end of the road for her weekly treat.
         “Remember, you turn into a toad if you step on crack…” Together, they’d hopped from square to square all the way down the road. She blinked, and felt her lips pull into a watery smile At least, she still had Dad. He’d never let anything bad happen to her.  
         As she walked up the path, the front door opened, and her mother appeared.  Without saying a word, she folded her arms across her chest and a slab of mottled flesh formed a barrier between them.
         “So, what’s yer excuse this time?  No, don’t tell me. You got kept in again, didn’t yer?”
         Anna felt her face stiffen as she locked eyes with her mother. With the slightest movement of her head, she nodded.
         “Well, it’s just not good enough my girl. What was it this time….gabbing in class was yer?”
         “No.”
         “Then what?”  
         Anna shrugged.  
         “Don’t look at me like that, you sulky little madam. You, my girl, are going to have to pull yer socks up. I don’t know what yer Dad is going to say.”
         Her mother sighed heavily, already losing interest.  She put her hand up and patted her curlers.
         “Well, I can’t waste any more time now. This neutraliser needs to come off otherwise me perm’ll be ruined. But don’t think you’ve heard the last of this. I’ll ‘ave a word with yer Dad later. Now come on, get inside and be nice to your brother. ‘E’s been worried sick about yer.”
         Anna doubted that but obediently followed her mother’s broad bulk into the house.
As Anna walked into the living room the smell of ammonia made her eyes water.  She blinked and rubbed them thinking if anyone noticed they were bloodshot, at least she’d have an excuse. She looked over to where her brother sat with the coiled stillness of something venomous about to strike. His eyes glowered as they met hers. He didn’t look worried, she thought. Not one bit. He looked wired. His skin, always sallow, had a dusky quality as if blood was storming through his veins and his body was tense.  She thought that if she dared reach out and touch him she’d get an electric shock.    
         Suddenly she felt sick as she realised why he was so agitated. He’d been listening to “The Story” again. She gritted her teeth until her jaw ached, then opened her eyes and looked around the room, trying to calm herself. The dull beige wallpaper with its vertical pattern of identical roses, the veneered teak coffee table, the maroon uncut moquette sofa, all reminded her of other afternoons just like this. The only thing that was new was the hairdresser, testing the curl in her mother’s hair by bouncing it on her palm. Anna had never seen her before. Usually, it was Mavis, a stocky no-nonsense Brummie, who Anna liked, chiefly because her flat adenoidal voice steamrollered over her mother’s. Ever since she was little, Mavis had done her mother’s hair. Anna remembered crayoning on the kitchen table when her feet couldn’t reach the floor, listening to Mavis in full flow, her flat vowels as familiar as the wallpaper. She was a part of her childhood. Perhaps she had retired. This girl was much younger with pale china blue eyes, slightly milky as if covered by an invisible filter and Anna realised that she’d switched off and the monotonous chant of her mother’s voice was falling on deaf ears.  As the hairdresser’s slim fingers deftly unclipped another roller and tossed it into a container to join the others, plastic meeting plastic with a dull clatter. Anna wondered at what point her sleepy eyes had sharpened as her mother started on “The Story”.
         “Course,” she would have said, “my Alec over there is a twin.  His sister’s still at school. She’ll be home soon.”
“Oh!  You’ve got twins.  How lovely. That’s what I always say to my boyfriend.   If we’re gonna have kids, I want twins. Get it all over and done with in one go.”
         “Yeah. Well be careful what you wish for. I had no idea. Everyone just assumed I was just having the one, even the doctors. It was a shock to everyone when he appeared.”  Anna imagined the sideways gesture of her head towards Alec.
         “Just as I was about to have a cup of tea and the midwife was packing up, I felt a Gawd Almighty pain down there and the next minute another brat had popped out.  Mind you, nobody thought he’d survive. Like a skinned rabbit he was. Turns out me girl had been hogging all the nourishment. She’d grown big and he’d been half starved. Plus, somehow, he’d got squashed underneath her. That’s why they didn’t notice ‘im and that’s why he’s like he is. Poor little bugger.”
         It would have been then that Alec would have been caught under the spotlight of the hairdresser’s stare and despite everything Anna felt a twinge of compassion as she imagined the girl taking in his withered leg and hunched body.  
         Anna didn’t dare look at him. She knew what he was thinking. “But it wasn’t my fault,” she pleaded soundlessly. “It really wasn’t.”

Copyright Janet Baldey


Tuesday, 30 June 2020

NUESTIA SENORA DE LA MERCEDES


NUESTIA SENORA DE LA MERCEDES

By Phillip Miller

The Odyssey dived into the blue in search of hidden treasure
It found a ship sunk years ago with gold, you could not measure.
Nuestia Senora de la Mercedes, went down in 1804,
Sunk by the British Navy, causing Spain to re-enter the war.

Six men leapt from that burning wreck before it slipped away,
Climbing aboard an old rowboat, they thought it their lucky day.
Under the cover of darkness, they drifted out of sight,
Unaware of what lay ahead, on that fatalistic night

They woke in the morning, the burning sun upon their faces
So made some lines to catch some food, from old belts and laces.
They fished at night and slept through the day, dreaming of freshwater.
Ten days passed, one went mad, swearing he’d seen his daughter.

He laughed and joked and started to fit, sadly the poor wretch died
They committed his body to the sea and the youngest sailor cried.
“We must be strong, Carlos my lad, or our maker we’ll surely meet”
“We’re  going to die anyway Sir, as there’s not enough to eat.”

“Tell you know, we’ll make a pact if you can get this round your head.
We’ll drink the blood and eat the flesh of any man that’s dead.”
“Be damned you, butcher, I’d rather die, than feast upon a mate.”
But, as the others agreed, for Carlos it was too late.

As he lay in the sun, with his face all burnt and chapped
The first in charge put his hands around his throat, choking him as he napped.
In came a storm, tossing them high, so under the water, they went.
Only three came up, and one smiled, as down to the depths he was sent

30 days passed till they spotted land and with the current riding them in.
They fell on the shore, looked up to the sky, thanking God for the strength within.
But something was wrong with this plush little isle, all was not as it seemed.
A dark native, with a spear in hand, looked down and broadly beamed.

“You are so thin, but I’ll tell my kin, and we’ll eat you for our tea
We’ll roast you with roots, and fresh bamboo shoots, you Devils from the sea.”
Trussed up like pigs and taken away, they were basted with oils and seeds
Covered in clay, except for their heads, which were wrapped in tasty seaweeds.

The fires burnt long and ever so slow, so painfully did they cook
Finally, they died, and out fell their eyes, swiftly gobbled up by a rook.
Their flesh was eaten and their bones were beaten against an old skin drum,
To ward off sea devils and please their God, washing them down with old Navy rum.

They say this tale is as old as the hills
But no trace has ever been found
Yet on an island across the seas
There stands a manmade mound

And in a cage upon that earth
Guarded by the village ladies
lies a tattooed drum inscribed
Nuestia Senora de la Mercedes.

Copyright Phillip Miller


SHIPS IN THE NIGHT


SHIPS IN THE NIGHT


By Bob French

It wasn’t until I had reached the winding path that led down to the edge of the pond in St James Park, that I realised it was raining; not the hard wintry rain that stung your face, but a fine drizzle that felt refreshing.  As I nonchalantly kicked aside the bright coloured autumn leaves that now littered the path, I became aware of the stillness that surrounded me. Over the tops of the tall majestic white buildings of the Foreign Office and Downing Street, Big Ben’s toll suddenly shattered the dawn silence.  It was six o’clock.
          The bench was wet, but it bothered little to me as I sat down and ponder my surroundings; the annoying flocks of noisy birds that constantly harassed the tourists for food had long since left for warmer climes; leaving behind the grey Canada Geese to face the winter alone; their honking echoing eerily in the early morning mist.  I had come here in search of peace and tranquillity; to try and calm down, sort my mind out after a demanding watch at Naval Operations Center, based in the lower basement of Admiralty Building. The war was going badly.
          The chill of the morning soon penetrated my damp uniform and as a feeble attempt to keep out the cold, folded my arms.  It was then that the lone figure of a man; a naval officer, caught my attention.  He had been sitting on a bench on the other side of the pond, about fifty yards up from where I sat.
          At first I ignored him and stared down at the still surface of the pond that reflected the beautiful backdrop of the trees in their full autumn glory and thought of the Wrens under my command who had outdone themselves during the last few weeks.  They were responsible for providing intelligence to the Royal Navy warships sent to protect the merchantmen on the Arctic convoys.
          I recalled that this last one had been particularly bad, loosing eight merchantmen on the way up to Murmansk and two on the return leg.  Thankfully no Royal Navy vessels were lost, though many had sustained considerable damage from enemy ships, aircraft and submarines.
          One ship in particular, HMS Ashanti, a Tribal class destroyer had engaged, then chased off the Eiger, a German pocket battleship; sunk her escort, the Minden, a light cruiser and destroyed two submarines, but not before taking a mauling herself. Although the admiral was please with the result he, like me and the rest of the watchkeepers were please that the Tirpitz had remained in her Fjord.
          I casually glanced across at the lone figure, who had now lent forward, burying his face in his hands.  He appeared to be shaking his head, probably blaming himself for something.  I contemplated going over to him, but thought that it would be inappropriate for me, a mere sub lieutenant in the WRENs to approach a captain, even though all I wanted to do was help.
          Suddenly he stood; thrust his hands deep into his pockets and started to pace up and down. My curiosity drew me to study him and his behaviour until he stopped and stared directly ahead of himself, as though he had come to a decision; turned and walked back towards Admiralty Building
          I suddenly found myself panicking as he approached me; do I ignore him or should I stand up and salute.  My eyes followed him until he was opposite me, then without thinking, stood and threw him one of my best salutes.  My actions must have caught his attention because he stopped and looked across at me, then smiled and returned my salute.  It was surreal.  We both stood there looking at each other in the middle of a cold and misty empty park. I noticed that he had bright blue eyes and his hair was starting to grey at the temples, yet he looked no older than I was, then I saw the bandaged hand.  His smile was infectious, but what moved me was the sadness in his eyes. He then gave a curt nod and was gone. 
          That night as I wrote to my parents, I found my concentration was being interrupted by my thoughts of those few minutes in the park this morning; trying to relive them; to capture as many details of him as possible.  I knew he was a three ring captain and he had a chest full of medal ribbons and he wore his cap at a rakish angle like a Destroyer captain, but my tired body soon surrendered to sleep and my letter home and thoughts of my mysterious Captain quickly faded from my memory.
          The following day I was briefing the watch when the admiral came in and caught my eye.  I quickly brought the briefing to a close, leaving my ratings to get back to their duties.
          “Sorry to interrupt your briefing Miss Mason, but we’re having some drinks aboard the Colchester this evening; Trafalgar Day and all that, and thought that you and your ratings might like to attend, they’ve certainly deserved it.  Please invite Lieutenant Corrington and her watch as well. Transport will leave from the south door at twenty hundred hours sharp.” 
          I thanked the admiral, who always took care of his own, particularly when there was a run ashore.  Within minutes tired minds and fatigue bodies had disappeared and everyone was talking about this evening.
          The Colchester was an old county class Cruiser, a relic from the Great War, yet still a potent weapon.  As I entered the Ward Room, expecting something similar to the cabins on modern ships, I was pleasantly surprised to find it not only spacious but comfortable.  Mandy Corrington, a Canadian WREN who had come over in 43 with her countries contingent had only just stepped inside the Ward Room when she was grasped by her arm by a Canadian pilot and dragged off.
          A cheeky faced mess steward approached me with a tray full of drinks and leant towards me and whispered.
          “The younger officers are over to your left mama.” I nodded my thanks and took a glass of something dark from his tray.  Before I could take a sip, an elderly Commodore extended his arm, inviting me into his circle and after the briefest of introduction, which got lost in the noise of the chatter and laughter surrounding me, he continued to reminisce about his time in battleships.        
          I took a sip of the warm liquid and felt the Pusser’s Rum slide down my throat and burn my stomach and secretly cursed myself for not eating at lunchtime. I then felt someone gently taking my elbow and steering me away from the circle of elderly admirals and Flag Officers. 
               “Do come and join us.  We’d rather you celebrate Trafalgar Day with those who are here to remember it, rather than those who took part in it.”  I smiled at the fresh faced young Midshipman, who must have been the same age as my younger brother, as we entered a circle of officers who were more my age and seemed much livelier.
               After he introduced the officers in the circle he extended his hand.
          “And my name is Timothy by the way.”  I took his warm hand and felt his insecurity and was pleased that I wasn’t the only one who felt nervous in such surroundings.  We chatted and laughed until I felt my elbow being eased away again.
               It was as I was joining the new circle that I looked across to my left and there, looking at me through the crowd, was the young captain I had seen in the park that morning. I smiled at him and he nodded, but then he had vanished as bodies moved across him like huge Atlantic waves that surged and moved, breaking our eye contact. 
          The circle was loud and quiet jolly as the three Navy flyers and an Army captain tried to recall who did what at the Battle of Trafalgar.  When the jokes started to get rude, I nodded my thanks and turned away.
          Before I had moved a few passes, a huge bearded RNR captain took my hand.
          “Hay lassie, we canna have you wandering around the Ward Room with an empty glass.”  Before I could object, he had swung me around into his circle of friends and another warm glass of rum was thrust into my hand.
          “Jock Mackintosh of the Ajax.” His huge hand covered mine and I felt the roughness of his style of living in it.
          “You dinna want to ken this bunch o’ pirates un blaggards young lady.”  His comment brought a robust cheer from the men in his circle.  As they quickly introduced themselves, I was surprised to see that not only were they were all captains but they all looked so young.  Then my eyes settled on my mysterious captain from the park. 
          He smiled and extended his hand and I felt its warmth and strength as I took it.
          “Jammie Buckingham of the Ashanti.  So glad you could come Lieutenant….?”
          I suddenly felt like a young schoolgirl on her first date; my mind went blank and felt my heart leap as I took in his blue eyes; his young boyish face and his smile.  The noise in the room seemed to fade into a muffled drone and I felt that we were the only two in the room.  I suddenly realised that I was staring at him.
          “Um, sorry Sir; sub Lieutenant Mason. Operations, Western Approaches at the Admiralty, Sir.” My duty station instantly brought a cheer from the group and I felt several of the officers slapping my back.  I heard the big Scot saying that they considered us as guardian angels, always watching over us, and I felt for the first time that my watch were appreciated.
          Jammie excused himself; gently took my elbow and nodded me towards the bar.
          “Do you fancy a real drink Miss Mason?  I somehow feel sure that the officers of your mess don’t go around drinking Pusser’s?” He spoke quietly with no real accent and it made me feel comfortable.
          “I’d murder a cup of tea if that’s alright Sir.”  He turned and smiled at me and I felt my heart leap again.
          “I think in such surroundings, we can dispense with the formalities.  You can call me Jammie, as long as I can call you…..?” He tilted his head as though demanding an answer.
          “Jennifer.” He nodded as though storing my name secretly away in his tormented mind.
          “Right then Jennifer, one cup of tea it is?”
          It was when he slid the tea across the bar towards me that I noticed his hand and recalled that when we had met in the park it had been bandaged.  There was a ugly red scar where he must have been hit by shrapnel and without thinking I took it gently in my hand.
          He seemed to stop and study my face. Then he spoke quietly and caringly so that only I could hear him.
          “It’s alright, I’m afraid such things go with the job.” I could see the pain in his eyes as though he was reliving the carnage and death on board his destroyer and instantly I wanted to hold him, cradle him from the dangers he selfishly faced daily in those bitter arctic waters.
          “You should really take care of yourself you know.” then felt myself blush as I looked up into his eyes and saw the happiness in them for the first time.
          “I shall try my best next time…for you.” He tilted his head and smiled.  I wanted to hold him close to me, never let him go and knew from the expression on his face he felt the same way.  It was then that I realised that I was still cradling his hand and went to remove it when he gently placed his hand upon mine and quietly said.
          “I promise Jennifer, just for you.”
          As we stood their staring at each other, the tall bearded Scott interrupted us, shattering our private moment.
          “Come on Jammie lad, it’s not every day you get a second bar to your Distinguished Service Cross.  Our hands remained in contact until, like a ship slipping her moorings, they gently drifted apart and he was gone, but I knew that I would see him again and prayed that it wouldn’t be too long.  

Copyright Bob French

Monday, 29 June 2020

These Thoughts

These Thoughts

by Shelley Miller
Copyright Shelley Miller

THE PHOTOGRAPH


THE PHOTOGRAPH ON THE MANTELPIECE       

by Richard Banks

It belonged to Granny Walker, my maternal grandmother, who claimed that it was a hand-me-down from a long-forgotten ancestor, in other words, a family heirloom. Ever since I can remember it had hung from a nail firmly embedded in the chimney breast of Granny’s parlour, a framed photograph of an unknown road empty of both traffic and people.
         Now she is no more.  Her downstairs maisonette had to be cleared of her possessions and those not considered to be of any use or value were unceremoniously consigned to a skip. Had the photograph been allowed to stay there until the following day it would have been collected by the skip man and never seen again.
         According to my father, that would have been no bad thing. What, he said, was the point of an old black and white photo when you can have something modern and in colour.
         My mother disagreed. It was a valuable antique, she insisted, a link with the past, part of our family history. Father, who was not in the best of moods, snorted his disapproval but reluctantly consented to its removal from the skip on the condition that it did not sully the walls of their 1960s semi. This did not, of course, exclude other walls including those of my new flat which is why a week later my mother arrived at my door with a home warming present that comprised a cheque for £50 and the photograph.

         “It would look so nice over there,” she said, pointing at an oblong of unfaded wallpaper previously shielded from the light of day by a picture or photograph hopefully better liked than the one being foisted on me. “Oh look!” mother continued with the enthusiasm of someone gripped by divine revelation, “there’s even a hook in the wall.”
         Although nothing was said that implied that the £50 was conditional on me accepting and displaying the photograph it seemed ungrateful to take one and not the other. Having inserted the cheque into my wallet I put the picture on the mantelpiece and departed to the kitchen to make a pot of tea. I returned to find mother attempting to hang the picture on the hook only to discover what I had already discovered, that the metal chain at its back had come adrift from one of its fastenings. I returned it to the mantelpiece promising to make the necessary repair but a month later it was still there, unfixed and unappreciated.
         I mean, I did try to like the photograph, after all, it was a family heirloom but what this view of an unfamiliar road had to do with my family was far from obvious. It was a grand sort of street, the kind you would expect to find at the centre of a large city but what it was called and where it was to be found were questions to which I had no answer. Another unanswered question was why the street was devoid of traffic and pedestrians; on what was obviously a warm, sunny day surely someone would have been about. Was this, I conjectured the view of an event rather than a street? But what could cause a city centre road to be so empty? As my curiosity grew my need for answers finally stirred me into action.
         On a wet Sunday afternoon, I completed my ironing and with nothing else to distract me examined the photograph in the light of my dining room window. If there were secrets to be found the photograph was keeping them well hidden, but then this was not entirely the fault of the photograph. After many years of coal fires in my grandmother’s parlour, the glass cover of the frame had acquired a grimy film that in time might have completely obscured the image behind it.
         Armed with a bottle of Windowlene and a jiffy cloth I set to with a vigour that in addition to removing some of the grime also parted one side of the wooden frame from the rest. My initial horror that I had irretrievably damaged my mother’s gift was soon replaced by the realisation that the damage could be made good by a single application of glue. All that was needed was the separation of frame from glass cover and backing, the insertion of said glue and the reassembling of the several parts. It was a blessing in disguise I told myself. Once the glass was free of the frame it would be so much easier to clean. And so it proved, but another blessing was soon to follow. Having removed the wooden backing, for the first time I saw the reverse side of the photograph and two of my questions were instantly answered. In dark blue ink was neatly written, ‘Me on the Boulevard Du Temple, Paris 15th of June 1838, the first man to be photographed’ There followed an exclamation mark and below this the writer’s name, ‘Frederick Hunter Ayling’.
         My heart skipped a beat. Ayling was granny’s maiden name. So this really was a family heirloom. But where was he? This was the picture of an empty street. With trembling fingers, I teased the photograph away from the glass and carefully turned it face up. If I expected to see the photograph transformed into one of my ancestor I was at once disappointed. Although now much clearer it was still that of a deserted street. For the best part of a minute, I stared at it taking in only what I already knew to be there, and then I saw it, a matchstick silhouette in the left foreground that had been rendered invisible by the smoke and dust of many years. A tall, slimly built man was standing at the pitch of a shoeshine boy, one foot on the platform provided the other firmly anchored to the pavement, an unremarkable scene made remarkable by the claim of my ancestor and the eerie solitude of the two persons there present.
         In the space of a few minutes my indifference, bordering on dislike for the photograph had been replaced by an eager determination to find out everything I could about my ancestor and the photograph that had captured his image.
         The research I undertook before the days of internet search engines was initially conducted at my local library which had a microfiche copy of the International Genealogy Index compiled by the Church of Latter Day Saints. While the index was by no means comprehensive it contained the event I most wanted to see - the baptism of Frederick Hunter Ayling at Holy Trinity Church, Clapham on the first of July 1816. In what seemed like a windfall of good fortune the same microfiche also recorded his marriage to an Elizabeth Badham in 1840 and the birth of a son, George Frederick, in 1842. After this, the Aylings featured only infrequently in the index with no obvious link to the persons already mentioned.
         My research shifted to the Family Record Centre then located in Finsbury near Sadlers Wells. Here were located the Victorian Census returns and the register of births, marriages and deaths began in 1837. Within a year I had discovered other landmark events in Frederick’s life, the births of three more children – two girls and a boy - the death of the second son, the addresses of their houses in Kennington and Camberwell and Frederick’s profession which in 1841 was described as a civil servant and in later censuses as a diplomat. The personnel records of the Foreign Office in the Public Record office yielded the additional information that in 1838 Frederick was working at the British Embassy in Paris. Between 1855 and 1857 and again in 1866 he was in Prague. Otherwise, he worked in Whitehall, no doubt commuting to his work across the Thames in a horse-drawn omnibus. Back at the Family Record Centre, I traced Frederick’s descendants through the male line until I came to the birth of Caroline Annie Ayling, my maternal grandmother - Granny Walker.
         So, Frederick was my great, great, great grandfather. That much was proven but what of his claim to be the first man to be photographed. Nothing at the Family Record Centre was going to tell me that but a friendly member of staff suggested that the Victoria and Albert Museum might be able to help.
         I arrived there with the photograph back in its frame intending to say nothing about Frederick’s claim which I reasoned would label me a crank. Instead, I asked what, if anything, they knew about the photograph - a photograph, I added, that had been in my family for many years. The young lady at reception knew nothing but on phoning their photography section a Mr Northcote consented to see me. He was, he later told me, only intending to give me ten minutes of his time. When I left at half-past four I had been in his company for over two hours.
         It is, he said, one of the earliest known photographs and in its way the most remarkable. Taken in 1838 by Louis Daguerre, it was reputedly the first photograph of a human being. The following year Daguerre demonstrated his photographic method to the French Academy of Science at which time he issued a limited number of prints. If this was one of them it would be a significant artefact of interest to collectors in this country and abroad. He asked if he could detach it from the frame and, on my consenting, immediately came across the notation made by my ancestor.
         “Is this true?” he asked, his voice rising several octaves.
         I told him what I knew, that my ancestor was a middle ranking civil servant who in 1838 was working at the British Embassy in Paris. What he looked like I had no idea. Even if I knew, the man in the photograph was too small and indistinct to be identified.
         “Would it be possible,” I asked, “to enlarge the photograph so as to produce a larger, clearer image of the man?”
         Mr Northcote smiled. “Yes, it’s been tried many times but the clarity, or rather the lack of it, remains the same. We will, I’m afraid, never know for certain the identity of the man but in the absence of any other contenders, your ancestor’s claim can never be disproved. Tell me, how old was he in 1838?”
         “Twenty-two,” I answered.
         “About the same age as yourself,” he said, “and every bit as tall and lean. What a pity we don’t know more.” For a few moments, he seemed lost in thought. “He must have enjoyed his time in Paris. Then, as now, it was one of the ‘go to’ places to visit. So much to see and do. In 1838 the Boulevard du Temple was at the centre of Parisian theatreland. Possibly your ancestor was on his way to a show when he stopped to have his shoes polished. Perhaps he had a young lady he was wanting to impress.”
         Mr Northcote seemed flustered by his flight of fancy. “I’m assuming, of course, that he wasn’t married.”
         I smiled and assured him that in 1838 my ancestor was a bachelor and would remain so for another two years. “Does the Boulevard du Temple still exist?” I asked.
         “Indeed it does, much changed of course but still, the busy, vibrant place that it was then.”
         “Busy?” I said. “But the photograph shows it to be almost deserted. It’s a bright, summer’s day but apart from the two persons in view there’s not a soul to be seen; the road should be full of horses and carriages, but it’s not.”
         “Oh, but I assure you they were there. You see the taking of a photograph then was not the work of a split second as it is today. Daguerre’s method required an exposure time of seven minutes.  Seven minutes for the light of day to register an image on the silver-surfaced plate that he used. Anyone or anything in motion would not have been in the same place long enough for an image to form. But the man having his shoes polished and the boy doing it were sufficiently still for them to appear. One wonders if the shoeshine boy knew anything about his moment in history; he, of course, was the first boy to be photographed. As for your ancestor, he was an employee of the Foreign Office and better informed than most about what was happening in Paris at that time. Perhaps he was at the Academy of Science when Daguerre announced his invention to the world, or maybe he just read about it in a newspaper. Either way, it was probably then that he put two and two together and identified himself as the man in the photograph. Let’s hope he made four. It’s a fascinating tale. Keep digging, sir, who knows what else you may discover.”
         I took his advice but, after my early success, new information proved difficult to find. Twenty-two years after my meeting with Mr Northcote there is no further evidence linking Frederick with the photograph.
         In 1879 after a long and successful career he retired from the Foreign Office having achieved the rank of Senior Principal. Frederick lived on for twelve more years. His grave can be found in Camberwell Cemetery at the foot of an imposing monument featuring an angel with outstretched wings and an inscription which, while listing his many virtues including truth and honesty, has nothing to say about photography.
         As for Daguerre’s photograph, it now hangs on my dining room wall beside one of my own showing Frederick’s inscription. They are my most treasured possessions. 


Copyright Richard Banks