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Thursday, 1 April 2021

John

 John

By Rob Kingston


 Sometimes you will see him wispy hair dishevelled,

His coat and cane both features of a previous man now shelved

His stories of which are many, are seldom of this date

His often quirky outburst you hear be it morning noon or late 

His spinning cane a vision, Charlie Chaplin springs to mind

It is but a feature he does use, not a walking cane or stick for pain

 

A shout, a loud laugh combined is how his outburst is best explained

It makes some jump and others laugh at his unannounced display

He brings a smile from most who greet him, upon his happy half mile

Rain or shine you'll see him here 

Sitting on benches or searching, though a gifted meal he’ll find

 

Some people appear concerned, others they just stare

But those who care to talk to him will find his world austere

A man walks up and down our town, a happy soul is he,

He has no concerns but comes across as someone who is needy

Or perhaps just missing a little social care.

 

© Robert Kingston 19.10.14

Wednesday, 31 March 2021

A sunny day in Rayleigh?



A sunny day in Rayleigh?


By Len Morgan



Well, here we all are in sunny Rayleigh. The rain is pelting down, there are no clouds in the sky, just a uniform grey blanket, as usual.

I sit beside the window of the street side café eating pies, mash, & liquor, sipping strong hot sweet tea out of a large china mug.

I watch the shoppers rushing by in their heavy raincoats, waterproof fleeces and fashion jackets. Umbrella's catch the wind, dragging and pushing their owners this way and t'other. I smile as a bus drives by, spraying puddles from the gutter in all directions. Pedestrians scattering in all directions, in vain.

The waitress collects my empty plate and delivers my pudding: jam roly-poly and custard. I order a second mug of tea; hopefully, there will be a break in the weather by the time I've finished it.

I look down at my ‘T-shirt’, shorts and flip-flops; the weather was fine when I left home, but wait what's this? The rain seems to be easing. Yes, I spy a sunbeam peeking shyly from between the clouds. I gulp down my last malingering, mouthful of tea and ask for the bill.

As I leave the café I look around me at all the rain-soaked shoppers and smile. The clouds have drifted away now and I'm bathed in sunshine. Can I believe my luck?

It's a sunny day in Rayleigh, "YES!" So, what did I come into town for? Ah, I know... "A bottle of factor30 sunscreen."


They call me a cockeyed Octopus. (As my Granddaughter would sing Ah South Pacific.)

Tuesday, 30 March 2021

SNOW WHITE - THE WAY IT WAS

 SNOW WHITE - THE WAY IT WAS 

 by Richard Banks


‘Let’s get one thing straight from the start, the Snow White story is fiction, the stuff of legend, forget it. If you want the truth, this is it, the way it really was. Believe me, I’m her mother.

      You look surprised, Mr Reporter. Well, don’t. Write this in your notebook:  I’m alive, there never was a wicked stepmother. As for Snow White, well, I mean, what kind of a name is that? Even in this crazy world who would call a kid Snow White? Well, it wasn’t me. Her name, her real name, is Flo White. If you want her full title it’s Florence Veronica White. Here’s her birth certificate. No, the father ain’t around; took off in 1931 after she set fire to the kitchen. No, I don’t blame him, should have taken off myself and let him raise the little hellcat. Who knows, he might have done a better job. Even so, things would never have happened the way they did but for that idiot photographer from the Southend Mirror. That was the start of it - saw Flo pulling up tulips in the park and took her picture.

      “What the hell are you doing?” I say. “Shouldn’t you be asking me first?” I thought if I made a big deal of it I could touch him for a few quid.

      “Calm down dear,” he replies. I nearly hit him. “Don’t you want your young lady to be in the Mirror?” I say she already has for breaking her probation order and I don’t want no more publicity, no thank you. But the man won’t take no for an answer, keeps rattling on about a competition the Mirror’s running called Teen Queen of Southend. “Fill out this form,” he says, “and she could win £100.”

      “For doing what?” I say. I give him one of my don’t mess with me looks and get ready to knee him in the breadbasket.

       “Look,” he says, “It’s all on the level. We publish her picture, along with all the other girls, and the cutest one wins.”  

      What is this man on, I thought? Flo doesn’t do cute. Can’t he see that? Well, whatever he saw, he certainly took a decent picture, and what do you know, Flo wins. Overnight she becomes a local celebrity. 1,000 people turn out to see her crowned and ten times that number watch her parade of honour go up and down the prom. People can’t get enough of her and the Mirror milks it for all it’s worth. ‘A NEW STAR IS BORN’ is one of their headlines. ‘ESSEX GIRL DESTINED FOR GREATNESS’ is another. Sales of the paper hit an all time high and now everyone in town wants a piece of the action. Scarcely a day goes by without her being asked to open a shop or appear in some club or other. It’s manic, but they’re paying big bucks, so why not, I think, after all she don’t get paid for turning up at school. The little minx loves every moment and, to my surprise, Flo does cute like she invented it, takes it to a whole new level. There’ll never be another one like her, that’s for sure.

      You’re looking puzzled Mr Reporter. What has all this got to do with Snow White? Is that what’s bothering you? Okay, let's cut to the chase, as they say. It’s a nickname, something the Mirror invented when they entered her for the Eastern Counties Belle of the Year contest. First of all, it was Snow Flo. Didn’t mind that too much, but when they change it to Snow White I phone up the Editor to complain.            

      “What are you doing to my girl’s name?” I say. “What’s wrong with Flo?”

      He didn’t pull his punches. “It ain’t showbiz,” he growls. “Think about it. Do you know any celebrities called Flo?”

      I had to admit, I didn’t.

      “Look,” he says, “trust me, it’s for the best, Snow White suits her. Haven’t you noticed how her skin is as delicate and white as snow?”

      “Of course it is,” I say, “yours would be too if you stayed up all night drinking vodka and pernod.” Why did I bother? Nothing I said was going to change things. They were in charge now, him and the Mirror, and didn’t they make the most of their little money spinner. On the day after she wins the Eastern Counties, they go into overdrive. ‘WHO’S THE FAIREST GIRL IN ALL THE LAND?’ asks the Mirror’s placards and the newspaper provides the answer, with blanket coverage down to page five.

      Life is now one big party for Flo and one she didn’t have to pay for. No wonder it got too much for her. I mean, she shipped enough booze to sink a battleship. With the Miss UK final coming up, the paper decides to book her into this place where she can dry out. No, it wasn’t me who arranged it. If it had been down to me I would have tied her to her bed and locked the door. On the day she’s due to be admitted I’m on holiday with Vince, my latest, so the Mirror has one of their reporters escort her to the Retreat, as they call it. The silly man didn’t have a clue, decides to change buses in Harold Wood and while he’s studying the timetable she does a runner into the local housing estate. By the time I get back, the paper’s going ballistic, the Miss UK contest is only two weeks away and their golden goose is nowhere to be seen.

      “Help us find her,” they demand.

      “Why should I?” I say. “You got yourself into this mess, you sort it out.”

      Eventually, we strike a deal and they agree to reimburse me for my not inconsiderable expenses should I find her. Two days later, the telephone rings and surprise, surprise it’s my little princess, all run out of money and asking for more. It turns out that she’s living in some dive with a guy she met in an off-licence and, what’s more, they’re in love and she’s not going back to Southend, no matter what. I pretend to go along with all this mush and arrange to meet her in The Wood. Yes, The Wood. No, I don’t mean Harold Wood, I mean The Wood in Harold Wood. It’s a pub. Yes I know it’s confusing, but that’s the way it was. Now do you want to hear the end of this story or don’t you? Okay then.

      Well I get there about midday and two Bloody Mary’s later in she comes with lover boy, who turns out to be a vertically restricted layabout by the name of Billy, except that she has all these pet names for him. One minute he’s Sleepy, the next Bashful and when he’s blowing his nose, he’s Sneezy. Were Happy and Dopey mentioned? Yes, them too, along with some others you’re probably not allowed to print. Anyway, I now have a problem. Billy’s mates are outside the pub and any hope I have of bundling Flo into a taxi and getting her back to Southend are dead and buried. So, it’s on to plan B. Has she, I say, tried an Apple Explosion?

      “What’s that?” she asks.

      “It’s the latest cocktail,” I say. “It’s all the rage; four parts cider, two of brandy and one each of rum and vodka.”    

      “Bring it on,” she squeals, so I go to the bar, order the wretched concoction and slip in a few pills for good measure. Figure that once she passes out I can get her into an ambulance and from there to Southend hospital.

      No, it wasn’t attempted murder! I don’t care what people think. Why should I try and kill my own daughter, when the newspaper’s paying me to find her alive? Of course, it makes sense. Now, where was I? Oh yes. Flo keels over, just like I thought she would, the ambulance arrives and off we go to the hospital, except that it’s Brentwood Hospital and not Southend. However, that’s not a problem because once she’s there I can phone the Mirror and they can come over and take charge like they always do. Even better, lover boy is clearly the worse for wear and hasn’t been allowed in the ambulance. So it’s all win-win and I’m on a nice little earner. Should have known it was too good to be true. Once she’s in the hospital she pukes over everything in sight and then goes limp, like a rag doll.

      “Give her a slap,” I yell, “that will bring her round,” but oh no, they rush her off to intensive care and inside five minutes she’s attached to more tubes and leads than you’ll find under the bonnet of a Mercedes Benz. By the time the newspaper guys arrive, she’s in a coma and no one knows when she will wake up again.

      “What the hell do we do now?” says the Editor, “it’s a week ’til Miss UK.” So they try everything they can think of to bring her back to life; they play her favourite music, have her visited by crooners, film stars and a faith healer from Clapham, but nothing they do makes any difference. The Miss UK contest comes and goes and the newspaper guys are in deep despair. Then one of them has an idea and they all cheer up.

      “What’s going on?” I ask. At first, they don’t want to tell me, but the next day the Editor says they’re going to set up this special clinic in Southend, just to make it easy for me to visit her. So like a fool I fill out the discharge form and a private ambulance takes her off to Southend, while I’m left to get the bus. By the time I catch up with them, Flo’s in this pavilion on the pier, and the Mirror’s charging everyone to come and gawp at her.

      At first, I’m hopping mad, but after they cut me in for ten per cent I see their point of view, maybe Flo does need sea air and a constant stream of well wishers. Anyway, that’s what we tell everyone and when visitor numbers increase to thirty thousand a day we all feel that the right decision has been made. Come August the queue to see her is two miles long, and, what with merchandising, we’re pulling in over twenty grand a week. Parenthood is a demanding business, Mr Reporter, but don’t let anyone tell you it’s over-rated. 

      For the first time in my life, I’m living the dream and when Disney sends a telegram saying he’s interested in buying the film rights to Flo’s story it seems that things can only get better. Then, overnight, it all goes bums up. Loverboy, Billy, appears on the scene and demands to see her, but we get Security to throw him off the end of the pier. Problem over, we think; unfortunately, it’s low tide. The same day, after we shut down for the night, the devious little ratbag breaks into the pavilion and, by morning, Flo is not only awake but grinning like a Cheshire Cat whose had more than cream for breakfast. When Billy’s solicitors arrive we decide that maybe he’s not quite so dumb after all, and we cut them both a piece of the action, providing he keeps his mouth shut and she acts like she’s still in a coma. But, oh no, I forgot, they’re in love. Not only that, but they’ve seen this film about Shangri-La, and think it’s a real place. All they want to do is go there and live forever in paradise, so if we give them a suitcase full of money, they’ll be on their way and won’t press the lawsuit they’re planning on taking.

      Well, what can we do? Not much, so we have them sign a legal agreement, with a confidentiality clause and smuggle them out of town in the back of a van. Disaster! total disaster! but not quite. The newspaper guys have another bright idea. “Okay,” they say, “we’ve lost the freak show but we still have the film company. If we can give them a happy ending they’re bound to buy the film rights.” So that’s what happens. The Mirror prints a special edition, with the sensational news that a love-smitten Prince, from a part of the world where they don’t have telephones, has woken up Snow White with a single kiss. It’s the whirlwind romance to end all whirlwind romances: he’s proposed, she’s accepted and they’ve gone off to this foreign place, where they’re bound to live happily ever after. The news is greeted with national rejoicing. Everyone and I mean everyone, is out on the street, waving flags and organising street parties, church bells are ringing and the Government, not to be left out of it, gives everyone a day off work. Best of all, the film company makes an offer for the film rights and after a negotiation or two, the deal is done. Two years later the film’s showing in the States and Disney’s first full length cartoon becomes a smash hit. Even after all these years, it’s still pulling in the punters. But then, if you’ve done your research you’ll know all that better than me.

      You’re quite right, Mr Reporter, the film isn’t much like the real story, but that’s Hollywood for you - who’s complaining? not me. Seventy-six years on, I’m the oldest millionaire in the country. Hooray for Hollywood, that’s what I say, who needs reality when you’ve got Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

      What did you say? What happened to Flo? Did I ever see her again? Well, that’s another story, an even longer one. Come back tomorrow and we’ll talk some more.’

 

Copyright Richard Banks

 

Monday, 29 March 2021

BOMB SITE


 BOMB SITE

 Peter Woodgate

Dust settles over the bones of buildings

as plimsoll’d feet pick their way

over the playground of mangled mortar,

scrambling over the shattered shells

of bomb-blasted homes.

 

Fingers fumble with the flotsam

found floating on the sea of destruction,

as vermin vanish down holes,

avoiding brick missiles,

hurled with energetic innocence,

from carefree youthfulness.

 

Laughter fills the air!

It is the sound of the future,

for the past lies silent,

buried by the bugs,

that fell, like whispers in the night.

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate 

Sunday, 28 March 2021

Uncle Bills Special Smile

 Uncle Bills Special Smile 

By Sis Unsworth


The days before the NHS, all those years ago,

it was difficult for many, that much we now know,

Dentists were expensive, not then used by the poor,

loose teeth or the toothache meant string tied to the door.

The open door was then slammed shut, the patients they would shout,

and hopefully offending teeth, with luck would be pulled out.

So, when the NHS was formed, it was a great relief,

No more would people suffer, with bad or loosened teeth

Many were quite desperate, and had all their teeth pulled out

“get yourself some false teeth,” you could hear them shout.

“Your teeth will all fall out sometime, and then where will you be?”

“The NHS may fail you know, so get them while they’re free,”

My uncle Bill did just that, and proudly walked about,

But every time he came back in, he always took them out.

A glass of water you would see, with uncles teeth inside.

But when he went down to the pub, he put them in with pride

I still can see in my mind's eye, although the years do pass

Uncle Billy’s new false teeth, smiling from the glass.

Copyright Sis Unsworth

Saturday, 27 March 2021

The Earring

 The Earring

By Janet Baldey


It’s just a cheap enamel earring.   An orange flower on a thin chain, but it’s pretty and when it had its mate, it was her favourite.   The second her eyes open it’s the first things she sees, glowing like polished copper against the grey morning light and looking lonely, hanging on a hook all by itself.  A sole earring is no use to anyone of course, and she should throw it out but she can’t bring herself to do that.   To her, it’s a symbol.  It reminds her of the joy of love and the pain of loss but also of hope and when that goes perhaps despair will take its place.

         It was a leaden, late January Wednesday, outside, the clouds spat rain and the windows were decorated with pearly beads.   But it was cosy in his bed, where they’d spent most of the afternoon.  Underneath the duvet she’d melted into him, her troubles forgotten, lost in the release only he could give her.  At last, all passion spent, he’d lifted his body and kneeled beside her.  His face was flushed, his eyes were tender and her heart throbbed with happiness as he grinned and winked.

         ‘Tea Madam?’

 With one swift movement he jumped out of bed,  his pale buttocks gleaming as he padded out of the bedroom door and ran, stark naked, down the stairs.  With a sigh, she stretched like a cat, luxuriating as she listened to him talking to himself.  It was a habit of his and she knew he was already composing phrases inside his head.

 

         As she dressed, she wondered where they’d spend the evening.  It always varied. If he had a deadline, they’d both write, he, on his article and she, on her novel.   Separate but together, they would compare notes afterwards, reading their work out loud.   If feeling flush, he might take her out for a meal.  The White Horse was their favourite and maybe their special table would be free.   Tucked into an alcove it was both secluded and with a wide view of the restaurant so they could see without being seen.  Or maybe, they’d go to another pub where, upstairs in a room watched over by skeletons, they’d mingle with like minded friends.     

It was only later, back home and getting ready for bed that she noticed her earring was missing.   With a small hiss of annoyance she searched her clothes and then the floor but all she found was dust.   She cast her mind back, she couldn’t quite remember but was sure she’d been wearing both of them when they’d made love earlier on.    

The next day, she sent him a message.   ‘Lost my earring – is it with you?’   

Got it’ was the reply ‘It’s by the side of my bed.   You’re going to have to come and get it!      

The bald type was no disguise and innuendo shone through the words.     

   But soon afterwards, her circumstances changed and their magic Wednesdays vanished like sun vaporised morning mist.  Now, they could manage only a few snatched meetings, unsatisfying to both and she sensed a rift widening. She knew his reputation.  He’d made no secret of it and on first counting up the numbers, she’d gasped.  

‘My god!  You go through women like a knife through butter – I didn’t realise you were such a love rat!’ 

‘I’m not.  Not really. I’m more of a love hamster.’  

 She’d laughed then, but at the time she hadn’t realised that hamsters have such very sharp teeth.   As the years passed she’d grown complacent, thinking that each one strengthened their bond, but ever so gradually, the text messages dwindled.   At last, goaded by insecurity, she asked the question. 

‘Do you want to end it?’   She was certain of the answer.  It would be, as it had been so many times before,     

‘Oh, God…no.’     

Instead, he sat slumped in his chair, staring at the floor and afterwards, she wished for a knife to cut out her tongue. 

‘You do, don’t you?’       

The brittle silence that followed was broken by a harsh sound coming from her own throat.     

‘Is there someone else?’ 

‘No’, he muttered, ‘no, there isn’t’.  Rising, he took her in his arms and held her as tears rained down her face. 

         Just before he left, she went into the bedroom and fished out a sweater from inside a drawer.

‘Before you go, you might as well take this. And don’t forget my earring?’
        

He looked at her and for a moment his face went blank.    

‘Do I have to?  I’ll miss it.  It looks good hanging beside my bed.  Let me keep it.  I’ll buy you another pair.’     

Her heart leaped but she didn’t let it show, instead she hardened her voice.

‘Why on earth would you want it?   As a trophy?’           

‘No…no.  Never…..  I promise.’        

She stared at him, not knowing whether to believe. She remembered occasions when she’d come across a necklace, a lipstick and yet another earring that she’d found down the side of his sofa.         

‘Must be my daughter’s.’ He’d said airily when she commented on them.      

She never got her earring back, or its replacement, and over the weeks felt comforted.   She liked to think of it hanging from his lampshade, light reflecting its tangerine shadow on his wall.   Most of all, she liked to think it was a part of her and if he wanted that, maybe he might want the rest one day.

But then summer came and heat shrivelled her hope.  She learned that he’d lied.  All along, there had been another woman, an acquaintance of hers.  One free to spend more time with him.  One who gloated of her conquest, not thinking to spare her feelings.  One who thought that her heartbreak at seven lost years as a stupid pettiness.  A widow, she said ‘I’ve suffered, so why shouldn’t you?’  That was her logic. A woman she used to like but now realises is as sweet as a snake hiding amongst bluebells. 

But this woman has a lot to learn.   She thinks she knows the truth but she has only scratched the surface.  It takes seven years to delve deep. Why, she probably believes it when he tells her she is the love of his life.             

People can only take so much.  Little by little fragile layers of dried tears are sealing the wound in her heart.  And as love creeps out of the window, realisation crawls through the door. In the days when they told each other everything, she learned of his childhood and suddenly everything is clear.   The fault doesn’t lie with her.  Its roots go deeper. All his life his affairs have been a quest for the love that should have been his birthright. 

Understanding that, she’s ready to ask for her earring again and when it arrives, not openly but pushed through her letterbox in stealth, she’ll marry it with its mate, lock it in a box and throw the past away.

        

Copyright Janet Baldey    

Friday, 26 March 2021

My Town Lyrics


 My Town Lyrics

By Len Morgan

It's my town, I'm not leaving 
least not while I'm still grieving. 
Here we grew our hair, 
learned to laugh and swim, 
Here we fell in love, 
then fell out again.

Warm fit lasses and brave lads, 
watch them turn into Mums and Dads 
where's the corner shop, 
the beat cop we knew, 
Here so much has changed 
those ten years, just flew.

But I really don't know,
which way should I go,
and it's hurting me so,
my town aint my town, any more.

Can't see where it's all leading, 
looking back and remembering 
The dark winter years 
when we all caught cold. 
I can see it now, 
play by play unfold

But I really don't know,
which way should I go,
and it's hurting me so,
my town aint my town, any more.

Time's a thief and it's stealing, 
all of those things I believe in 
All the mills are gone, 
friends, I see not one, 
sure as night meets day, 
seasons go that way.

(Refrain): 
But I really don't know,
which way should I go,
and it's hurting me so,
my town aint my town, any more.


I'm not finished with the chorus, it still doesn't seem right to me. My story has a man looking around and realising that everything has changed; through time. It doesn't seem like his town any more, he wants to know where all the old familiar places and people have gone. I need to incorporate that sense of change/loss into the refrain. Still a work in progress...