Tuesday 27 September 2016

Royal conference






The truth must now be told about a secret royal conference that was held at Windsor Castle not long ago. The Queen had gathered a select coterie of royal predecessors and others to advise her on whether she should abdicate the throne.

“You see”, she said, “One is getting on a bit and one wonders whether it would not be better for one to pass the job on to another one, who for the sake of argument one could refer to as Two”.

“Och, you should be good for a few years yet”, said Macbeth. “You always look sturdy enough when you come to the Highland Games each year.”

“But that’s just the point”, said the Queen. “You always expect one to toss the first caber and one couldn’t get it further than five yards the last time one tried”.

“Maybe you’ve got a fair point there”, said Macbeth. “Perhaps hammer throwing is more in your line. I’ll invite Jeremy Corbyn next time to give you something to aim at.”

“But one is still thinking that maybe it’s time to step aside”, said Her Majesty. “Charles is always dropping subtle hints, like buying one a box set of ‘One’s Foot in the Grave’ for Christmas last year. One hasn’t forgotten the time he got one to open a retirement home and slashed the tyres on the royal car while one was busy cutting the ribbon. And you should hear the things he says when he thinks one has nodded off but is only pretending.”

“How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless child”, King Lear offered.

“Nicely put”, said the Queen. “One of your own little sayings?”

“William Shakespeare”, said King Lear. “You must have seen the play?”

“Probably”, said the Queen. “But one never takes much notice of the words. Philip’s usually rabbiting on about how much he fancies the actress who’s playing Cordelia.”

“You’re lucky being able to talk about abdicating”, said Richard II. “I got shoved aside to make way for Henry IV Part I”.

“And I, in turn, had to hand over to Henry IV Part 2”, said Henry IV Part 1.

“I’m so glad you did”, said Henry IV Part 2. “But spare a thought for our grandson over there, Henry VI, who ended up in three bits”.

“We’re here to talk about me”, said the Queen, a bit tetchily. “But one is glad you mentioned grandsons, because one is wondering about skipping a generation if and when one gives up. One is not sure that the country is ready for Charles, what with his strange ideas about tree-hugging and homeopathy, but everyone likes William, given his helicopter and everything.”

“What’s a helicopter?” asked Richard III.

“It’s a wonderful flying machine”, said the Queen. “It can pick one up anywhere so one can parachute into the Olympic Stadium, as one once did – that was not a stunt double one hastens to add – and Phillip loves it when William flies him over the moors near Balmoral so he can take pot shots at the deer and anti-blood sport protestors.”

“You know”, said Richard III, “a flying machine would have been so useful at Bosworth. I can see it now –

‘A helicopter, a helicopter, my kingdom for a helicopter’ – Henry Tudor wouldn’t have stood a chance if I’d been able to say that.”

“But that would have been impossible”, said the Queen.

“On the grounds that helicopters hadn’t been invented in 1485?” asked Richard.

“No”, said the Queen. “On the grounds that that line would have broken all the rules of blank verse – far too many syllables”.

“Anyway”, she went on. “This is getting one nowhere. One has nearly made up one’s mind, but one needs to be sure that one has a decent speech to hand when one makes one’s announcement to the nation.”

“You can borrow mine”, said Prospero. “When I abdicated rule of my island and returned to Milan I made quite an affecting speech about breaking my staff and drowning my book.  It’s one of the best things I ever said”.

“No way is one drowning any books”, said the Queen. “When one has finished one’s book it goes straight back to the library – the fines are outrageous if one doesn’t. And did you say something about breaking one’s staff?”

“I did indeed” said Prospero.

“Well that settles it”, said the Queen. “One’s staff are essential. One always needs people to polish one’s tiara and feed the corgis. If abdicating means breaking up one’s staff then one is not doing it. One has every intention of being gloriously happy for a good while longer, thank you all very much.”

And that is precisely what happened. Given that you weren’t there, how do you know otherwise?



© John Welford

Tuesday 20 September 2016

Haikus and tankas





The writing challenge was to compose a pair of poems on each of six themes, these being:

Theresa May; map reading; making tea; writing a poem; bird song; dog bite.

The poems had to be a haiku and a tanka. A haiku comprises three lines with syllable pattern 5-7-5 and a tanka is a five line poem with a 5-7-5-7-7 pattern. Rhyming is not allowed in either form.

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Theresa May

A Prime Minister
Should prime all her ministers
Theresa may not

Theresa, P M
Stood in the street and declaimed
About the future
Will she keep her promises?
Or will the future keep her?


Map reading

I once owned a book
Called “The Map That Came to Life”
And it always does

To get where you want
Forget the sat nav device
A spouse with a map
Will take you both to places
That may not even exist


Making tea

Teabags are so cool
But useless for making tea
Until hot and wet

“You’ve made it too strong
And you know I put milk in first”
It all goes to show
Making tea and making war
Can be hard to tell apart


Writing a poem

Rhyme, metre, rhythm
Weave special magic to show
The power of words

Heroic couplets
Iambic pentameters
Flowing, perfect rhymes
When complete the poet gets
Heroic satisfaction


Bird song

The birds’ dawn chorus
Shouts their wish to rise and shine
Hours before you do

The songs of the birds
May have hidden messages
Should you choose to hear
The woodpigeon says to me:
“Take two books with you, you dolt”


Dog bite

When the dog bit me
No way did I remember
My favourite things

A bitten finger
Six trips to the surgery
Stitches and dressings
Waits for nurses and buses
Gave lots of time to read books

--------------------------------

(And an extra tanka for good measure)


In the library

On library shelves
Opportunities await
For curious minds
Imaginations bleeding
Into brand new dimensions



© John Welford

Tuesday 13 September 2016

The Parting of the Ways



( For other pieces of creative writing by me, see Stories and Poems: an index to my blogs )

The Parting of the Ways

The track led steeply up the side of the South Downs towards a celebrated viewpoint at the top. Climbing the track were four people – the older couple were the parents of the female half of the younger married pair. The young marrieds did not have a car of their own, so when a parental weekend visit was made it was good to take advantage of the chance to visit a local beauty spot that would otherwise be difficult to reach.

It had been a fine summer’s day up till then, so they were dressed accordingly and had no protection against the sudden heavy shower that fell upon them as they plodded up the track. They were soon completely soaked to the skin, and a debate started as to what to do next.

“That’s it. We’re turning back” said the older man. However, the younger man was not so sure.

“Why?” he said. “What’s the point of sitting in a parked car, soaking wet and uncomfortable, when we might as well carry on up the hill and see what we came to see? We’re not going to get any wetter than we are already”.

“We’re turning back.” repeated the older man, and promptly did so.

The younger man carried on walking up the track, determined not to miss this rare opportunity to see a fine view and convinced that the shower would soon pass and they would not stay wet for long once the stiff warm breeze that blew over the Downs had got to work.

He was the only one of the four who continued to the top. His wife followed her parents back down the track.

As far as the view from the top was concerned, everything turned out just as he had expected. It was a wonderful view, enhanced by a splendid rainbow as the late afternoon Sun caught the retreating shower cloud passing into the distance above the ridge of the Downs. He stayed there for several minutes, completely dry as he had forecast, and he looked forward to telling the other three about what they had missed.

However, when he got back to where the car had been parked it was nowhere to be seen. They had not waited for him to return but had driven off, presumably as some sort of punishment for daring to contradict his in-laws.

He had no choice but to start walking the twelve miles back to his home, and it was therefore well into the evening before he reached his front door.

He had hardly stepped through it before the shouting started. How dare he be so stupid as not to follow the older man’s advice? He was clearly in the wrong, so why did he not accept this? If he was going to be so wrong about not knowing when to turn back in the rain, what other dangers would he attempt to lead their daughter into? Just what sort of husband was he?

He was too tired to argue, but not too tired to say a few things that, in retrospect, were probably better not said. Wounds were opened that were going to be very difficult to close.

As for his wife, she said absolutely nothing. Just like her mother, she faded into the background and let her father do all the talking.

And that was how the marriage proceeded during the months that followed. Whenever the young couple needed to make a decision, she never agreed anything with her husband if she thought that her parents would disapprove. Instead of talking things through with her husband she would get on the phone to see what they thought.

His in-laws were keen to give the young husband plenty of advice about how to put things right. “You need to work at your marriage” they said. But how could he, when every move he made had to be referred back to the court of Mum and Dad? Or - to be more accurate - the court of Dad?

The literal parting of the ways on the downland track was only one stage in the inevitable breakdown and the final parting. As long as the young woman saw herself as a daughter first and a wife second, what other conclusion could there be?

There was a final irony to their separation, when he came home one day to find that she had packed her bags and was ready to call a taxi to take her to the station. She would have gone already, but she didn’t know how to read the railway timetable. When it came down to it, she needed his help before she could leave him and go back to Mum and Dad.

( For other pieces of creative writing by me, see Stories and Poems: an index to my blogs )

© John Welford

Tuesday 6 September 2016

A helpful person




(The brief was to write a true story about something that happened to the writer when they were much younger than they are now)


A Helpful Person

When I finished my degree course at Bangor in 1974 I did not have a firm idea as to the career I wanted to follow. Librarianship was something that I was drawn towards, but I did not want to commit myself by going straight to library school as soon as I got my degree.

I took advantage of a scheme that was available for people in my position, which offered a year as a paid pre-qualification assistant at a university library. I therefore soon found myself at one of the largest and most prestigious such libraries in the country, namely that of the University of London.

The library occupies a large proportion of the Senate House, a 1930s Art Deco skyscraper building close to Russell Square and the British Museum. The building also contains the central administrative offices of the University, which is highly relevant to the story that follows.

My placement as a “student assistant librarian” involved spending time in a number of different departments so that I could get a good idea of the various things that a university library did. One such department was the main Reference reading room, in which the chief task was pointing students and staff towards the resources needed for answering specific questions. I have always enjoyed this aspect of library work, involving as it does a certain amount of detective activity in finding information derived from all sorts of places.

During quiet times in the Reference section I was asked to tackle the various puzzles that came our way in the post, often from overseas students and academics. The worldwide reputation of the University made it a target for all sorts of enquiry, some of which took the form of letters expecting us to write half of a student’s PhD thesis for them!

Some of the letters were due to the existence of a publishing firm that called itself the University of London Press, despite not having any formal connection with the University.  It was not a difficult matter to find out if the query related to something published by this company or by the University’s actual publishing arm, which was called something completely different! Incidentally, the ULP was eventually bought by the University of London, so this problem no longer arises.

I remember on one occasion finding a letter addressed to the “State University of London” that should have gone to the State University of Leiden in the Netherlands!

I must have been quite good at this particular job, because the librarians asked me to carry on doing it for an hour a day after I was supposed to have moved on to another department. That was why I found myself, one fine morning, sitting at a desk in the Reading Room with a bank of phones in front of me and a pile of queries to sort out.

One of these related to the fact that the University was – at that time – one of the organisations that set school exams at GCE O- and A-level. My own school qualification certificates were almost all issued by London University. The query was from someone who wanted to buy a set of past papers in a particular subject.

I therefore picked up the phone to call the Publications Department, which lurked somewhere else in that vast building, and so began an extraordinary episode of telephonic pass the parcel.

The first person I called was quite sure that they could not help, but – if I waited a moment – they would put me through to someone who could. That was OK by me, but the second person was also apparently not the one I wanted, and neither was the third.

The fourth person reckoned that this was a matter for the School Exams Department, so off I went again. The same happened in this department as in the previous one, with my call being passed around like a hand grenade with the pin already removed.

Eventually I spoke to someone who had every sympathy with my dilemma, although she did not have the answer I needed.

“Mind you”, she said, “When I get a question I can’t answer I usually try someone who nearly always comes up trumps. Wait a second and I’ll put you through.”

I waited a second. Another phone on my desk started ringing. I picked it up. “Hello”, I said.

I was talking to myself.



© John Welford