Wednesday 24 December 2014

ATLANTIC DEPRESSION



         We made the return journey from Canada to the UK by ship; the venerable Polish ‘Stephan Batory’, across a cold, grey, stormy Atlantic, following one great depression after another. Icebergs towered in the mouth of the St Lawrence, awesome and serenely majestic in the cold currents that swept down from the north but after that there was nothing but the mountainous swell, in grey days and black nights. Seven days without a glimpse of the sun and I’d loved every minute of it. I must have been the only one.
On the third day Anne and the children were languishing in their cabin, in abject misery, along with most of the rest of the passengers and I was starting to feel terribly guilty that I’d selfishly subjected them to this misery. I consoled myself with the fact that I wasn’t to know - that the weather could have been much better. The restaurant by then was nearly empty and they were running low on sick bags.
 One awful night the old engines broke down and we wallowed helplessly at the mercy of the elements, listening to the hollow clanks reverberating up from somewhere in the bowels of the hull for hours, before finally getting underway once more. I still preferred it to flying - I’d rather swim than fly.
 On the fourth night we were woken by a commotion in the corridor outside the cabin. It was two o clock in the morning and our bleary eyes were confronted with the bizarre sight of a funeral procession - a rolling, staggering funeral procession – banging from one side of the corridor to the other - uniformed officers of the Polish merchant fleet bearing a coffin with enormous dignity to the open deck at the rear. I watched in awe as they stood round the casket and conducted their moving ceremony, against that backdrop of heaving, malevolent, mountains of Atlantic swell, before sliding the flag shrouded casket into the black waters and casting their flowers and wreaths after it. For a moment, a small agitated garden of remembrance had danced in the elements before being swallowed up by the blackness. All I knew was that the deceased was an old Polish national, on his way home from the new world, one last time, to see his family. I wept with those people who gave me an insight into realms of pride and dignity that I’d rarely experienced before. They hadn’t needed to do that, but they’d done it just the same. Since that journey I’ve always loved the Poles, as inhabitants of a proud, courageous nation that is a credit to humanity. 
Before the end of the journey one or two more of the older passengers had also expired, either to be buried at sea or taken off at Southampton in body bags. I noticed ironically that they were accorded the dignity of being the first to disembark Seven days in all and at the end of it even I  felt unsteady on my feet but it was a thousand times better than flying.



Tuesday 23 December 2014

SON


SON


From the gloomy passageway
Beyond the kicked in door,
The nauseous stench of death and decay.
Defies us to cross the damaged  threshold at our peril.


Maggots swarm on a decaying, corpse -
In the old armchair, the floor and hair -
What's left of it. 
Bony fingers point accusingly.
Too late, too late.’
  

Ah! there you are my lad.
We wondered where you were.
You might have tidied up a bit.
Just look at this place.
Empty beer cans, fag ends everywhere, unwashed dishes in the sink.
Whatever would your mother think.
Everything is just the way it was you know.
We haven’t changed a thing.
There was no need to leave us in this way
We loved having you around, you made us proud.
Everything will be alright.

You can come home now.'

Copyright Harry Hunt 2008

Monday 22 December 2014

OLGA

The great tragedy of the human condition is the random and mathematical improbability of two lives coming together at the right time and place, with all the required magnetic forces for a successful and enduring merging of the souls in the unbreakable bond of spiritual bliss they call love.
What a pity our paths never crossed Olga. I would have fallen in love then, just like I have now, only then it would have been real, whereas now it is just a picture on a screen with some associated biographical information.
It only takes that small difference in time or distance to change or forge the individual destinies of the ever increasing billions who now roam the planet.
We are truly in the lap of the Gods, at the mercy of fate and lady luck.
Meanwhile we make our nest and hopefully lie in it and try to make a decent fist of the hand we're dealt.
But the dream never goes away and sometimes like now, the dream acquires a face and a personality and you can only look on in wonder at what might have been.

Copyright Harry Hunt 2014

Sunday 21 December 2014

CRICKET ST THOMAS MILK PASS TO MEMORY LANE

CRICKET ST THOMAS FREE PASS TO MEMORY LANE

It just happens that my favourite family group photo is an old Cricket St Thomas Dairy pass for free entry to the grounds of Cricket House and zoo for customers of the dairy. It closed down shortly afterwards so it didn’t get much use. 
At that time it was famous as the venue of ‘To The Manor Born’ one of our favourite sitcoms. Noel Edmonds and Mr Blobby came and went after a series of disputes and now it’s a Warners Hotel. (No children except for guest entertainment at Xmas or other festive occasions). The public can still go into the grounds and some good events are held there such as outdoor concerts etc but everyone pays now.
I like  the photo because it reminds me of the time we all lived crammed under the same roof in our small village farm house. We even had my parents with us for a time and after dad died mom came back and we looked after her for 15 years till she died aged 109. Now there's just three of us.
We’ve been lucky. They all settled within a 10 mile radius of our home in Combe St Nicholas although our eldest daughter and son are both now amicably separated which is good in some ways because the grandchildren get easy access and stability and we still get them.
 Our youngest daughter, a vet, never married and is still happily together with her partner in a lovely bungalow with land in a village called East Lambrook which has a great pub and a famous Marjorie Fish Garden.
Oh the irony of life!
That leaves one, our youngest son. He’s still at home, or rather sometimes still at home when he’s not in Thailand with his Thai wife. (Knows when he’s well off.) No overheads means more spending power and flights to Thailand are not cheap.
The Home office is deaf to his predicament - heartless bureaucrats all. Unless he can prove income of 18.5K the fact he works hard never claims on the state and she would never be a burden as we would provide for all their accommodation and needs doesn’t count for anything. They have caused him much heartache and sadness as he can’t get a work permit in Thailand either. They’re only interested in money and Westerners are there to be taken.
Anyway when I look at this photo this is what I see but it’s a while ago now when I could still turn an attractive woman’s head.  Doubt whether I could now.



Morriston Orpheus Choir - Myfanwy


IF ONLY..

The years and miles between us
Mean we’ll never meet.
She in her world
Me in mine
Unless,
Performing some extraordinary feat
Newsworthy I become
Prime time.

So until then I have to be content
To see her lovely face and hear her dulcet tones
At six o-clock upon my TV screen.
Inspiring me with dreams
Of that which might have been.

BUT

It’s just as well we’ll never meet
Dreams and love are shattered by the smell of sweaty feet
The snores at night
And a thousand little things that blight
Perfection in reality
So I’ll dream on, this time knowing that I’ll never disappoint
Let time take its course and not defer
In purging all these thoughts
Of what it would be like to live with her.
But every now and then
I’ll stop awhile
Stretch out a finger and imagine
That I touch that lovely smile.


© ben corde 2013

OLGA

In the vast impersonal unreal place they call cyber space I have just stumbled upon a vision of stunning, heart-stopping beauty.
Her name is Olga which I always thought was a Russian name but this lady is Spanish.
 She is not only beautiful but has academic qualifications that would frighten many lesser mortals.
 I defy anyone to look into the eyes of her SM profile photo and not be drawn irresistibly  by the magnetic, mesmeric quality, the depth, the sadness, all therein. into something akin to paradise. 
I can only put a finger on that enigmatic smile and wonder.  
If only...

ABOUT TIME. LONG OVERDUE

WE SHOULD NOT BE PART OF THIS EU EMPIRE IN THE MAKING> PLEASE READ AND SHARE
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2882208/PETER-HITCHENS-Forget-evil-Putin-bloodthirsty-warmongers.html

Saturday 20 December 2014

On some days....

On some days I see every shape, form, no matter how arcane with a new intensity. 
Ordinary everyday things like a tongue and groove joint  take on a new significance and beauty.
Everything is merely a filled hole in space.
I've no idea who or why I am, in in this collection of living, dying humanoid cells? 
Where did my mortal consciousness originate? 
Who decided that my parentage would spawn me in this life form?
Why not a tortoise or a bird? Seems bloody unfair on them if you ask me. 
Side by side, ignorance and evil perform a grotesque dance with genius and magnanimity like flickering flames in a fire. Neither can extinguish the other.
All I can do is look on in fascination at the machinations of humanity and the unstoppable evolution of the universe around us.
Nothing at all makes sense. There is only chaos and the craving for knowledge, to understand, to create order out of it. It can never succeed, because the more answers we find the more questions arise. 
And when the end arrives it will all be done and dusted, 
Even the memories soon die. 
A meaningless, futile window on the universe will close. 
Life is a far greater tragedy than death.
     

Monday 15 December 2014

LETTER TO PRIME MINISTER TODAY


Prime Minister

As a lifelong ex Tory now UKIP supporter, I and as many others as I can persuade now intend to devote the rest of our lives through social media in helping to ensure you never attain power again.
We have been dragged into the EU without our consent and they now effectively govern us. Our once great fishing industry has gone along with many others.
We have been denied the democratic freedom to control our own destiny. The 1000 year old history, heritage and future of this nation and the millions of our fallen heroes in past wars who died for that freedom have been betrayed.
If you had kept your promise on a referendum, whatever the result of the vote, that sacrifice would have been honoured, but you didn’t. You decided instead to reduce us to the status of a serf state of a new European empire dominated by Germany.
Your referendum in 2017 will not happen because you won’t be there. In any case it would be too late. Already this nation, its environment and infrastructure is being destroyed by overcrowding, social breakdown, crime and terrorism.
I hope  one day you are brought to account. Meanwhile the United Kingdom Independence Party will continue to destroy what’s left of any chance you may form a majority government in 2015.

Ben Corde


Thursday 11 December 2014

DAY BY THE SEA NEARBY in SEATON DEVON.

Something about this quiet unassuming little town and harbour that suits me fine. Find it restful. Old, quaint, not particularly prosperous but slowly on the way up.