Page 85 - Exile-ebook
P. 85

84  AN EXILE OF THE MIND         TIDDLERS IN A JAM JAR                          85


 or shine, sleet or snow. It was a
 national pastime and an opportunity
 to catch up on the ill wind of local
 gossip. Their treasure then lugged
 homewards with no refrigerator to
 preserve  it for a hungry day. This
 rite of passage  was repeated  for
 years to come during rationing.
 The clackety-clack of a horse and
 cart delivering milk could be heard
 streets  away.  Manure  steamed  in
 piles  in the cart’s  wake to fertilise
 cabbages  and  cauliflowers  in  back
 gardens. I was  often  sent out  into
 the street with a bucket and shovel
 in a mad scramble with neighbours
 to scoop up the precious poo.   The Royal wedding cake in 1947.  Children queuing outside a shop as sweets rationing ends in 1953.
 Old clothes were never discarded
 but darned,  patched  and repaired.   But  the  ration-bleak  years  had   Junk food was not yet invented.  pavements. A torchbearer to  cheer
 Everything was old or broken with  their upside with protein and vita-  An energetic devotion to gardening  up the neighbourhood after the long
 little hope of being replaced.   mins for the poor and less flab food   produced vegetables by the cartload.  bleak hours of blackout.
 It  was  an  offence  to  feed  an  for  the  affluent  unless  hustled  on   A dietician’s dream half a century   VE Day,  Victory  in Europe,
 animal food that could be eaten by  the black market.   later. Horsemeat, dried  eggs  and  marked not the end of a bad dream,
 humans. Our elderly violin-playing   However, austerity  was  over-  the ‘national loaf’, a tasteless slab of  but the beginning of a new nightmare
 neighbour  was  fined  for  feeding  looked  for the  Royal wedding  in   wheatmeal, made up the fare until  as rituals of recrimination unravelled
 birds in his garden with bread long  1947 when a four-tiered  cake,   Americans introduced  something  across Europe. With food shortages
 since stale which his teeth couldn’t  three  metres  high  and weighing   called spam.   everywhere,  respectable  shopping
 chew.  Hundreds  of  thousands  of  225 kilograms, materialized  from   War’s end saw the flicker of gas  and gossiping housewives in Naples
 cats and dogs were sacrificed on the  the royal kitchens. Dressed in their   lamps illuminated in  darkened  lined up to sell themselves to young
 false assumption that putting down  finery, the 2,000-plus guests turned   streets,  casting  a greenish  halo  American  GIs for tins of food. In
 the  family  pet  was  a patriotic  and  up for this lavish bash in a ‘ration-  within their faint circles. The  contrast,  high-spirited  neighbours
 humane thing to do. Only to discover  free’ zone. Prince Philip had not one   lamplighter  carried  a  flame  atop  sat at garland-bunted tables on our
 later a population explosion of rats  but  two stag parties  where booze   a long pole, leaving a string of  cobbled street, rationed but joyous.
 and mice.  flowed freely.   lighted  lanterns as he padded  the   A few  months  later, my  father,
   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90