A place where I'll post up some thoughts and ideas - especially on literature in education, children's literature in general, poetry, reading, writing, teaching and thoughts on current affairs.
Friday, 24 August 2018
The Wart and Toe-nail
In 1961 a guy called Wilkinson stamped
on the big toe of my right foot and a few
months later the nail fell off. It had
turned several colours before the day it
worked itself loose: red,purple, yellow,
green. Sometimes combinations of all
four, like a sunset over a city, infused
with sulphur. I kept the nail. It was in the
same cardboard box as the name-tags my
mother sewed into my PE kit, the medal I
won for winning the Metropolitan Walking
Club’s Novices Race, my father’s ‘US ARMY’
brass brooches, the drawer from an East
German wooden money box, and a stone
from the bed of the River Monow. I took
the box with me to university and when I
moved into digs run by a Polish woman and her
cab-driving husband, it was there alongside
my Anglo-Saxon poetry books. By then it
was beginning to twist and had turned brown,
and on the surface that had been next to the
quick of my toe, there was a curd-like residue
of something organic. This may seem unrelated
but on my right hand I had several large warts.
They had appeared there as a result of holding
the hand of someone who had several large
warts on her left hand. I shared the digs with
John who liked to probe around in the cardboard
box and though he liked the drawer to the East
German money box and my father’s US ARMY
brooches, he was sickened by the toe-nail. He
was critical of some side-whiskers that had
cropped up on my face and not at all keen on
the warts. He was highly skilled at doing the voices
of a sergeant-major reciting Jabberwocky, a
professor of Latin who translated and
recited the poems of Catullus that focussed
on fellatio, and Geordie women in a sausage
factory who had pulled down his trousers and
smothered his stotts in the jelly that was used
to make sausage skins. He was so good
at these voices that there were times he would
be doing the performance along with many others
long past midnight, at the very moment when I had
to be writing my essay on Anglo-Saxon poetry.
John wouldn’t leave my room and we
would hear the cab-driving landlord coming
home and his Polish wife greeting him like he
was liberating her homeland - a kind woman,
though not keen on the fact that when we washed
up in the bathroom sink (not a frequent event and
there were no other sinks to wash up in), bits of
spaghetti bolognese lingered in the plug hole.
There was nothing I could say, either funny or
hostile that would move John to leave. One night
I put the toe-nail next to the largest wart - one that
looked like the cross-section of a cauliflower on the
fleshy part of my middle finger - and walked
towards him. The doubling up of the nail and
the wart was so unpleasant for him that he left
immediately. Last time I saw John, he was living
on his own in a ground floor flat on the Marylebone
Road.