I was just sitting enjoying a cup
of tea early this morning, when it suddenly hit me that it is the 12th
of June. Where on earth have the last
few weeks disappeared to?
The start of May found me hobbling
around with a badly swollen right knee, compliments of rheumatism. However,
nothing loathe, as the saying goes, Himself and I started the month by driving
out to the Farmer’s Market at Kilruddery House in Bray, Co. Wicklow. It’s a popular destination for all dedicated
foodies and many of my friends congregate there on Saturday mornings, sipping
Tai Chi latte and herbal teas.
Me?
Well, apart from the odd jar of chutney, I make a beeline for the book
stall and the lovely gentleman who runs it.
Many are the conversations we have had about books; a bookworm himself,
he starts gathering what he knows I will like the minute he sees me on the
horizon. He never lets me down. For
sheer solid good value this stall is a personal heaven. For the princely sum of €18 I came away with
a Maigret novel, a book on the Comanche Indians, Art in the great houses of
Ireland, a cookery book for a friend and a history of Ireland. All the books are in excellent condition and
cost roughly €3 to €4 each.
I have to say I was less enamoured
of little Sophie, [approximate age six, mass of curly nut brown hair, red
ribbon, electric blue socks in white sandals, lime green cardigan and floral
pinafore with a cyclamen pink tee-shirt underneath]. Sophie, or Soapy as her brother called her [clearly
a discerning ten-year-old] was informing her mother and all and sundry that she
would not ****ing well sit down and that she didn’t like her mother one ****ing
bit. I’m sure there are gentlemen who
work on the docks whose hair would turn grey to hear Soapy’s language. In another day and age her mouth would have
been washed out with soap.
Mum [harassed looking thirty
something in check shirt, white tee shirt and tatty jeans with brown high
heeled shoes] wearily begged darling not to be naughty and to sit down and eat
the nice slice of apple strudel; Soapy’s response was to kick her mother with
great precision in mid-calf with some force.
Her face in a rictus of agony Mum again begged darling to be a good girl
and not to do that again or she would be put on the naughty box when they got
home. Darling kicked Mum twice in quick
succession for good measure while sweeping a mug of coffee off the table.
While Soapy was multi-tasking,
Edward dear, the discerning ten-year-old, was, while examining the contents of
his upper nasal passages, removing a five euro note from Mum’s purse while she
was facing towards Darling Sopheeeeeee.
Pocketing the moola, he then sauntered over to eye up the cakes. What a multi-tasking pair of little darlings
they are. If Mum lives long enough and
doesn’t collapse from high blood pressure she will no doubt be enormously proud
of his entrepreneurial skills when he is in his twenties, and Soapy’s skills as
a prop forward on some unfortunate rugby team.
I’m not entirely convinced that all
this no slapping thing is working; a generation of self-centred selfie taking
individuals is beginning to show itself up.
Enraptured with themselves and with little or no sense of discipline I
sometimes fear for the future. However,
on a brighter note, there are pockets of down to earth endearing children who
will make the world a better place, that’s if the selfie groups let them
impinge on their universe.
Gradually, over the course of the
month the knee got better with the improving weather, and life returned to
normal. YD embarked on a major makeover
of her room, and I look forward to the reveal when OH and I return from a short
break to the country. Inspired by her
makeover work and the prodigious amount of de-cluttering she was engaged in, I
decided to declutter too.
I am now minus two pairs of
trousers that had seen better days, there were three but I think there is a bit
of gardening wear still left in them. I
assembled all the ornaments I decided I wanted to declutter the house from and
while passing a local auction house I went in to enquire when the next
china/porcelain auction would be. The Ansley
vases I bought at auction there look lovely with the other “for decluttering”
stuff, well, I’m not hard hearted, who would love and look after them as well
as I would hmmmm?
The June bank holiday brought an
end to the mini-heatwave we were having.
On Monday morning OH came into the kitchen full of excitement. “There are rabbits in the garden” he said
urging me to come to the dining room window and there, grazing peacefully was
Mammy rabbit and her baby. Now to be
known as Mrs Hopsy and Little Speedy respectively. It has been almost fifteen years since we had
rabbits in the garden. Living cheek by
jowl with the fox.
I have often thought the
foxes looked on the rabbits as a sort of winter larder, not to be used while
hunting was good elsewhere and in case food was not dispensed from the kitchen
window of the house. Mme. Pounce has
discovered Hopsy and I am afraid that she may try to attack Mrs Hopsy. As I
said to YD, if it comes to a choice between Mme Pounce and Mrs Hopsy, the
rabbit gets my vote. Mrs Hopsy was with
us again today complete with Pounce’s unwanted attention, Little Speedy, I
fear, may not have made it past the Bank Holiday.
We had, on Bank Holiday Monday, the worst electrical storm in years. As YD and I sat enjoying a cup of tea in the kitchen, there was an almighty bang outside and the whole place lit up with an orange glow. I was sitting near the window and realised that the forked lightning had hit the rocks behind the house. Suddenly I could feel a tingle all over and my hair stood up like a halo around me. I'm non the worse for it and indeed haven't felt as good in ages...not that I'd recommend a lightning bolt to anyone as a health treatment. As OH said, it was lucky I wasn't out in the garden and we can thank the rain for that.
6 comments:
Goodness, there is a lot going on in your part of the world, dear Irish Eyes!
I am so glad that your leg is feeling better. Your writing is as wonderfully descriptive, clever, interesting and amusing as ever. Is there yet a label for the children of Millennials? I am sure that you could find one.
Please do give my regards to Mme P, who seems to be carrying on as usual.
Your recent experience with the lightning is...awesome. In the original sense of the word.
xo
You have such an eye! I was right there watching the horrible family and I agree with you on that there are some wonderful young ones coming up along with all the horrors - let's just hope they make it past the first rank of horrors!
I can't imagine what it must have felt like to have been affected by the lightening strike in your own house. Are you still glowing?
Ah, it's been a real tonic on such a sad morning after the madness of yesterday to sit down and have a proper catch up. I made coffee, snapped off a couple of squares of dark chocolate (remedial, of course!) and sat down to listen to a dear friend talking about her life. It's been lovely! So many moments; gentle, poignant, funny and infuriating (the horrendous Soapy and her brother). I enjoyed reading about your decluttering and the objects that were too dear to part with, and the snippets of family history. I do hope the knee has eased - though there's been so much rain, I fear for you - my youngest has lots of trouble with her knees and they ache in bad weather. Anyway, thank you so much for some much-needed sunshine on a dark day. Cxx
Thank you so much Frances, I love to hear from you. Mme Pounce is feeling her fourteen years and we are contemplating making a staircase for her to get up to her favourite snoozing spot!
Glowing has ceased ;-) thank goodness, I felt like the energiser bunny for the rest of the day!
Thanks Chris, I'm still debating where to put the things I couldn't part with...a days absence from their shelves made for a whole new picture...oh well, no doubt the study, already bursting at the seams, will come to the rescue :-O
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