Wednesday 2 May 2007

New Shoes and the Smell of Tar

 
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“New shoes and the smell of tar”, came right out of the blue from the lips of my eight-year old as we buzzed along yesterday afternoon in our well-dented, totally paid for and very cheap to run red Peugeot 106. (Remove legs before entering). We were girls on a mission. Two pairs of feet needed shoes, one mad mother needed to get out. Some might call it retail therapy; yesterday I called it breathing. Maybe that had as much to do with the huge blue sky so intense that I nearly veered off the road looking at it and its fat roosting clouds, white, underbellied grey. Zooming along these untrafficked roads north across the fens towards Norfolk you felt you were entering Spring not as a season but as a place. Behind you was gloomy damp, ahead bright blue, an infinity of sky with planks of black-brown earth and green field beneath. Alongside us amongst hedgerows still twiggy and bare, sporadic willows sported their first flush of bud.
“What colour would you call that willow?” I asked my daughter. “I need it for my blog”
“Yellow,” she said, “a sort of goldy green.”
“Perfect,” I murmured, “Nature’s first green is gold.” The good old Robert Frost poems your teachers made you learn by heart never leave you. (Why aren’t children memorizing poems?)
“Nee-naw trator” shouted the two-year old who loves all things flashing and loud.

A plough was turning up crumbly earth exactly the colour of Green and Blacks 70% chocolate. You could have licked up the crumbs. The earth here is so rich. Black Gold the farmers call it. It gives up hordes of lettuces, beetroot, carrots, celery to the hands of Polish harvesters and the supermarket trolley. We live in the salad bowl of England. I find myself strangely proud of this. What I once saw as the dullest landscape on earth now seems a rich, industrious place busy about the business of feeding the nation. (Roll on Socialist murals of headscarfed workers, sleeves rolled up, pitchforks in hand. Are all the eastern Europeans working here exerting an invisible force on the local psyche?)

But yesterday it was the smell that caught us unawares. Not flowers or grass, not any of the beautiful smells you expect to herald Spring. It was tar. Steam-rolled and steaming, blacker even than the earth. The men are always out working, but for the first time this year we had the window open. It was warm. Everyone was smiling. Three men in earmuffs managed machines. Two young men were propping a van door open. One of them had a glint of gold in his tooth.

In Downham Market where there is never any traffic and plenty of parking, we bailed out into hot sunshine. Smith’s Children’s Shoes, tiny and particular, blessed with baskets of toys with which to occupy one while the other is fitted, equipped us with two new pairs of shoes. One statutory black school Start-Rites (sound of ripping Velcro), the other a bright red pair of brass buckle Mary Janes that gave the wearer so much joy she went out of the shop bouncing. Bounce Bounce to the door. “Bye lady!” Bounce into the street. Living Shirley Hughes, we entered stained-glass Reeds, the family owned department store that, unlike our village which has everything you need and nothing you want, has everything you need and a few corners in which you’d like to snoop one day when you are not negotiating a bouncing red-shoed two-year old through the china department. “Shoes!” she waved them at the lady in the pinny. It looked alarmingly like a kick too near a teapot. “Shoes!” to the café girl.

Good girls get to have fruit shoots and dotty biscuits (and cups of tea and a simple butterfly cake. I had to have one. Where have you even seen one for sale in the last 15 years? Besides the filling was soo utterly creamy). The little one bites every Smartie off the top of the biscuit; the big one has discovered that baked Smarties will crack and peel so that if you are careful you can eat a whole half shell on its own before devouring the rest of the Smartie. It’s one of the well-kept secrets of childhood.

By the time we got back to the car the afternoon had gone. The air was cold again; grey had swallowed up the blue. Overhead an early moon hung in the sky. My moon maidens made me sing. We sang the three note moon song in unison, in solo, laughing the way home. There were new shoes on their feet. We passed the roadworks, diggers asleep. The spot where the young man smiled, a glint of gold in his teeth.

17 comments:

Tattieweasle said...

Hi Eden
Oh so wish to breathe sometimes never tried retail therapy like that but there again I have boys and it all seems a dim and distant past except for essentials - loved the blog! Re templates I have NO idea what I did I just change the colours - honest!

Elizabeth Musgrave said...

so glad to find you here blogging again. fabulous blog as always. why are you not on the list on the purplecoo homepage? i have had to work hard to track you down, well maybe not hard, but took a bit of determination!

CAMILLA said...

Eden, darling girl,
Have found you again. Same as usual Eden, you have not lost that wonderful way of writing. lovely blog, I adore your descriptive words. Brings memories flooding back to years ago when I owned a pair of red shoes, have not since. Was there not a Ballet once called The Red Shoes? with the dancer Moira Sherha, think she was married to the journalist Ludovik Kennedy. When my children was small and had to have new shoes, in the shop I remember saying "walk up and down" it drove them crazy!
Warm Wishes.
Camilla.xx

Pondside said...

Hi Eden - I love the red shoes! When my daughter was born my sister sent a tiny pair of red leather shoes. She said that they were to make sure she only had all the good things in life, the opposite from the HC Andersen story of the red shoes.

pointyhat said...

What a great blog - I've just found it whilst touring in the southern united states. You're a star and the children must be a real delight.

Inthemud said...

Hi Eden, Fantastic you're back!
What a lovely blog!

Shoes, tractors, willow and Butterfly cakes, bliss to be out in the spring air!
Have missed you, glad you've found us at last. It's great here!

muddyboots said...

aha l'v found you, l had seen you lurking on a blog comment or 2 but here you are. l do like those shoes!

Kitty said...

Hello, hello hello! Found you at last. Lovely lovely shoes. And am going to put Pashley into Ebay cos I want one too. I see you used to live in Newcastle - me too, in Heaton (as a student) and Jesmond (when I got a real job). Love Newcastle but don't get back very often now, although only an hour and a half away,

Pipany said...

Oh Eden, you're here! I've posted messages to find you on the main page as I lost the new email address somewhere in the ether (never will be any good at the technical stuff). Have so wanted to know how things are going and then today, thanks to Kitty's comment on main page, I realised you are back. Hurray! Love the blog and love Mary Janes too - was already thinking 'Shirley Hughes'! Hope you are well xx

countrymousie said...

Wonderful blog and so professional with all your links.I bow to you.I love the smell of tar, as did my mum - and cresote that we used to black the buildings with and no, I do not sniff glue!!!
Tracked you down at last - why are you not in the links to the side I wonder. Anyway can find you know -love mousie in Suffolk

Exmoorjane said...

Oh, I LOVED this one first time round and love it even more on second reading. So good to have you back and putting up the archive - so many I missed in the frenzy of CL. Those shoes! Janexx

Fennie said...

Hi Eden - so glad that your here - been looking for you ever since I heard you were here but you seem to have fallen into a black hole.
I love the Fens. I'm with Constable - 'the problem with mountains is that they get in the way of the landscape.' Ely Cathedral, standing majestic on its 12 foot high 'hill' the endless dykes. The Nine Tailors.
All that.

Super, super blog. Look forward to reading many more.

Faith said...

Eden, I tracked you down by your comment in suffolkmum's blog. Lovely blog, and cute red shoes. I have Em's first tiny size 3 or 4 Clark's shoes in their box in the loft - red patent. It was cruel putting that Green and Blacks link in!!!!!

Holy Way said...

Hello Eden - thank you so much for your lovely comment on my practice blog.

I so love your writing - exquisitely alive - i could almost taste the chocolate earth - i am sure Tumbling could too - it's his favourite chocolate!

And so amazed to hear they still make Start Right shoes!

Particularly happy to think of you singing the three note moon song!

Frances said...

Hello Eden, just think of all the time ahead of all of us, to live, to see, to laugh, to think, and then ... if we have the skill that you have, to write.
Again, I await updates from time to time regarding sightings of the Marlowe woman. You will charm her yet!
Best wishes to you and your family.
xo

@themill said...

I just loved this Eden. Start Rite shoes - it just seems like yesterday. Am seriously cutting back on blog time so don't visit you as often as I would like. Thanks for visiting me tho'. Still loving UC. BTW do you mind if I link you to my page?

Unknown said...

cute shoes...i have bought couple of red nike shoes for my children...they feel great!