I聮ve
had a very troubling few days.
I聮ve
been hanging onto life by the slightest of threads.
I聮ve
diced with death, discoed across the dance floor of deadly destiny
and stayed alive.
I聮ve
played my hand and very nearly got a voided card in the great
bingo game of life but have nevertheless emerged victorious and
with only mild concussion and a little bruising.
I was unfortunate enough to get caught up in a coach hijacking.
I聮ve been tied up, knocked unconsciousness and had my hair
combed against my will.
The
police managed to stop the coach at their third roadblock; they
shot out the tyres and Hansel surrendered. At first he tried to
pin it all on me, told the police I was a Shropshirian Fundamentalist
and wanted to make myself into a martyr for the holy cause. When
all the police found in my bag were some bingo markers, post-it
notes and unwashed clothes they decided I was no real threat.
Mavis
gave me back my palmtop before a tearful farewell, she had grown
ferociously attached to me while I was tied up at the back of
the coach.
Once again I had to explain to a smitten female that I must walk
my path alone, though I must admit that making the sacrifice to
remain unattached was a bit easier this time thanks to Mavis,
her appearance, the fact that she smelled of wet dog and that
she kept touching my hair - I hate that.
The
police gave me a lift to the nearest town, a place called Oberwesel
that I think is near the River Rhein. After some difficulty making
myself understood I聮ve booked into a hotel to gather my thoughts
and keep a low profile.
Mother
rang and I had to explain about Mavis answering my phone and saying
we were romantically involved, I tried to say it was all a simple
misunderstanding and a stranger had picked up my phone, I didn聮t
want her to worry.
Mother did not sound convinced so I told her that I had secretly
got married to Mavis last week and we were on our honeymoon. Mother
didn聮t believe that either so I told her due to the stress
of constant travel I had developed a multiple personality disorder
and I spent four hours every day as a female alter-ego with a
split-end fixation and a thick German accent.
Mother was having none of it so I gave up and explained that Mavis
was a delusional pet therapist that got hold of my phone while
I was tied up on a coach that had been hijacked.
Oddly
she believed me. Despite her failings, my Mother still possesses
that uncanny maternal ability to know when I聮m lying. She can
also tell when I聮m biting my nails, not eating properly, wearing
unsavoury underwear or staying up past 11 o聮clock, even if
I聮m on the other side of the world. It worries me.
My hotel
in Oberwesel is, by a fortuitous turn of events, staging a European
poetry convention, "The River Of Words" with competitions,
readings, book signings and as much German sausage as you can eat.
It聮s multilingual so I have entered myself in the freeform expression
category. I see this as an excellent opportunity to not only tell
people about Shropshire, but also to display my prowess with the myriad
subtleties of the English language, my dextrous wordplay and my uncanny
usage of the mixed metaphor.
I聮m
going to try out a verse I wrote a few years ago called "Moreton
Say, I love you", it聮s about Moreton Say and my love for
it there.
Staying
at my hotel is another English poet called John Yeovil who looks
not unlike Val "Iceman" Kilmer when he was in Top Gun,
only less flying jump jets and more rhyming couplets.
John travels the world, much like myself, sharing his thoughts with
the people he meets, the main difference between us is that John
isn聮t so bothered about changing the world for the better,
he just wants to be rich and famous. This self-centred outlook is
probably due to his upbringing, he comes from Devon. He has my pity.
I explained
to John the double truth that money does not buy happiness and fame
is a cage of fear. He wrote it down. John writes down a lot of what
I say, he says it聮s for inspiration, I think it聮s so he
can pretend he thought of it first.
Tonight
I do my first public reading.
I went
down a storm. I聮ve
decided to spread my message through the medium of poetry and verse.
MORETON
SAY, I LOVE YOU By
MORRIS TELFORD
"Tumbling
hills of gentle good
Oswestry, Marchamley Wood
Simple fields of pure and calm
Market Drayton, Old Bill's Farm
Moreton
Say I love you so.
Why do I love you? I don't know.
So many things for me to choose.
So lucky to be of the few
That
live there.
Will
you be my Valentine?
I'll buy you flowers and some cheap wine
I'll always be true and loyal and I'll
think of you with a genuine smile.
In
the marvellous chocolate box of life
You are the soft centre, a whippy whirl.
And though perhaps initially disappointing to those who wanted a
toffee
Turns out to be the favourite after all.
I've
lived in you, I was born in you
I climbed my first tree, you were there too.
I'll never leave until I do,
and even
then, I'll bring you too.
Part
of Shropshire, part of me
Bingo at dinner, Countdown at tea
Better than ordering stationary
Moreton Say will you be
My
one true love?
Moreton
Say I love you.
Do you love me too?
I like to think so."
I聮m
in the quarter-finals, my competition seems slight. I don聮t like
to blow my own trumpet, but in the next heat I am going on after a
woman called Jessica who just grunts, screams and occasionally shouts
"my boyfriend has left me" while she holds a balloon between
her knees. She calls it 聳 "a primal response to the systematic
repression of womankind". I call it a mad woman with a balloon
between her legs shouting about her boyfriend leaving her. She doesn聮t
stand a chance against my latest epic that I penned last night 聳
"Bingo Markers Of The World"
BINGO
MARKERS OF THE WORLD By
MORRIS TELFORD
"Bingo
is a noble thing
With many advantages
Cash prizes you can win
by incremental stages.
One
of the best things about Bingo
And it聮s an aspect that聮s often ignored
Is the special marker that you use
To cross numbers off your card
Not
just any old pen or pencil
Felt-tip or marker will do
It's important to choose a superior quality
Bingo marker to use.
Some
Bingo markers are angry
They flake and leak all the time
These are no good for bingo
As they draw an inferior line.
Some
Bingo markers are timid
They run out and don聮t mark anymore
They are just as bad as the angry ones
I mentioned the verse before.
Other
Bingo markers are weaklings
And can snap if submitted to strain
I had one like that once in 1992
It completely ruined my game.
Where your marker comes from
Can be important too
The notorious Singapore markers
Were made with inferior glue
I once
had one made in China
That only lasted a day
Though to be fair, Oriental markers
Are generally ok.
The
finest marker I聮ve ever had
I bought in Market Drayton
From Rosemary the newsagents
Next to the railway station.
I called
that marker Elvira
And loved her like a girl
She was stolen from me a few weeks ago
On my mission to save the world.
I miss
her tender grip
The way she聮d hesitate
Before striking through the numbers
Two fat ladies, eighty-eight
Her
colour and her balance
Her simple, even line
The way I felt she looked at me
And said "Morris, you聮re mine"
I never
will forget her
Nestled at my side
My Whitely to her Voderman
Her Bonnie to my Clyde.
I now
tend to use the American
Twin nibbed fluorescent pen
They聮re not as good as Elvira
I聮d give them a six out of ten."
I don聮t
believe it. Jessica beat me in the quarter-final. The judges felt
her "primal rage and innovative balloon use outweighed the more
traditional verse".
One
woman in the audience was moved to tears by my Bingo Markers poem.
I聮m absolutely stunned. I聮m very happy that Jessica will
now have the opportunity to hold a balloon between her knees and
scream in the semi-finals though; I congratulated her with a firm
handshake and not the slightest twinge of bitterness.
Art
is a difficult animal to categorise, I always think the important
thing is to be happy with your own work, so I聮m going to continue
to write my epic poem "How many ways do I love Shropshire?"
and send it to my Mother when it聮s finished, she always enjoys
my work.
I wrote
this today-
WHY
I DIDN聮T WIN
By
MORRIS TELFORD
"Instead
of concentrating on the subtleties of language, where thought and
mind harmonise.
I should
have just shouted a load of nonsense
with a balloon between my thighs."
Despite my defeat, an American publisher did approach me and express
an interest in a book of Shropshire related verse; I聮ll let you
know if it聮s published. A provisional title is "Morris Telford聮s
Shropshire Verse", and will include "Bingo Markers of The
World", "Moreton Say I Love You", "Shropshire
The Golden Land of Love, Joy and Gingerbread", "Why Can聮t
Everyone Just Be Nice To Each Other Like They Are In Moreton Say?",
"Things That Carol Voderman Reminds Me Of" and "Camilla
Edwards Lies, Lies, Lies".
I stayed
up late last night, drinking at the bar with the poet John Yeovil.
Despite being from Devon, John seems to have a great appreciation
of beauty and told me about his world travels.
He
told me about the time he went swimming naked in the Amazon, and
the time he lived with Eskimos during the four month night of Hari-Kancha.
Since beginning his travels he's played death poker in illegal Mexican
gambling pits, sampled the thousand pleasures of Moroccan love dens,
base jumped from the Hong Kong finance centre with his hair on fire,
seen the hidden underground mirror temples of platinum in South
America and the Art dungeons of Paris but is still seeking that
ultimate experience, the Holy Grail of life events.
He聮s searching for the one single crystal clear moment of joy
and fulfilment where he knows his travels are at an end and he has
seen the true face of creation.
I,
of course, told him he must visit Moreton Say, all he wants is waiting
for him there.
What
a shame we didn聮t meet years ago, I could have saved him so
much trouble.
One
thing John did say that intrigued me were his experiences of China,
he said the regime there is in some ways very oppressive, but the
people are eager for new ideas and there is a strong underground
current of change. Bingo is also very popular.
I decided
to travel to China, from what John says it sounds right up my street.
I don聮t really know much about China; they seem to make a lot
of the colourful plastic toys for the Market Drayton stalls so I imagine
they know all about Shropshire.
Getting
a flight to China has proved more difficult than I imagined, the Chinese
authorities aren聮t overly keen on admitting people whose stated
reason for travel is "to turn over the current regime and get
the populous to move to Shropshire". I changed the reason to
"holiday and cultural exchange" and that seemed to do the
trick, I fly from Frankfurt airport next week.
I聮ve
been checking the 大象传媒 message board and notice Melvin Bone has taken
the time to write again.
"I am amazed by the response to my last posting. I have been
informed by the Devon Tourist Board that visits by Dutch people
have trebled since my last posting inviting the Dutch to come and
visit. Apparently in Holland they are living in fear of a Northener
wandering their country extolling the virtues of the barren north
of England. I have heard many have taken up jobs in Devon as they
recognise it as a truly glorious place to live."
This is clearly not true. I myself called the Devon Tourist Board,
after about five minutes someone picked up the phone and thanked
me for calling, it was the first query they have had in seventeen
years.
"Morris: I'm sure that Shropshire was indeed once an idyllic
place and Devon a backward backwater. But as the Country Life survey
highlighted Devon has been able to move on and flourish to achieve
greatness as a county, meanwhile Shropshire has unfortunately stagnated.
I looked up the last crime you mentioned in Shropshire. You are
right in one aspect, the last crime in Shropshire of the 19th century
took place in 1898. I fear however you textbook may cover only the
19th Century as crime has escalated throughout he 20th Century and
into the 21st. The 'Most Wanted' at the moment is a self styled
"Stationary Bandit" who has fled the country. If you meet
such a fellow on your travels watch out as Police have him listed
as armed with industrial staplers and dangerous."
At first
I was very worried about this information and called my Mother to
warn her not to open the door to anyone brandishing a stapler. Then
I realised you are making some sort of connection to me and this
fictional "Stationary Bandit", though of course anyone
who knows me will tell you I always adhere to and take very seriously
the Health and Safety regulations when using Industrial Staplers.
Even the XS-119, the self-proclaimed bad boy of the industrial stapling
world has never tempted me to stray from the regulations.
"By contrast Devon in the 20th Century is a relative crime
free zone, with only occasional bouts of crime brought on by holidaying
Northeners and Cornish smuggling sheep over the border. Both after
the riches of Devon. Devon is Gods own country and Cider gods own
drink as the apple is the first fruit mentioned in the Bible. Mel.
Resident of the No.1 County.
PS:good luck in Germany, I'd recommend Braunschweig as a place to
visit. Best not to mention the war though."
Mel
聳 In my mission to spread a bit of Shropshire goodness around
the planet, I always want to keep the emphasis on being pro-Shropshire
and not anti- Devon or anti any other county, country or continent.
In saying that, it is obvious to me that any county that has "drinking
apple juice" as it聮s main attraction need to have a good
long hard look at itself in the mirror.
Mailman
Joe has also been in touch, thanks for taking the time Joe. Jo had
an excellent idea-
"Have
you thought of campaigning for the expansion of the boundaries of
Shropshire so that neighbouring counties can enjoy the benefits
of being under the care of Shropshire"?
This
is an inspired idea. I聮m looking into the possibility of making
a start on it. We could phase out Devon altogether and just have
one big happy English county - Shropshire. Thank you also for congratulating
me on stopping the Iraq war, though it would be remiss of me to
take full credit. Before the war started, I did leave a message
with Tony Blair offering to sort the whole thing out and if he got
in touch all I had to do was pack my Bingo markers and I could be
ready within three quarters of an hour. I think the message got
a bit garbled though.
I just
heard Jessica came second in the "River of Words" freeform
expression category. A man called Rufus who looked a bit like Greg
Dyke just sat on a stuffed Otter and chattered his teeth won first
prize.
Poetry isn聮t what it used to be.
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