BATHING BETTY.A Poem by Terry CollettA BOY AND GIRL IN 1950S LONDON![]() The bomb site is the best place for chickweed Helen said so you went to the one off Meadow Row and gathered up handfuls of the stuff and took them back to your flat to feed the budgerigar you were looking after for the old couple along the balcony who had gone away for a few days you watched as Helen poked some through the bars of the bird cage with her fingers and you noticed her tenderness and determination as she pushed it through the narrow gauged bars her tongue poking out of the corner of her mouth her eyes focusing through her thick lens spectacles does it sing? she asked don't think so you replied least I’ve not heard it do so she talked to the budgie in her little girl voice and sang a few lines of a hymn the budgerigar just stared at her and walked up the other end of the perch with a beak full of chickweed as she sang to it she held her head at an angle and one of her plaits of brown hair hung downwards do you want to come back to my place afterwards? she said you can help me bath my doll Battered Betty and then Mum'll get us some bread and jam or bread and dripping and a mug of tea you had wanted to go to the bomb site for half an hour to gather ammunition for your catapult but she had that look about her face that made you say sure why not and so after poking through the remaining chickweed and washing your hands under the cold water tap in the kitchen and drying them on the towel hanging behind the door you walked down the concrete stairs and out into the Square and down the slope into Rockingham Street where you walked past the coal wharf where coal trucks were being filled with sacks of coal and by the Duke of Wellington pub where you used to get bags of crisps and bottles of Tizer on Sunday evenings then under the railway bridge and she talked of some boys at school who called her 4 eyes and fish face O don't mind them you said they just can't see your beauty too blind dumb idiots do I? she said have beauty? sure you do you said putting on your serious face never seen a girl with more and she smiled and gazed at you through the thick lens of her spectacles showing the large brown conker like eyes when you got to her place her mother was just finishing bathing a young kid so she let Helen have the water after to bath Betty and gave her an old towel to dry with you helped her prepare the doll but she took off the baby clothes an old cardigan that had seen better days and a creamy dress with small buttons at the back which were a hell of a job to undo and a pair of doll panties that fitted tightly and were a struggle to get off well Helen said the water's nice and soapy so we can wash her as it is and so you watched as she dipped the doll under the water (it might have drowned had it been for real) and held it there until bubbles came out of the neck and she lifted Betty out and wiped her over with a flowery face cloth and Betty’s eyes opened and closed and you helped dry and studied (as boys tend to do) the seriousness of Helen about the task the tongue hanging from the side of her mouth her eyes focussed the head to one side like an animal trying to understand a human command and the small hands working with calm concern just as you'd seen your mother do when she made a cake or rolled out pastry for a pie once the doll was dry and dressed she put Betty back in the tiny cot her dad had made from an orange box and her mother said sit down and I’ll get you some bread and jam or bread and dripping and mugs of tea and off she went to the kitchen humming some hymn and you looked at Helen sitting there with her plaits of hair and big eyes showing no fear and a smile from ear to lovely ear. © 2013 Terry CollettFeatured Review
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2 Reviews Added on December 6, 2013 Last Updated on December 6, 2013 AuthorTerry CollettUnited KingdomAboutTerry Collett has been writing since 1971 and published on and off since 1972. He has written poems, plays, and short stories. He is married with eight children and eight grandchildren. on January 27t.. more.. |


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