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Monthly Archives: June 2012

The Nature of Co-operation

17 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 32 Comments

Tags

Japan's nuclear reactor restart

Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

Well, there you have it. Two salons, one with the hamburger lunch, one with milk tea and cream, in two different towns. And they have one problem to resolve. Should we restart the nuclear reactors? Or not. As you can see, it’s not an easy co-operation. But that’s the nature of co-operation.

 

Songs from the States Part 1

17 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

music clips, USA

Playlist by Algernon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHsDa9_HSlA

Sweet Home Alabama- Lynyrd Skynyrd

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSt0NEESrUA

North to Alaska

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhdiSqt6sXE

Arizona – Mark Lindsay

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIrqs-FUPbo

Arkansas Grass – Axiom

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dN3GbF9Bx6E

California Dreamin’ – The Mamas & The Papas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPpnvNlywP8

Colarado – The Flying Burrito Brothers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJIauO3PROI

I live in Connecticut –Aerosmith

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NztfOSyCCFM

Delaware – Perry Como

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9Benryvvqo

Mainline Florida – Eric Clapton

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnepPZChA5U&feature=fvst

The Devil Went down to Georgia – Charlie Daniels Band

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hobnB9PPPo

Hawaii – The Beach Boys

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7t7cGwN7_0

Private Idaho – The B52’s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u05eH6cYRSI

Illinois – Dan Fogelberg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsWohOShiqs

Indiana – Jon McLaughlin

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqHgZhLLTc0

Iowa – Dar williams

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB17uWuBrL0

Carry On Wayward Son – Kansas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-v38lbPNZs

Kentucky Rain – Elvis Presley

Australian of the Year

17 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 5 Comments

http://www.australianoftheyear.org.au/recipients/?m=laurie-baymarrwangga-2012

The Great Aussie Moore – Chapter 1 Victor Australis

15 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Neville Cole

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

1901, Aussie, Australian Federation, Ballarat, goldfields

 

Fossickers

By Neville Cole

My mother always had a rare sense of timing. She passed away last year on my birthday. Instead of celebrating another year around the sun with my friends, I travelled back to Melbourne to organize her funeral and take care of her affairs. It was all fairly straight-forward until it came time to go through her stuff. The house where she passed was filled to overflowing with the assorted flotsam and jetsam of a long and disorganized life.

Sadly, most everything I came across was destined for a quick trip to the local tip. I was beginning to think that I should save myself a considerable effort and toss it all, until deep down in a box pile of ancient papers, I started to discover bits and pieces of a jumbled handwritten manuscript entitled Victor Australis that appeared to have been written by a long-lost Great Uncle named Aussie Moore.

I knew my Great Uncle Clarry well. He was a legendary figure around Kilmore, the town my mother grew up in. One of many famous Clarry Moore tales was that on his 82nd birthday the family purchased him a table saw so that he could put a new roof on his barn. He completed the task by himself in less than a week. I knew all about Clarry and Grandpa Dot; but until I came across Victor Australis, I had never heard of Aussie Moore. It was if he had been banished from the Moore family records.

Victor Australis is a rambling and outrageous account of a very strange life. Many events are described in exhausting detail then whole decades disappear without a trace. Much of he describes is too coincidental to be true, while other parts of his life story are clearly historical fact. In his own words, Aussie Moore was one of the “first true Australians” as he was born during the early hours of January 1st, 1901: the day Australia became an independent federation.

Ever since I picked up Victor Australis I have haven’t been able to set it back down for long; which is why I have decided to write out Aussie’s tales out in some kind of a logical order and bring them to the world. Ladies and Gentlemen I give you the late, great Aussie Moore!

NOTE: The section of italic text that follows I believe to be the opening paragraph of Aussie’s autobiography. I have tried to capture his idiosyncratic phrasing exactly as he laid them to paper; but, truth be told, some of these pages have been pretty severely damaged by the ravages of time and in places I was forced to make my own best guess as to what had been once been intended.

I was born into trouble and it has followed close at me heels throughout my entire life. I have done too many things to remember them all, seen much more than even that, and just to have survived this long I consider myself a fortunate fellow indeed. I was born in an Englishman’s house high on a hill overlooking the rich goldfields of Ballarat. The morning of my birth was the first morning of the new Australian federation, which makes me one of the first true Australians, the first of the Aussies. I don’t count in this group any of the many indigenous peoples who have inhabited the great southern land as they all predate terra australis by centuries at least. I don’t remember any of the particulars of my birth. Which isn’t unusual, I suppose. In fact, any man who says he does remember that time of his life is a damned liar at best and at worst a devil in the flesh.

I was, quite naturally, told stories of that morning by others from time to time. However, never by my own father, Duncan Robert Moore, for reasons I will reveal at a later time.

Ballarat – the town where Aussie was born

At the dawn of 1901, Ballarat was a town still thriving from sale of gold. It was a town with a thick rough edge and a tough, unforgiving, and almost unimaginably wealthy center. It was a town still driven by the Eureka spirit. My father was far more proud of Australia’s hard fought federation than my arrival. In fact, on more than one occasion he informed me that it was always his intention that I would be a daughter – a gift from him to my mother for her hard toil over the years. My name had already been chosen. I was to be Victoria Australis Moore. When it was clear that a nob and two bollocks hung between my thighs, my parents removed the last two letters of my first given name and I became Victor Australis Moore – forever after known simply as Aussie. But getting my name changed is the least memorable part of this story.

You see, as was customary on the last night of each year, my father spent a good part of New Years Eve, 1900 drinking heavily with good friends and neighbours and, only after midnight passed and it became obvious that I would wait no longer, did he send his guests home and my brother Clarry to fetch the local mid-wife. She arrived none too soon and immediately saw my mother was in grave danger as I was well on my way to coming out breach. There was no time now to fetch the doctor so, as the mid-wife did what she could to make my mother comfortable, my father staggered to his horse and galloped off to fetch Mr. Webb, a local horse breeder who had experience with various animal surgeries. Mr. Webb by all accounts had also been partaking in a long evening of revels and, perhaps because of this, made the immediate decision that I must be delivered in the manner of the great Caesar himself. He administered a gulping gut full of rum down my mother’s gullet then proceeded to quickly and skillfully slit her belly and tear me screaming from her womb.

My oldest brother, Clarry watched the whole ordeal in utter fascination, and later would recount the horrible episode to me late at night causing me to suffer from a lifetime of sleep shattering nightmares. Clarry never failed to mention that Mr. Webb sowed my mother’s belly back together “like a seamstress at her loom using naught but dried sheep intestines that had been soaked in spirits”. Such was my coming in and such has been my path ever since.

 —ooo—

Milk Tea with Cream

14 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 27 Comments

Tags

cup of tea with milk, Julian Assange, Kyoto

Illustration and Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

 

Illustration

I begin this piece with a cup of milk tea at the Cafe de The Francois in Kyoto. Waiting for a friend who didn’t turn up (lost at the other end of the street). The lighting is yellowed like the walls, playing off bald heads and gold spectacles. Well dressed ladies cluster on red velvet upholstery raising their pitch over the piano concerto. A man with his elderly mother bend over cream cakes. He stirs his drink vigorously and when it spills he exclaims and stops all movement. His mother rustles through her purse and takes out tissues to wipe the spill. After finishing his cake, he reaches into his own bag, takes out his own tissues, and wipes his own mouth. I accept a final refill of my glass of water, and leave for the train.

Milk Tea with Cream

This week I’ve been occupied, watching an old 11 week TV Japanese drama on Youtube starring Takuya Kimura, a Japanese singer and actor breaking new ground in pan-asia entertainment, followed by the Julian Assange interview series. I started with the old guys and worked my way down to the new ones, ending with Occupy.

Toward the end of the Occupy compilation he asks a question about the organisation of the occupy sites. You started to put up instructions, he says. For how to organise the police, how to organise yourselves, how to organise interferers, crazy people, the garbage. Was this a model specifically for your events? Or was this some kind enactment of a larger model.

Fascinating to listen to the responses. I had the feeling that Assange is not interested in the Occupy movement as much as his audience. President Obama, did you take note of the cigars he was waving about? Or was that smoke not meant for you.

It seems that there is more to come.

Travel Trauma and Shopping

14 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 4 Comments

Travel Trauma and Tribulations.

June 12, 2012

“Let me show you Sir.” “Just punch in your flight number and the machine will print your boarding passes, Sir.”  A friendly traffic cone breasted Virgin-Air attendant was showing me the ropes on IT travel etiquette. I had felt elated being internet savvy enough to book the three returns Sydney –Melbourne a few days earlier. The booking form appeared reasonably simple and just wanted the basics, name address etc. It’s funny but when something involves payment to others it is surprising how creamy smooth things can work out on the internet. In no time the envelope with ‘payment by credit card’ appeared with ‘this will take just 45 seconds’. Forty five seconds later I had coughed up a hearty $ 830. – including $ 27. – Credit card surcharge and another $ 76. – GST. No mention of any of that when filling out the booking form. Why the Credit card surcharge? Creamy-delights for the airlines alright.

The velocity membership imbroglio I’ll save for another article. Apparently you get points which you can use for shopping. Shopping and plane travel are so interwoven, I wonder if they are not the same. At each step travelers are tempted to connect wallet to an electronic remote suction device. They are all into it and shopkeepers are specially picked for their gleaming white teeth and hypnotically affirmative nodding heads nudging those that obstinately remain hesitant towards parting with the mulla. I can somewhat understand shopping at the tax free international travel section, but Sydney-Melbourne? What is at work here?

The first thing to notice is the nervous tension and excitement amongst those that frequent airports. No form of travel can compare. The wait for the local 401 bus to Balmain that might take an hour to get to your destination is conducive to a quick nap or endless yawning, the opposite of excitement.

Nothing like that at an airport. There is a crackling of nervous expectations. People are on edge and running. That is exactly the entrapment enticement to be exploited. The way out is to quickly stop and shop. It gives relief and content to what we feel life is about, especially life on the move, in transit and at that moment. Shopping is life lived at its fullest at any airport, even if it only involves a $ 2.80 bottle of water.

Once the plane refs up its engines to the max, just before take-off, it only confirms that having shopped works as the perfect placebo calming frayed nerves with the tensioning of the solar plexus being eased when contemplating the plastic bagged goodies stowed just overhead…

On our return flight one upward-pointed nosed woman was so loaded up even her fellow passengers overhead travel storage had to be taken up. Bag after bag was pushed overhead. The lid could hardly close. Each time it was pushed down some other item would bulge out. The owner of those bags was chortling with delight and her bovine boyfriend just kind of smiled giving knowing looks at the Virgin flight attendant. She understood.

The plane cruised around aimlessly with the cheery captain telling us there were many behind ours queuing up to land at Sydney. They had priority and we would be about twenty minutes flying around a bit here and there. I could not help but hope all those queuing planes would not bump into each other during mid-flight.

Perhaps I should have done a solid shop myself, ease the nerves.

Tags: Balmain, Melbourne, Sydney, Virgin Posted in Gerard Oosterman | Edit |   Leave a Comment »

Soliloquies and Images from Balmain

12 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 15 Comments

Soliloquies and Images from Balmain

June 8, 2012

Soliloquies and Images from Balmain

When we moved for the first time to Balmain it did not have a library. Balmain was regarded as a place best avoided, known for its crooks, killers and itinerant rabittos. Apart from those flacid rabbits; milk and bread would also still be delivered. It was also endowed with  dozens of pubs with Friday-night booze-ups and fights being very normal. On Saturday mornings same pubs would be hosed down and mopped with hospital strength disinfectant, used as a fumigant against the pervasive odor of drunks and their much loved piss-ups.

Bib-n-Brace overalls would be hanging from Hills Hoists. Walking the streets at those times had the smell of mutton bone inspired poverty and sounds of clunky working boots on their way down to Harry West’s Stevedoring. You would never give your address as Balmain, especially if you wanted a loan from The Bank of New South Wales, except if you knew the local manager. I still remember his name when he gave us a stern warning when buying a house for $ 12.000 with glorious harbour views. His name was Alan Jackson. “You are buying just a shed”, “it’s just a dump”, he said with a smile.

After the advent of the coal-loader and ship’s containerization the Balmain peninsula became a bohemian ‘in-place’ with cheap wine casks slowly replacing long-necks of ale. Properties that were shunned for decades started selling. University lecturers with their lover students started moving in. Dope smoke and songs of Sonny and Cher, ‘I’ve got you Babe’ and later Carly Simon, ‘oh you are so vain’, filtered down onto liberated streets. In with the new.

One such brave man was Larry Lake. (1916-1989) He moved to Balmain from Canberra where he had worked as head of the National Library for many years and also previously as  Liaison Officer and Chief Selection Librarian in London. He bought a small workers cottage not far from where we were living at the end of the peninsula and close to the water’s edge. When large boats reversed propellers and their engines, the landmass would shake and our mugs hooked onto the kitchen cupboard wall would do the rattle and shake.

We met Larry Lake through The Balmain Association which had formed during the late sixties. The president of The Association for many years was John Morris, who at the time was also the president of The National Trust. Monthly meetings were held in the Balmain Watch-house which wasn’t used anymore. The ‘Watch-House’ and Police lock-up had fallen into disrepair. Its original purpose was a sleep-over for knock about delinquents and the permanently inebriated rough necks of the Balmain and Inner West during the period that Balmain was one of the roughest neighbourhoods in Sydney. This ‘Watch-House’ designed in the Georgian style by the Colonial architect Edmund Thomas Blacket was rented out to the Balmain Association for a nominal ‘Pepper and Salt ‘fee.

Helvi and I became members of this Association and Larry Lake suggested we could transform one of the Watch House cells into a children’s library. We couldn’t believe our ears. A library? At this time Balmain must have had some books but they would have been far and wide in between. Hooves and Horses more likely with Woman’s Weekly and Pix scattered around some of the more affluent terraces.

It was a hay day for communal living in the truest sense. I am unsure if this ‘community spirit’ is still thriving elsewhere. Perhaps it has and is blossoming in those new mining communities with the influx of so many young couples keen on making it. It certainly has disappeared in Balmain. There are hardly children about with none playing about with Billy-carts. Where are they?  Are they perhaps inside with X-boxes or have they been with replaced by remote roll-a-doors and multimillion extensions with huge micro wave ovens and security devices. Both parents are most likely working and pale looking. Children in Child-care at $ 100. -a day, who wouldn’t look pallid? The kids remain well hidden.

But, going back, it was extraordinary how so many good and gifted people got together and all at the same time. Larry Lake, a book expert. John Morris a conservationist and President of National Trust, right at the time of large scale demolition orgies throughout Sydney. The Balmain Watch House and the Children’s Library kept functioning till Leichhardt Council decided to stop the book famine and gave Balmain its own library. There were some odd ball aldermen too, Nick Origlass and Izzy Wyner, ‘spindle legs’ Phillip Bray and so many others.

We went to Larry Lake’s wake. He was a terrific bloke and good friend. He had a hand in saving and restoring “The sentimental Bloke” a very good Australian film.

http://afcarchive.screenaustralia.gov.au/newsandevents/at_archive/screeningsevents/sent_bloke/newspage_156.aspx

They were the good times.

Tags: Balmain, Balmain Watch House, John Morris, Larry Lake, NationaLTrust, The Sentimental Bloke, Thomas Blacket.

The King Street Giant’s Fossilised Mobile Phone.

11 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 23 Comments

Tags

archaeology of the inner west, Fossilised mobile phone, King Street, Newtown Giant

Newtown is one of Sydney’s most extensively explored suburbs and has yielded some surprising archaeological finds in the last hundred years.

Recent economic strictures imposed by the municipal equivalent of the Greece monetary crisis  – the Marrickville Council new economic program “Doing Less With Less” include a fundamental policy of discarding vital archival material, closing the public library and selling off museum storage spaces to Kennards – for hiring out to yuppies to store the shit that they can’t fit into their trendy new pieds a terre in the precinct.

The Friends of Newtown Archaeology (FONAy) are fighting back by meticulously sieving through the treasure trove and these are two of our amazing finds.

In 1907, two great disturbances rocked the world of Newtown Archaeology – the discoveries under the very main street, the artery of our borough – King Street revealed a rich and truly amazing prehistory of Newtown.

The first – was the unearthing of a fossilised prehistoric human – a giant of a man almost two and a half metres tall – named at the time, the King Street Giant.

In August of 1907, a nasty and curious accident happened in front of what was to later become the Newtown Bridge – after the construction of the reailway and the re-blocking of the tram tracks leading from King Street into Enmore Road.

Mr Halliwell Diddicomb-Holme, didn’t come home that day.  The dray of coal he was driving disappeared – Halliwell, horse and all into a hole that opened up in the road.  Incredibly, the horse was only slightly injured, but Diddicomb-Holme had to be put down.  Records do not reveal the fate of the load of coal, but it is not difficult to imagine that it was put to good effect by the less-well heeled parishioners of the borough.

Not wanting to see a repeat of the accident, the Town Council started excavations in an urgent attempt to prevent further catastrophic collapse of the carriageway.  This was particularly pressing with the imminent introduction of the first trams – weighing considerably more than Mr Diddicomb-Holme’s load of coal.

Work was progressing apace by January 1908 as the above photograph shows – with some serious excavatorial effort being put into the carriageway proximate to the Bank Hotel.  But an accidental discovery by a Mr Phillip McAvity brought the work to a sudden halt when his No. 4 Speer & Jackson shovel struck a very solid and hard object in the sandy loam typical of the soils overlaying the Hawkesbury sandstone in the County of Cumberland.

As was his wont, Mr McAvity took leave to consult the foreman – a Dutchman with a keen interest in archaeology Mr Peeg Sarmes.  Mr Sarmes cordoned off the area and began a re-inforced wooden trenching approach to protect the object until it could be fully exposed.

The broad light of day revealed a truly extraordinary find – a 4.0 metre fossilised human (13 feet tall in Imperial feet).  The creature was immediately named the “King Street Giant” – for the obvious reason that he was extremely tall  – as well as being fossilised in a limestone suit.

With the inducement of free beer, the publican of the adjacent Bank Hotel (the sister pub to the Pig’s Arms) – a Mr Barney Ancoke persuaded the diggers to haul the giant into the public bar where they draped him in a Newtown Bluebags flag and the curious and incredulous public paid three pence a head to observe the King Street Giant on the quarter hour.  He was the first, but certainly not the last giant to expose the cods in Newtown.

As you can possibly see from the photograph, the King Street Giant was modestly laid to rest with a hand discreetly covering his wedding tackle and the dissolved limestone flowing through the water table did the rest.

Barney Ancoke made a small fortune (eight guineas) exhibiting the King Street Giant, purchased a racing ferret from a Miss Uve Beenad and pursued a life in slow decline from the toxic effects of eating excessive amounts of rabbit from dubious sources.  He died penniless and unmourned and was buried in the pauper’s section, courtesy of the state, in a grave situation at Rookwood.

It is not recorded what happened to the actual King Street Giant, however it was later discovered that a faulty and inaccurate tape measure was used to establish the dimensions of the giant and the Dutch excavation engineer, Peeg Sarmes was charged with the crime of using tiny children for excavation work without pay and on a promise that there would be sandcastles later.

But the King Street dig was not done yet in revealing the mysteries of the past.

With the coming of the railway through Newtown, it was necessary to re-block the tram lines.  This occurred later the same year – in 1908.  Workmen were removing the tarmac and the fishplates under the rails and replacing the wooden blocks with the newly-discovered James Hardly asbestos-concrete suspension system.

The site engineer, a Mr Len Bovine noted in his day log of April 1, 1908 that his men “Were removing curious objects apparently manufactured by an obscure brickworks they called ‘Tellstar”.

More recent work with one of these found objects has revealed the incredible possibility that it is a fossilised version of a neo-pre-counciliar communication device.  Experts agree that it definitely predates Alexander Graham Bell, but there is dispute over whether it was merely an artefact used in some religious ceremony (perhaps involving a pre-Camperdown or Newtownian SP bookie) for the placing of wagers on marsupial races, or whether it is in fact the only surviving example of Tellstar’s first mobile phone.

Electronic engineers (and masons) have been engaged in in-depth analysis of the object and have reported promising early progress.  They have been able to extract numbers from the object’s memory, but attempts to dial through on those numbers have been fruitless with the exception of a retired GPO maintenance man who reported that he was hearing strange ring-tones from the back of a home-made brick barbecue.  Tellstar representatives have been unavailable for comment, mainly because they cannot or will not answer their phones.

Many Hoppy Returns

10 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Neville Cole

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Burma, Grand Cayman, Harold Hopwood, Hoppy

Hoppy in Burma, circa 1930

Story and Photographs by Neville Cole

Harry “Hoppy” Hopwood would have turned 104 earlier this week. Wherever he was I am sure he did so with a schooner of beer and a fine Hopwood cheroot. I wish I had been there with him to raise a toast, and listen to a story or two. Instead, I’ll take the time today to share some of the Hopwood legend with you.

The author in Grand Cayman circa 1995

I met Hoppy on Grand Cayman shortly before his 87th birthday. I’ll remember him always as he was that day: a spry, cheerful old gent with an intoxicating laugh and a puckish glint in his eye. His adopted home on Grand Cayman is a small bar called Over the Edge that is literally built on the edge of a cliff and out over the Caribbean Sea. Next to the bar is old lighthouse from the top of which it is said on a good day you can see Cuba . Most nights when Hoppy is in Grand Cayman you will find him perched atop the corner stool at Over the Edge sitting with his good friend Capt’n telling tales and occasionally engaging in the lusty singing of a naughty shanty.

The author goes over the edge

Hoppy and the Capt’n were enjoying a quiet drink at Over the Edge when I wandered in. I sat down and ordered a Caybrew and before I had time to take my first sip, Hoppy had taken me under his wing. All I had to do to was introduce myself and ask Hoppy for his name. You see, it is impossible for Hoppy to respond to any question in a direct manner. Instead of just telling me his name, Hoppy had to spin me a yarn.

“The name on my passport” he said, “reads Harold Lloyd Hopwood, but I’m rarely called anything of the sort. My father, the entertainer, George Hopwood, of Hopwood and Harris the Brighton Boys fame, always called me Harry. Most of my good friends know me only as Hoppy, though once the great S.J. Perelman in one of his less humorous novellas, dubbed me Hapless Hopwood. Frankly, I don’t care what they call me anymore, unless it’s late for dinner, boom boom.”

At this point in the story, as if on cue, Capt’n began to chuckle and my beer arrived so I raised my glass and said “Well Cheers, Hoppy” and after taking a sip added “So, you’re not from here then I take it?”

“Here?” Hoppy pondered. “No, not here exactly. I guess I would have to say I am from New York though that answer seems far less than satisfying because, you see, where I am from is far less important to me than where I am and where is am is right here. I’ve been everywhere others weren’t and disaster was my only companion. I’ve contracted just about every known disease of the modern age and a few that have yet to be diagnosed, but I’ve always traveled on. What I’m not is a writer, though I met many in my time. Writers spend half their lives chasing down inspiration and the other half trying to remember what it was. That’s not for me. Not that I have anything against books or the written word. On the contrary, I enjoy them thoroughly. In fact, I’ve always kept a journal. I’ve filled a full two-dozen of them with various and sundry jottings; but that’s all rote and happenstance – life is in the living, not the retelling.

“Is that so?” Capt’n snorted. “Then why are you so bloody fond of the retelling part?”

“Quiet, Capt’n I’m just answering his question.” Hoppy muttered without ever turning his head.

“I was born on the sixth day of the sixth month of the sixth year of the century, within the incandescent glow of Coney Island, New York. My old Da was as cockney as they come. From the moment I tumbled from the womb, my impressionable brain was filled with rhyming slang and lilting English melodies. So complete was my indoctrination, that despite being submersed in Brooklyn bawls and Bronx cheers for a good part of my youth, I was without fail, always mistaken for a Londoner. My parents came to New York soon after the untimely split of the Brighton Boys in 1904 to perform their show “London Derriere” and never saved up enough money for a return ticket. Mother, it seems, was no replacement for the outrageous Charlie “Bomba” Harris and London Derriere was far from a roaring success; but with two paychecks coming into the family instead of one, George and Emma: The Hilarious Hopwoods did manage to become two of the most reasonably priced entertainers in the greater New York area. So what if their show was tired as old boots, it hardly mattered, my old dad was a masterful salesman and had an uncanny knack for making good business decisions. Somehow, somewhere he’d find a way to succeed. You see, there was one thing my Da loved more than old London town and that was the machinations of high finance. In fact, he’d only managed to lure my strong-willed mother to New York in the first place by regaling her with tales of wondrous Wall Street. Like most of the American public, George Hopwood longed to make a killing in the Stock Market. They planned to grab themselves a quick fortune and retire to the English countryside.

“And what was it your Da would sing to you as he bounced you on his knee?” Capt’n inquired with a stifled snort.

“Stocks, Harry!” he would sing to me. “That’s where your future lies. Stick with stocks, me lad, and you’ll soon reach the skies!” At this, Da would raise his voice to a high crescendo and toss me into the air catching me just before just before I hit the ground. I always screamed with delight at this, a reaction that only encouraged George to try to throw me even higher. Of course, the Hopwood apartment was far too small for such a dangerous game to carry on for long without incident. It isn’t clear exactly how my mother knocked me out of my father’s reach as she bustled through the door that day. She may have swatted me right out of midair, or possibly she toppled over the top of my father causing him to mistime his catch; but the end result was I broke several bones and spent nearly three days unconscious. It was the first of many episodes with coma-inducing injuries.

“Which explains everything you ever need to know about this crazy old coot,” the Capt’n chortled as he rose and staggered slightly to the bathroom.

“You have the look of a man of words,” Hoppy said to me quite seriously after the Capt’n had moved out of earshot.

“It’s how I make my scratch” I replied… unable to resist taking on Hoppy’s addictive word play.

“Good,” Hoppy said pulling a large stack of journals out from behind the bar and dropping down before me. “Look this lot over while you’re in town and we can talk about you writing my life story when I get back. Meet me here in three days, four tops. We will be here to celebrate my birthday at least…and you are hereby invited to join us. No gifts necessary. Fine with you?”

“Fine Hoppy, of course,” I replied. “Where are you headed?”

“North, I believe.” See you in a few days.” Hoppy smiled as he threw a stack of Cayman dollars on the bar. “And the next drink’s on me.”

Looking North to Cuba

As I sat and sipped my rum and cokes that evening I began to read Hoppy’s journals. Within the first few pages I noted details of numerous hospital visits and the occasional traumatic head injury. Despite these scrapes and bruises it appeared that Hoppy’s childhood was a generally happy and uneventful one. That is until I found an entry about an incident that occurred shortly before his twenty-first birthday, when George Hopwood drove his brand new Model T off the road near Staten Island. Emma and George died together in the crash and left Harry, who recovered after a brief weeklong coma, alone in the world.

But it was the next entry that really caught my eye. In it Hoppy described turning his back on a lifetime of his recently deceased father’s advice. When confronted with facing the world alone for the first time, Hoppy opted to cash in all of his small family fortune and use it all to see the world. The long and short of this being, that by the time the Great Stock Market Crash of 1929 hit, Harry was living high in the mountains of Burma; the proud owner of the newly formed Hopwood Cheroot Company. Had he “stuck with stocks” as his father advised, Harry would have lost everything; instead he happened upon a sweet deal that would keep him flush enough to travel the world the rest of his life and bring him into close contact with some of the most discerning and infamous cigar aficionados of the modern age.

Hoppy never did return to Over The Edge. I was there every night until June 6th. When he didn’t return for his birthday party, I put his journals back behind the bar and headed off into the night; but Hoppy’s tales I read that week still bounce around my brain.

From time to time, an incident will remind me of one of Hoppy’s adventures and I imagine him still out there dodging danger and living life to the fullest; then I think back to my last memory of that evening with Hoppy in Grand Cayman… two tipsy octogenarians stepping off the dock, setting their course for due north, and powering out into the darkness. No doubt Hoppy had a hankering for a fine Cuban cigar.

Happy Birthday, old friend. Many hoppy returns!

Queen to Pawns

08 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

playlist, queen, Queen Elizabeth

Playlist for the Queen’s Birthday by Algernon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rJGX8uqoL8

Acid queen – Tommy featuring Tina Turner

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUIQSy2_0Dg

Kings and Queens – Aerosmith

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFrGuyw1V8s&ob=av3n

Dancing queen –ABBA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BAf2S6ij2gk&ob=av2e

Killer Queen – Queen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKxfUJr0E_A

Queen of Decadence – Schwarz Stein

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhJIDETEVIQ

Caribbean queen –Billy Ocean

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cob00SYvHE8

Queen Jane Approximately – Grateful Dead (would have been Bob Dylan if I could have found a decent version)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHRpRzXzTHg

Pearly Queen – Traffic

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKfETKRJC_M

The Vanilla Queen – Golden Earring

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHEuSGGmX-c

Witch Queen of New Orleans – Redbone

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ejjZhcv7Ho

Queen of Spades  – Styx

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wz5IFl7uCis&ob=av2n

The Queen is Dead – The Smiths

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dr_YfJFSkis

White Queen (As it began) – Queen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DLF7quqbCs

Ballad of the Teenage Queen – Johnny Cash

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuFl423r4BA

Death Valley Queen – Flogging Molly

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRWQIIkCndg

Rock ‘n’ Roll Queen – Mott the Hoople

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckRX0k9owAY

The March of The Black Queen – Queen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhJ6lA-0rBY

Origins of the Queen of England

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