railways were privatised. He slept from time to time on park benches. He wrote operas for children, preferred tinned fruit, and hummed as though continually about to hatch.
My father was not a drinker. He was a Capstan Full Strength Navy Cut untipped man. He gave up after his stroke, simply smoked seventeen in a row in the hospital and never again. Not that there was long to go. His stroke had hit him while he was walking along reading a Posy Simmonds book in Charlotte Square. Perhaps it was an excess of pleasure that felled him.
Up ahead of Clement and me is my robust Cousin Audrey. A dead ringer for Christine Keeler, Cousin Audrey is a Champagne girl, and I hope she wonât mind if I say that she is now to the north of seventy, in her cloud of fragrance purchased at Jenners, the Queen of Edinburgh department stores, and surrounded by the ghosts of terriers and horses. Cousin Audrey is my motherâs first cousin and is a Young of Youngâs Malt Loaf, delicious, healthful and profitable. Youngâs Malt Loaf will be remembered by some for its acronym: YOUMA, long since, to Cousin Audreyâs righteous and splendid ire, munched up by United Biscuits, now a mere crumb in Nabisco, which may be just a cornerof Nestlé. Cousin Audrey keeps tabs on us all; she is not a McWilliam. McWilliams are mainly socialists and Cousin Audrey, to whom I canât not, as you will have seen, give her full title, does , energetically, use the telephone. She has graced stages from Pitlochry to London. One of her dearest friends, a Miss Balfour-Melville, she addresses as Miss Balfour-Melville. Miss Rosalind Balfour-Melville will this week be one hundred years old; we are in May 2008. For her birthday present she has requested a new white frock with a lot of wear in it. Thatâs Old Edinburgh for you.
When Cousin Audrey is puffed out, she declares, âWhew! Iâm peched.â When sheâs feeling dotty, she says, âI know you think Iâm up the lum.â Cousin Audrey is an alumna of a now-defunct Edinburgh school called St Trinneanâs, which is, you understand, not remotely the same as being a girl from St Margaretâs, which is quite distinct from Lansdowne House, George Watsonâs Ladiesâ College, Heriotâs or St Georgeâs, which as it happens is where I went. St Georgeâs is to the naked eye intensely Scots but to the understanding of mockers of a tubby wearer of its uniform in the nineteen-sixties, almost up-itself English.
My plaits often got filled with chewing gum on the bus or tied to the seat handles. The girls did the gum, the boys the tethering. Maybe it was the scarlet cockade on my beret embroidered with St George piercing his curly dragon and those four nouns from âThe Knightâs Taleâ, TRUTH, HONOUR, FREEDOM and COURTESY. In summer, we wore white gloves with our lightweight, fine puppystooth check, A-line coats; in winter the older girls sported a suit, known as a âcostumeâ and a cardigan in a shade named Ancient Red. I was only a âbig girlâ for a year, but during that year was privileged to enter the mysteries of the Senior-style undergarments: white knickers, navy knickers, white cotton suspender belt and stockings, in the shade Aristoc âAllureâ, the colour of strong tea with evaporated milk. There was a racier option, American Tan, that was a shiny auburn, the tea without the milk. The uniform came from Aitken & Niven or Forsythâs;it goes without saying that there were distinctions between the two shops. Forsythâs had a slightly swingier clientele and had perhaps less Old Edinburgh tone; it sold sportswear (tennis, croquet, skiing, cricket) and you sat on a polar bear to get your shoes fitted.
One of the things people ask, if they notice that you are female and gather that you might have been schooled in Edinburgh, is âWere you at one of those Jean Brodie style schools?â There is of course no such
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