Monday, 19 January 2009

January was never a favourite. This year is no exception. Had we been blessed with "proper" snow, I wouldn't feel the same... One of the things I really miss up here in Scotland is the proximity to France. This time of year (and others too!) I would set off with a few friends, heading for The Tunnel and ultimately Bleriot-Plage. We pretended it was because it was time to stock up on good wines at reasonable prices in chosen shops. What we really went for was a good stroll along the beach, followed by a seafood lunch at a certain restaurant. Over the years we perfected our timetable; the shopping was done and dusted in an hour, the rest of the time was sheer joy. The only time we stopped in our tracks, was on that day in November, when one of us received a mobile text message. Two planes had hit the Empire State Building, another The Pentagon. We left early and listened to news bulletins all the way back to Berkshire.

NORMANDY MIST

The people-carrier ploughs through monochrome mist,
Making motorway progress towards the coast.
We get out on arrival at Bleriot-Plage,
Slamming the doors shut behind us.

Grey winds grip us: try to treat us like litter
Left on the beach. Resisting, we anchor our feet
In silver-grey sand and look for the white cliffs of Dover.
In vain, of course, because beyond the lighthouse
All becomes an everstretching blur.
Nor can we enthuse over speeding sand yachts -
They remain tethered on a day like this,
When gloom threatens all that exists.

But seafood awaits in Au Cote d'Argent,
Where our reception is warm and familiar,
With an exchange of phrases and French muted smiles.
We sit around our table, not exactly enjoying
Panoramic views. But does it matter
When someone has placed a vase filled with
Winter mimosa in our midst?

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