MY LIBRARY HOME 

One of my earliest memories is of going to the Library.  Librarians then were strict and wouldn’t allow you in until they checked your hands were clean.  I didn’t care.  I just wanted to get in amongst those books. This Library has now closed and a new one built in its place, also good, and I don’t have to show that my hands are clean!

I especially remember the New York Library because it was so beautiful and because I bought two books in their book sale. ‘Letters of Arnold Bennett, Vol. 2. 1889-1915’ and ‘Letters of Arnold Bennett, Vol. 3. 1916-1931.’  I love these books.

I also love the stamped inscription on the bottom of them. ‘The New York Public Library – The Branch Libraries,’ and inside, ‘Withdrawn, for free use in City Cultural and Welfare Institutions.  May be sold for the benefit of the New York Public Library only.’  How great is that.

Then there was the one in the city of Dundee, Scotland.  A very small Public Library that hardly took up any room at all but had the same magic inside.  That Library has also gone but I still walk into it in my mind.

 Libraries then always seemed to require filled in forms and Birth Certificate before they’d let you in. I’d have supplied them with my blood group, shoe size and almost anything else just to get inside and pick up a book.

Which is why, at the time so many Libraries were having to close, I wrote this poem to defend them and remind why they are so crucial, so important to us all.

                              MY LIBRARY HOME 

When they tell me to ‘Attach Birth Certificate here,’
I ask them which one they mean.
The first one that simply affirms I have been born,
Or the real one, where under ‘Place of Birth,’
I have written ‘Library.’

For it was amongst these book-lined shelves
I was born to an awareness and understanding
Of what men and women, girls and boys get up to,
Plus all those other things we’re told that flesh is heir to.
I took down those books, held them, read them
And loved them so much, I hugged them.

I read about everything.
Love and hate, life and death, war and peace,
Joy and sorrow, crime and punishment.
I read about mountains, valleys, deserts, cities and jungles,
And how man was just a pinprick of light
In a vast darkness.
Or, maybe, a pinprick of darkness
In an ocean of light.

I learnt about creatures that walk, talk, crawl, creep, swim and fly
And how a sudden, surprising spark of affection
Can be a connection between them and us,
Us and them.

Which was why, under ‘Nationality’ where it said,
‘Tick any one of the countries that follow from A to Z,’
I ticked them all instead.
For I am every colour and race, creed, dogma and faith.
Is that hard?
Not when you’ve got a Library card.

So that’s my real home, for me and generations before me,
For together we speak for all those yet to come,
Who need us to succour them, love them, encourage them,
build them and fill them, and shine ‘em up,
As they find their place in their Library home. 

                                                ©2017 GWEN GRANT

 

 

 

TEA AND SUNSHINE

When I was a girl, we went to the seaside for a day once a year.
The Miners Welfare put on buses to take the children and their mothers,
grannies, aunts , brothers, sisters etc., etc., to the nearest stretch  of coast.
It was like a dream!  For not only did we get to see the sea, we got half- a-crown
to
spend, as well.  Candy floss, penny machines in the Arcades, the Laughing

Policeman, and, up to 12 and  a half pence ( today’s half-a-crown value) anything
we desired until the money sadly ran out.   When I think of those days
now, I can feel the sunshine.

TEA AND SUNSHINE

Tea and sunshine.
Lemonade.

Sandy beaches full of seashells.
Conch shells, ribbed shells,
Tiny pink baby shells.

No squid.
No octopus.
No shark, no dolphin nor whale.
These only to be dreamt of.

A day at the seaside

Lovely!

              ©2023 GWEN GRANT

The Blue Whales
Hurt in an accident, the Blue Whales help Michael forge a
new relationship with his father.
Available in SMASHWORDS and KINDLE.

   DREAM MAKER

Years ago, when I was a girl, I used to read scary stories at bedtime to frighten
myself.  I bitterly regretted this when I had to live in a big old country house
with floors that creaked even when no-one was walking on them and when
shadows took the form of human figures. So, had I been asked then what was
the worst bad dream, I would inevitably have said something along these lines.
Now, however, bad dreams can be a lot more subtle and a lot more scary, just
like the one in this poem.

 DREAM MAKER

His dream maker has retired and gone
  on holiday,
Taking with it all the sunny holidays and
  golden beaches.

What has it left behind?
What couldn’t it be bothered to pack into its
  overnight bag?

Well, just about everything except the dream
  of Hoovers.
Walking up and down grey carpet, constantly
  running over the same bits of paper
With the same little black figures written on them.
The ones that don’t add up and never will no matter
  how often he writes them down.

That’s it!
A vacancy has occurred at this house.
Only dream makers with fabulous holidays in hand
  need apply.
Those who have hoovering and unfriendly figures
  in their pockets

   NEEDN’T BOTHER.

© 2023 Gwen Grant.

THE SCHOOL I WAS SENT TO

Impossible as it seems now, when I was a child and  very poorly, I was sent to
an Open Air School 300 and more miles from where I lived. 
All the little girls, including me, slept in Wards with windows wide open every
night and had a routine which was totally, utterly foreign to me.  I was a Northerner
in the  midst of Southerners and absolutely everything was different.
You were discouraged from crying and it still physically hurts when I cry now.
However, because of that school, I’m here to tell the tale!  I wrote a book about that
year there, KNOCK AND WAIT, which is the second book in my trilogy
PRIVATE-KEEP OUT, KNOCK AND WAIT and ONE WAY ONLY, the book I wrote when
I got back home.   PRIVATE- KEEP OUT is available on PENGUIN Children’s Classics.

  THE SCHOOL I WAS SENT TO

The first time I saw the school I had been sent to,
I thought it was a school for witches,
For the great house leaning against the forest
Was dark as night.
With only its snaggle toothed windows blazing in the moonlight.

Of course, it wasn’t a school for witches.
They only visited.
Swooping in through the open tops of windows
On their broomsticks,
Trying to make out they were the shadows of trees.
Bumping to a stop in the middle of the dormitory,
Where nothing could move them.

Nothing, that is, until Sister Sweet came crackling in,
All fiery with starch and bad temper.
Her purple hands so big, entire cities were built on her palms.
She made them shift.
The only thing I ever had Sister Sweet to thank for,
In the whole year I spent at that school I was sent to.

                                                                     ©  2018 GWEN GRANT