Wendy Cope 

Wendy Cope: ‘I remember getting angry with my sister …’

The poet recalls childhood memories, from not crying when she was sent to boarding school to feeling dizzy smoking her first cigarette
  
  

Wendy Cope at home in Cambridgeshire.
Wendy Cope at home in Cambridgeshire. Photograph: Graham Turner/Guardian

I remember the first time I read a book by myself. It was The Buttercup Farm Family by Enid Blyton. I got stuck on the word “put” and had to ask Nanna.

I remember getting angry with my sister and sitting on top of her and banging her head on the floor.

I remember sitting at the piano making up a tune, then thinking it couldn’t be any good because to do it properly you had to have lessons in composing.

I remember a frightening dream about being chased by Captain Hook and the pirates.

I remember when we kept chickens in the back garden and I collected the eggs.

I remember being told to write a poem at school when I was six. I didn’t know how to begin, so I copied the first line from the girl in front of me, and wrote the rest of it myself.

I remember an older girl called Janet coming to play with us. One day she brought a little cushion with an opening at one corner. Inside there were scraps of beautiful fabrics. She let us take them out one at a time and look at them. It was wonderful.

I remember playing a record of Lillibulero and dancing round and round the wind-up gramophone.

I remember dreaming that I could fly. I didn’t go high up but I could lift my feet off the ground and move effortlessly through the air. I still have this dream sometimes.

I remember dreaming that someone was tickling me and wouldn’t stop and it was really horrible, so I bit them as hard as I could. I still have this dream too.

I remember when our South African aunt and cousins came to see us. I had been expecting black people in grass skirts and I was disappointed.

I remember finishing the last of Enid Blyton’s Malory Towers books and wishing there were more.

I remember Nanna keeping us out of the way because Daddy needed to talk with Mummy about the business.

I remember saying goodbye to my parents at Charing Cross station when I was seven and first went to boarding school. I didn’t cry because the girls in books didn’t cry.

I remember the first time I saw a slug. It was a big black one, moving up the wall of the school dining room. I couldn’t take my eyes off it because it was so horrible. I thought to myself: “That must be a slug.”

I remember the first time I ate baked beans. We had them at school, on fried bread, and I liked them a lot. I still do.

I remember the matron, putting a kaolin poultice on my knee after a girl pushed me over on the Sunday afternoon walk.

I remember permanganate of potash. It made the water bright purple and you had to sit with your feet in it.

I remember stone hot-water bottles.

I remember being part of a gang called The EE (it stood for Eating Eight). We stole spring onions from the kitchen garden.

I remember wishing I could run fast and be good at games.

I remember my best friend coming out of the cloakroom on a cold day, wearing a big coat with a hood, and saying, “I’m an Omo.” She often got things wrong in ways that were funny, and that was one of the reasons I liked her so much.

I remember a girl called Helen, who bossed us around.

I remember learning to sing The Ashgrove and Linden Lea and Early One Morning.

I remember conducting the percussion band on Open Day. The teacher chose her favourite, Gina, but it turned out Gina couldn’t beat 4/4 time. I was the only one who could.

I remember feeling sorry for a girl called Jane because I thought she was very ugly. When Mick Jagger became famous, it struck me that he looked just like Jane.

I remember reading under the bedclothes and the torchlight getting dimmer and dimmer.

I remember wearing long grey socks, held up by garters. I remember nametapes on everything.

I remember reading Kipling’s Jungle Books and thinking they were the best books I’d ever read and feeling sad about saying goodbye to Baloo and Bagheera and their world.

I remember writing stories in an exercise book and telling people I wanted to be a writer.

I remember thinking poetry was mostly rather boring.

I remember picking up one of the Pooh books and realising for the first time that it was very funny. I reread both the books, laughing all the time.

I remember going with my sister to buy the Beano and Dandy and sitting on a wall to read them because we weren’t allowed them at home.

I remember my father reciting The Charge of the Light Brigade. That was better than the poems we did at school.

I remember a Christmas tree that rotated and played a tune.

I remember those big old Christmas tree lights. When one bulb went, the whole lot stopped working. Grownups got very tetchy trying to find out which bulb needed replacing.

I remember watching the Coronation on television. Richard Dimbleby kept going on about how heavy the crown was and I cried.

I remember having a bilious attack, kneeling with my head over the toilet and feeling so ill I wished I could die.

I remember having chickenpox at school in a dormitory full of girls with chickenpox. We had a competition to see who could drink the most cups of tea in a day.

I remember dressing up in my party dress and standing in front of the mirror imagining I was a ballet dancer.

I remember daydreams about being a concert pianist. I remember longing to have an older brother. My father was a widower when he married my mother. I used to fantasise that a half-brother would turn up out of the blue.

I remember being afraid that Daddy would die.

I remember pretending to think I was adopted and getting a lot of concerned attention and reassurance from my parents. I had been hoping to learn that I was adopted because it would make me more interesting.

I remember being told, repeatedly, that I was lucky to have curly hair.

I remember hating my hair and wishing it was straight.

I remember sulking because I was made to wear a hat to church in the school holidays.

I remember telling my mother that I hated her, and meaning it.

I remember choosing a book about natural history and being disappointed because it was about nature not history.

I remember Nanna, a teetotaller, saying, “I’ve never touched an alcoholic in me life.”

I remember using Daddy’s oil paints to paint a picture of our garden. It was no good.

I remember our art teacher in the senior school, with her smock and her CND badge. She was only interested in the girls who were good at art.

I remember Miss Cox playing us a record of Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik in a class music lesson, and thinking to myself, “I like this. I really like this.” And feeling pleased with myself for liking classical music.

I remember falling (briefly) in love with Cliff Richard when I was 14 and we went to see him at the Palladium.

I remember falling in love with Frankie Vaughan and later with Anthony Newley, and writing a poem about the latter.

I remember falling in love with older girls at school. Mostly they were the ones who sang solos in the choir.

I remember learning how to inhale cigarette smoke and feeling dizzy and having to lie down.

I remember an incident in a war story when an American airman touched a nurse’s breasts. After that I began to have sexual fantasies.

I remember writing a poem about Princess Margaret’s wedding.

I remember being ashamed of myself because I was overweight.

I remember being taken to see a doctor and told that I was losing weight too quickly.

I remember being glad that I was at boarding school because there were no boys there and I didn’t have to worry about looking attractive.

I remember reading Keats and thinking I would like to marry a poet and be his soulmate. I had forgotten all about wanting to be a writer myself.

Life, Love and The Archers by Wendy Cope is published by Two Roads, £16.99. To order a copy for £12.99 including free UK p&p, go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846

 

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