The Tall Girl from Somerset 19 Anne
Anne
A play, a drink and Orion.
Three years have passed since Anne left
Oxford. Three winters have come early and gone late like unwelcome guests
that stay too long. Summer’s lease, as
we know, hath all too short a date, even in Somerset. Anyway,
weather apart, Anne is now a barrister in chambers in Bristol. She
is going through those years of starting a job and settling into it. How we
long for our apprenticeship to pass and to be accepted by our colleagues and
clients but when we look back, those years often turn out to have been the best
years of our life. Anne is the youngest person in the
chambers, always with something new to
assimilate, always with something new to get used to. Day
by day she has to learn to do what the others do from habit. She has little
responsibility as yet, but the work that she is in charge of is important to
her. The years of study, the years of theory are finally put to
use. She has to test herself. She has to find a place in
the scheme of things. She is now part of the working life of the city and
she is conscious of this as she walks through Queen Square with all the other
people who are making for their offices during those busy minutes just before
nine o'clock in the morning. Finally she is doing something.
In these early years in Bristol, Anne met
Quentin Goodish. Life went on in England too, not only on the road
east and in Australia.
If Anne and Quentin had
passed each other in Park Street they wouldn’t have looked at each other.
Quentin did not stand out among other men, and Anne would not have paid him any
special attention. She was tall and attractive and was always
noticed but Quentin wouldn't have seen her because he always walked along, head
down, absorbed in himself and his own concerns. How did they meet, then?
How did it happen?
They had simply decided
to go to the same play on the same night in the Theatre Royal in King
Street. He went alone, and she went alone, and they been given seats
next to each other. Later Anne often wondered if this had been a
coincidence, or if the woman at the box office had planned an evening for them.
‘Is my social life to be decided by the person in the box office? Has it come
to that?’ Lonely they both were. Work had given Anne little social
life. Her colleagues were mainly middle-aged men with young
families and many commitments, people who had already chosen their various
flight paths and who were busy.
Quentin had arrived at
the theatre first. Five minutes later Anne was shown to the seat next to
him. They nodded to each other, and both felt ill at ease since the
other seats in the row were empty. However, once they were sitting next to
each other, it would not have been right for either to stand up and move two or
three seats away. So there they sat, uncomfortably, their elbows almost
touching. Through the first act Quentin rehearsed what he would say,
and when the interval came he said it.
“Would you like a
drink?”
“Yes, that’s a good
idea. Thanks.”
The invitation was not
much to show for half an hour of thought, but it had the effect he hoped for,
and they went together to the bar. Anne had been wondering, as
she sat there next to someone who was on his own just as she was on her own, if
anything would happen in the interval, and she was glad when something
did. The bar was crowded and four harassed barmen were trying to
serve fifty impatient theatre goers in ten minutes. However, Quentin
managed to get two beers and bring them back, without spilling them, to where
Anne was waiting.
The rest was
easy. In any crowd, once the “other person” is converted from a
stranger into someone you have the socially accepted right to talk to, all the
hard work is done. How often do you see the partner of your dreams, over there
across the room, and you long to walk over and begin to talk, but you don’t,
and they later get up and go, and sadly you watch them leave! But
here the step was taken. The communication was now socially acceptable. ‘On
you go, Anne. On you go.’
After the play,
they left the theatre together, each much happier and with more hope in life’s
possibilities than when they had walked in. A light rain was
falling. It had been sunny when they had entered, but weather is
immaterial. Better to be with someone in the rain than lonely in the
sun. They walked down King Street to the Llandogger
Trow. Quentin bought two more beers, and they embarked on that
first, tricky, getting-to-know-you, summing-you-up conversation.
“Ah, so you’re a
barrister, well, I’m an accountant. Where do you
work? How long have you been here in Bristol? Yes,
it is a fine city. The play? Did you
like the play? So you’re from Somerset. I have an aunt in
Taunton. Ah, you’re from further north. The
Mendips. Right. I’m from Bristol. Born
here. Both of us born in
Clifton! Well! Can I get you another drink?”
Anne’s answers were fitted in among the
questions; she asked a few things herself, and little by little they each
constructed another acquaintance.
As he drank his beer, Quentin became more
relaxed and being more relaxed he became more talkative. Anne listened
patiently.
"Interesting, by the way, the name of this
pub, 'Llandodgger Trow'. It sounds odd, doesn't it! I only learnt this recently, but Llandogo is a
village on the River Wye a few miles above Tintern
Abbey. Perhaps that’s where Wordsworth was walking when he
wrote his poem. Around there anyway. In Llandogo they
used to build boats called trows. Hence the name of the pub.
'The Llandogger Trow.' The trows sailed from Llandogo down the River Wye,
along the coast of the Bristol Channel westwards, and then taking the River
Avon on the incoming tide, they reached Bristol, where they berthed at the dock
down the road from here. ‘Treasure Island’ starts here too, in this
very pub, except in the novel it is called the 'Admiral
Benbow'. Funny how novelists change the names of
places. There's no need to. They could just keep the name of
the pub as it is. And here, so they say, Daniel Defoe met Alexander
Selkirk, and so Robinson Crusoe was born. But I ramble on. I do
ramble on sometimes. I'm so sorry."
“I think they’re going to close
now. We’d better go."
"Yes, you're right. By the way,
what about the play next week? You know, at the Theatre Royal
again? Would you like to go?”
“That would be lovely. Thanks.”
Quentin felt very lucky, and thought that for
once he had received something which he did not deserve.
When Anne got home, it was nearly 11 o'clock,
and just before she put the key in the lock she looked up The rain had
gone, and it was a clear night, a clear frosty night, and every star was
shining. She felt better. The stars were all in their
places, everything was in its place, and things were going on as they should.
She felt re-assured. The universe was
on her side. She found Orion, with the three stars in his
belt. It was the only constellation she could pick out with ease,
and so it was the one she always looked for. In January and February Orion was
at his best, high up in the sky and easy to see. Harvey had pointed it out to
her on a crisp February night, the night before St Valentine, when they were
walking back to her room after seeing a film.
If she could see Orion, everything was all
right, and that night Orion was there, bright and clear, faithfully in his
place, with his belt and with his sword, and things were OK. Yes, he was there,
with the two bright stars at his shoulders, guarding his quarter of the sky.
She turned the key, and took a last look up at the sky. Then she
opened the front door and went in.
Comments
Post a Comment