The Morris Minor Frank inherited from his parents has turned out to be a Godsend. It has always been well maintained and the mileage is actually quite low. It allows them to make occasional excursions to places like Woburn Abbey and Chessington Zoo on the odd day off.
Frank particularly likes the day trips down to Brighton. The drive down the A23 is always pleasant. They usually park in a side street (a fairly uncomplicated process in 1970) and unpack Cynthia’s various life support systems. Cynthia is nearly three now and becoming something of a handful so it’s important to bring orange juice, pushchair, some nappies just in case, and of course a blanket. When they think they’ve got everything off they go down to the beach where Lorraine remembers Eeyore and Frank has to go back.
People are strolling along the sea front. They are normal, ordinary English people for the most part, taking time out from their busy lives. Some are enjoying bracing walks, older folk are resting in Regency shelters or feeding the gulls. Fresh air never hurt anyone. There are some youngsters too. Youthful fashions haven’t changed much Frank observes. Headbands and granny glasses are still in evidence but by and large Flower Power seems to be wilting. Perhaps somebody forgot to change the water. He wonders what new fashion will replace it.
Frank has brought along a recently published novel by Kingsley Amis and he is looking forward to reading a chapter or two. It is ‘Green Man’ in which a publican who suffers from something called hypnagogic jactitation attempts to interest his current wife and his mistress in a ménage a trois. He also has a fairly challenging crossword and if that doesn’t hit the spot there’s always the vastness of the ocean to contemplate. The ocean across which generations of Englishmen have ventured to seek their fortunes, bringing the light of civilization to dark continents, plundering Spanish galleons, deporting unwanted criminals and stocking museums with looted antiquities and hitherto unknown species of plants and animals. Frank starts to imagine a tea clipper gamely rounding the Cape in full sail…
Cynthia has found a ball of tar. Luckily it hasn’t gone in her mouth. But her new red dress is perhaps not ideally suited to the conditions. Lorraine shows her how much fun it can be to put pebbles into a plastic bucket.
With Cynthia happily occupied Lorraine unpacks their lunch. There is a Thermos of tea and some cheese and watercress sandwiches. Frank chews a sandwich slowly whilst observing the Palace Pier. Further along the beach is the less popular West Pier engineered in 1866 by Eugenius Birch and beginning to surrender to the sea. Funny, thinks Frank. It seems like only last week that he had sat in this very spot with other young misfits listening to skiffle music. Now here he is in a deck chair eating sandwiches just like the normal people they used to make jokes about. But what, when you get right down to it, is ‘normality’ anyway?
There is a clattering noise as Cynthia empties a bucket full of large pebbles. Building sand castles on Brighton Beach involves a certain amount of heavy construction. Patches of sand are few and far between and the tide is coming in which doesn’t help. Lorraine thinks she is just about ready for a move. Frank fancies a beer. Lorraine wouldn’t mind a walk through the lanes. Cynthia has her eye on a colourful roundabout. Frank offers to go on it with her but Lorraine doesn’t think she’s quite big enough. Cynthia insists. Bit of a kerfuffle. Fortunately Lorraine is able to distract her with some candy-floss.
On the way to the lanes they stop to look at some rude postcards, the dominant features of which are angry women with big bottoms, meek little men in deckchairs, red-faced policemen and saucy nurses. There is also the occasional vicar. Frank considers sending one to Pop. There is certainly a good selection to choose from. He settles on Woman To Salesman: “That lavatory brush you sold me is no good mister, we’re going back to paper.”
On a park bench by the Royal Pavilion Frank wonders about some fish and chips? For later? Lorraine thinks it’s a good idea. Frank locates a vendor and orders two nice pieces of cod. Well wrapped, no vinegar, extra newspaper please. They should keep warm if the traffic isn’t too bad.
Lorraine thinks it might be a good idea to leave early to avoid the rush. Frank agrees. The car is exactly where they left it, undented, no graffiti and no wheels missing. So it’s off again on the good old A23. The same familiar route through Hurstpierpoint, Handcross, Pease Pottage, Crawley, Gatwick (where airport building continues apace), and back to Horley. It has been a most enjoyable Bank Holiday. And it certainly made a nice change. Frank’s ruminations on the nature of normality had been inconclusive but that was nothing new.

Comments
celticman | May 1, 2009 - 15:32
You've got a great eye for what was in and what wasn't. You bridge two generations. What is normality? em?
chuck | May 1, 2009 - 16:00
Thanks celtic. It's good to have perceptive readers.
Jasper_Milvain | May 1, 2009 - 16:34
I loved this from start to finish. It has a nice gentle tone, and it isn't at all fussy or showy, but it is brilliant.
So nice to read a decent third person narrative, too. The exception rather than the norm these days.
Just a passing thought, and I might well change my mind in this, but do you think you need "(a fairly uncomplicated process in 1970)"? I think that it sits a little uncomfortably in a story written in the present tense and I can pretty much work out the setting for myself, and the Amis reference does this job too.
I am guessing that this is a competition entry. If it is then best of luck. I think it'll take some beating.
Thanks.
JM
chuck | May 1, 2009 - 17:09
Thanks Jasper. I'm in two minds about that line myself but I needed a sneaky way to establish the time period. Maybe there's a better way to do it. I'll think about it some more.
Mangone | May 1, 2009 - 17:57
A wonderful piece Chuck.
It brought back memories of plastic people (hippie term simular to what later became 'suits'), of summers of love, of days when you could still travel free to almost anywhere and meet some lovely people while you did it (hitch-hiking).
A bit of everything from local history to obscure musical genres (skiffle) and a pleasant depiction of simpler days with simpler pleasures.
Who could ask for more? (well besides Oliver)
As Jasper says, the best of luck in the competition!
It will take some beating.
lenchenelf | May 1, 2009 - 18:00
Straddles a poignant turn in perception for the reader through timelime, quietly and cleverly achieved with subtle but significant markers in place, narrative style, lack of sentiment. There is almost an ache created for this peculiar sense of authorial questioned 'normal' life prior to a seismic shift in technology and globalisation. Very well crafted :-) Nice one Chuck :-0) atb Lena
chuck | May 2, 2009 - 12:33
Thanks all for the helpful and encouraging comments. Much appreciated.
Dynamaso | May 5, 2009 - 06:38
Brighton Beach has a mystique of its own, much the same as Australia's Bondi Beach. While I've never been there, this tale has allowed me a glimpse of what is was once like. Lovely piece.
Ewan | May 5, 2009 - 08:03
Take it out, Chuck. Flower power on the wilt, Amis' (shite) novel and all the rest do the trick. If you're really not happy, put the price of the two cod in and refer to 'new pence'; which we still called them for several years, didn't we?
Good luck, although you won't need it. I don't envy the judges for the prose competition.
Ewan
Sean McNulty | May 6, 2009 - 03:56
Very impressed with this, Chuck. Your knack for literary allusion is ingenious sometimes, and just gets better and better
hilary west | May 10, 2009 - 17:46
I found this evocative and atmospheric. Good Luck !.
jennifer | May 18, 2009 - 22:24
'Flower Power seems to be wilting. Perhaps somebody forgot to change the water.' What a line! Still giggling.
Wonderfully evocative and almost philosophical...I wasn't 'there' but I felt like I was while reading this!
J x
threeleafshamrock | May 21, 2009 - 13:29
'Now here he is in a deck chair eating sandwiches just like the normal people they used to make jokes about.'
Jeez, I think I AM Frank!
Lovely piece, well written, nicely paced and brings back some lovely memories; I could hear the sea and smell the seaside and feel the excitement that us kids felt at the first glimpse of the sea, from the car. Of course now you would have to leave London at 3am to get there for Noon, LOL. Good luck with the competition.
Chris
Cavalcaderl | May 21, 2009 - 21:46
very well explained, its a job to please everyone. ihad families travel from scotland and somerset. with all the necessities and children. but there never was a toilet difficult. One used to attach a boat on back of the car, long journeys. 6 of us meet each other and go out days while they stayed with one of us, great then. well explained very expensive now?good luck well put and interesting.