News from Norfolk

Tag: East Anglia

Ferier’s Hill

You will recall, perhaps, that most enjoyable conversation over dinner the other week?  You were assuring me with great conviction — I cannot now reconstruct the context — that there are now no fairies left in Norfolk. 

Apparently — or so you said — the Puritans — or was it the Roundheads? — had driven them all away. And even if a few had somehow survived, they wouldn’t much like our vast, industrial-scale, expensively disenchanted fields. ‘Tis is a well-known thing — or so you insisted, pouring more claret — that fairies much prefer a landscape of stone walls, age-old hedges and ancient ring-forts, of the sort you are so lucky to have still in Ireland. 

Well, that reminded me of something. Indulge me, then, briefly, while I tell you the story of Ferier’s Hill. 

I must have been twelve years old at the time. That’s almost sixty years ago now! I was in my last year at my frankly appalling junior school, so welcomed the advent of the Easter holiday as only a small, bookish, hopelessly unpopular schoolboy could. 

Imagine my consternation, then, when it transpired that I was to have a companion up at our Norfolk place — and, what’s more, that he was to stay with us for the duration of the holiday.

Max was fifteen years old — going on a louche thirty-six at the very least. He was a distant cousin. At the time, I was told that he was being foisted upon me because “it would be nice for you to have a friend, darling, wouldn’t it?” With hindsight, it seems more likely that his parents’ divorce, their miscellaneous erotic entanglements and lack of enthusiasm for their existing children prompted this rush to find a place to park Max for the holidays. 

Max was then resident at one of our great public schools, from which he was later expelled. He was quick to compare yours and my own, rather older, public school, at which I was due to start that autumn, unfavourably with his own. He smoked whenever he had the chance. He swore like a trooper. He helped himself to the odd nip from my father’s cut crystal decanters when he thought no adults were watching. He was, in short, very worldly, in a way that I certainly was not. 

Our introductory conversation set the tone for all but the very last of our subsequent interactions. 

Max wanted to know whether we had a boat — which, living a good ten miles inland from the more fashionable north Norfolk coast, we did not. Secondly, he asked after our tennis court. Here, I could only report that although my grandfather had created one back in the 1920s, it had by our own time deteriorated into an overgrown sandy patch where, in summer, lizards and slow-worms basked on the crackled, crazed, bituminous landscape of what was left of the playing surface. 

What, though, about our swimming pool? Alas, I was forced to admit that while we did at least have a pond, it was choked with pond-weed and rushes, hence suitable only for small fish, frogs and a single, ferociously predatory heron. 

Extended interrogation by Max elicited the confession that not only did we fail to ski at Val d’Isère, Gstaad or Courchevel — we didn’t ski at all! Nor did we have a place in the south of France. Nor, as far as that went, had I ever been to the Caribbean, nor Hong Kong. 

My eventual shy assertion that we did, sometimes, go to Scotland in the summer, produced what was to become a very familiar sneer, and a flick of cigarette-ash onto the tiled floor of the Orangery. “How extraordinary!” Max opined. This would turn out to be his catch-phrase, employed whenever some aspect of our Norfolk existence seemed to him pitiable. He said it very often. 

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The Scarecrow

The Scarecrow? Well, therein lies a tale! Perhaps it’s best that I simply tell you all the facts, such as they are, and let you draw your own conclusions.  

Jeremy and the twins invited themselves to stay up at Pagets for a few weeks. Had I told you they’d moved back to Pimlico? After Jenny died, I was hardly using the London place — maybe two or three times a year at absolute most — so when Jeremy was offered the new job, he and Mai decided that the time had come to bid sayonara to old Tokyo. 

The twins had just celebrated their fourth birthdays, so it wasn’t too late to swap school systems. Also, young children are hugely resilient, aren’t they? They thrive on change. They aren’t set in their ways like the rest of us miserable old reactionaries. 

All that was left to do, anyway, was for Mai to tidy up a few loose ends in Japan, while Jeremy made a start on sorting out the Pimlico digs with the twins in tow. 

Late-summer London, however, was hot and airless — especially so, one assumes, for little ones accustomed to ultra-modern, high-rise flats. I suspect they’d lived their whole lives amid artificial air conditioning — a noisy, charmless, soul-destroying abomination, if you ask me! — not that you did. Meanwhile the Pimlico flat had been taken over by a local firm of builders, along with their power tools, radios and nonstop cheeky-chappie banter. It was all too much. 

Hence the improvised sojourn with Grandpa amid the quieter charms of the twins’ ancestral rural Norfolk. 

It had been a while. When I’d last seen the twins — Jeremy, as you’ll recall, had offered them up as a sort of peace-offering to a dying if still alertly aware, acid-tongued Jenny — they were hardly more than two interchangeable bundles of life, sporting wild crests of raven-black glossy hair, mostly distinguishable by the differently-coloured dummies, one pink and one blue, permanently lodged within their chubby little faces. Jenny disapproved of dummies — just as she disapproved of Mai, Japan, Jeremy’s career changes and quite a lot else that came her way — but, for once, said nothing. Perhaps she had finally realised that there was, at that point, very little more to be said. 

That, though, is bye-the-bye. I had better get on with the story — in particular, how the Scarecrow got mixed up with it all. 

August was almost at an end. The three of them rolled up, after various delays, mid-afternoon, in Jeremy’s little car — Jeremy, Ren and a reluctant, sleepy Kitty who had to be prised out of the car like a clam from its enveloping shell. 

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