I am reading a rather
delightful book I picked up by chance in the library.It is the diary by somebody called Kathleen
Hey who was a shop assistant in Yorkshire
during the Second World War.It brings
back very clear memories of my own childhood, particularly the four-year period
we spent escaping the London Blitz to Bowness-on-Windermere in the Lake District.Opposite the small house at the lakeside, a former café, into which we
crammed our large family of relatives and friends who had escaped to England
from Nazi-occupied Austria, was a small, derelict refreshment kiosk to which we
as children would press our noses because, displayed on its dust-covered
shelves, were cardboard replicas of the sweet and chocolates now no longer
available in the wartime shops.
I was reminded of the
feelings of longing I had each time I passed the kiosk by what I have just read
in Kathleen Hey’s diary, as she describes a few days’ holiday in Blackpool: “There were queues at all
food shops, some serving customers (residents) at one counter and visitors at
another.By the time a woman on holiday
has shopped for her family the morning will be gone.There are no cigs, sweets or matches though
many of the windows are attractively dressed with dummy boxes.”
I still have some of this
longing for chocolate which must have been sparked by the dummy boxes in the empty
kiosk all those years ago.Give me a box
of chocolates now and I am hard put not to finish it at one go. Thus are we all conditioned
by what happens to us in our childhood.
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