Notes From a Small Island by Bill Bryson
Prologue
My first sight of England was on a foggy March Night in 1973 when I arrived
on the midnight ferry from Calais.For
twenty minutes, the terminal area was aswarm with activity as cars and lorries
poured forth, customs people did theirduties, and everyone made for the London
road. Then abruptly all was silence and I wandered through sleeping, low-lit
streets threaded with fog, just like in a Bulldog Drummond movie.
It was
rather wonderful having an English town all to myself. The only mildly dismaying
thing was that all the hotels and guesthouses appeared to be shut up for the
night. I walked as far as the rail station, thinking I'd catch a train to
London, but the station, too, was dark and shuttered. I was standing wondering
what to do when I noticed a grey light of television filling an upstairs window
of a guesthouse across the road. Hooray, I thought, someone awake, and hastened
across, planning humble apologies to the kindly owner for the lateness of
my arrival and imagining a cheery conversation which included the line, 'Oh,
but I couldn't possibly ask you to feed me at this hour. No, honestly -well,
if you're quite sure it's no trouble, then perhaps just a roast beef sandwich
and a large dill pickle with perhaps some potato salad and a bottle of beer.'
The front
path was pitch dark and in my eagerness and unfamiliarity with British doorways,
I tripped on a step, crashing face-first into the door and sending half a
dozen empty milk bottles clattering. Almost immediately the upstairs window
opened.
'Who's that?' came a sharp voice.I stepped back, rubbing my nose, and peered
up at a
silhouette with hair curlers.
'Hello,
I'm looking for a room,' I said.
'We're shut.'
'Oh.' But what about my supper?
'Try the Churchill. On the front.'
'On the front of what?' I asked, but the window was already banging closed.
The Churchill
was sumptuous and well lit and appeared ready to receive visitors. Through
a window I could see people in suits in a bar, looking elegant and suave,
like characters from a Noel Coward play. I hesitated in the shadows, feeling
like a street urchin. I was socially and sartorially ill-suited for such an
establishment and anyway it was clearly beyond my meagre budget. Only the
previous day, I had handed over an exceptionally plump wad of colourful francs
to a beady-eyed Picardy hotelier in payment for one night in a lumpy bed and
a plate of mysterious chasseur containing the bones of assorted small animals,
much of which had to be secreted away in a large napkin in order not to appear
impolite, and had determined thenceforth to be more cautious with
expenditures. So I turned reluctantly from the Churchill's beckoning warmth
and trudged off into the darkness.
Further along Marine Parade stood a shelter, open to the elements but roofed, and I decided that this was as good as I was going to get. With my backpack for a pillow, I lay down and drew my jacket tight around me. The bench was slatted and hard and studded with big roundheaded bolts that made reclining in comfort an impossibility - doubtless their intention. I lay for a long time listening to the sea washing over the shingle below, and eventually dropped off to a long, cold night of mumbled dreams in which I found myself being pursued over Arctic ice floes by a beady-eyed Frenchman with a catapult, a bag of bolts and an uncanny aim, who thwacked me repeatedly in the buttocks and legs for stealing a linen napkin full of seepy food and leaving it at the back of a dresser drawer of my hotel room.
I awoke
with a gasp about three, stiff all over and quivering from cold. The fog had
gone. The air was now still and clear, and the sky was bright with stars.
A beacon from the lighthouse at the far end of the breakwater swept endlessly
over the sea.It was all most fetching, but I was far too cold to appreciate
it. I dug shiveringly through my backpack and extracted every potentially
warming item I could find - a flannel shirt, two sweaters, an extra pair of
jeans. I used some woollen socks as mittens and put a pak of flannel boxer
shorts on my head as a kind of desperate headwarmer, then sank heavily back
onto the bench and waited patiently for death's sweet kiss. Instead, I fell
asleep.
I was
awakened again by an abrupt bellow of foghorn, which nearly knocked me from
my narrow perch, and sat up feeling wretched but fractionally less cold. The
world was bathed in that milky pre-dawn light that seems to come from nowhere.
Gulls wheeled and cried over the water. Beyond them, past the stone breakwater,
a ferry, vast and well lit, slid regally out to sea. I sat there for some
time, a young man with more on his mind than in it. Another booming moan from
the ship's foghorn passed over the water, re-exciting the irksome gulls. I
took off my sock mittens and looked at my watch. It was 5.55 a.m. I looked
at the receding ferry and wondered where anybody would be going at that hour.
Where would I go at that hour? I picked up my backpack and shuffled off down
the prom, to get some circulation going.
Near
the Churchill, now itself peacefully sleeping, I came across an old guy walking
a little dog. The dog was frantically trying to pee on every vertical surface
and in consequence wasn't so much walking as being dragged along on three
legs. The man nodded a good-morning as I drew level. 'Might turn out nice,'
he announced,
gazing hopefully at a sky that looked like a pile of wet towels. I asked him
if there was a restaurant anywhere that might be open. He knew of a place
not far away and directed me to it.
'Best
transport caff in Kent,' he said.
'Transport calf?' I repeated uncertainly, and retreated a couple of paces
as I'd noticed his dog was straining desperately to moisten my leg.
'Very popular with the lorry drivers. They always know the best places, don't
they?' He smiled amiably, then lowered his voice a fraction and leaned towards
me as if about to share a confidence. 'You might want to take them pants off
your head before you go in.'
I clutched my head - 'Oh!' - and removed the forgotten boxer shorts with a
blush. I tried to think of a succinct explanation, but the man was scanning
the sky again.
'Definitely brightening up,' he decided, and dragged his dog off in search
of new uprights. I watched them go, then turned and walked off down the promenade
as it began to spit with rain.