Archive for August, 2009

Once apon a time

Bumpity bumpity bumpity bump,
Here comes the galloping major!
Bumpity bumpity bumpity bump,
Here comes the galloping major!
All the girls declare,
He’s a grand old stager!
Hi ho, here we go!
Here comes the galloping major!

So sing I to Tom as he bounces on my knee, smiling so broadly his eyes become little upside-down half-moons, like an extremely chuffed Pokémon.

It’s funny the fragments of nursery rhyme, stories and nonsense verse that resurface when you have a small baby to entertain. The Galloping Major song popped into my head unbidden after 30 or more years gathering dust in a brain cupboard marked “not really relevant to adult life”. Jane admitted she’d never heard it before, and looked up the lyrics on the internet. It turns out it was written in 1906 by someone called George Bastow, but Google couldn’t impart any further information.

We did find there were a lot more lyrics than I’d remembered. This is a general problem, most of the stories I stored away as a child are now badly degraded. For example, I dredged up and began telling Tom the tale of Goldilocks and the Three Bears last week, and suddenly realised it was missing the entire ending.

I got to the bit where Baby Bear had discovered Goldilocks still sleeping in his “just right” bed, and then drew a blank.

Did Goldilocks just run off? It seemed rather anti-climactic. The more realistic ending to a tale involving a small girl trapped in a room with two extremely large and powerful mammals (who are well known for violently protecting their young) didn’t seem particularly likely either, even for a children’s story.

But perhaps that’s why I’d blanked it out, the ending being too traumatic for my tiny mind.

I should really make the effort to look up the ending to the story, but really it doesn’t matter anyway. At this age, Tom would be quite happy if I read him the back of a cereal packet, as long as I did it with lots of silly noises.

So we’ll probably stick to the new ending. Intoned in a sing-song voice it works fine: “and Daddy bear swung his huge paw, tossing Goldilocks across the room like a rag-doll. Oh yes he did!! She crashed heavily into the bedroom wall – CRUNCH! – and landed in a lifeless heap on the floor. Poor Goldilocks! The bears then ate her – NOM NOM NOM – and all agreed it was a lot nicer than porridge any day! The end!”

Besides, rather than trying to remember ancient stories handed down for generations, I’ve found it a lot easier to recount tales that had a far greater impact on my young mind. The other day Tom really enjoyed the story of Luke Skywalker and the One Bear, Two Robots, and Alec Guinness.

In my version, Han shoots first.

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The Alternative British Citizenship Test

The trouble with the official British Citizenship Test is it’s a bit like testing if someone can drive by just quizzing them on the Highway Code, rather than putting them in a car and seeing if they can avoid hitting things. It’s too much about boring legislation and regulations and not at all about the stuff that you really need to know to survive in British society.

So I’ve put together a short quiz to test the more subtle things that make you British; like culture, and sport, and what to do on a Bank Holiday.

I present:

The Alternative British Citizenship Test

1) Did you see the game last night? (Pick one)
a: Yes, what were Chelsea playing at?
b: Yes, what were Arsenal playing at?
c: Yes, I really fancied the labrador but it seems it was the spaniel’s night.
d: No I was busy working and contributing to the economy.

2) What do the following have in common: The Queen, turkey, Noel Edmunds, silly hats?
a: They’re all things that Prince Phillip has shot at.
b: They’re all traditional elements of a Proper British Christmas Day.
c: They’re all things that you require a licence to transport on a public highway.
d: They’re all sacred to the Church of England.

3) Barker is to Corbett as Wise is to?
a: Morecambe
b: Whitley Bay
c: Southend
d: Lowestoft

4) Eddie “The Eagle” Edwards leaves the ski jump at a speed of S, where S is equal to the speed he is going. Where does he land?
a: At the other end of his dad’s back garden.
b: Just below the ski jump.
c: It doesn’t matter, it’s the taking part that counts.
d: Lowestoft

5) Which of the following CAN’T you do during a bank holiday?
a: Visit a garden centre.
b: Wash your car.
c: Watch “Apollo 13″ for the tenth time.
d: Visit a bank.

6) Where is the highest point in Britain?
a: Ben Nevis
b: Arthur Negus
c: Henman Hill
d: Harry Hill

7) The funniest thing ever on British television was:
a: Del Boy falling through that bar.
b: Basil Fawlty beating up that foreigner.
c: Compo crashing in that bath.
d: Princess Di hitting that pillar.

8.) Which of the following is a “joke” religion that only became official after it was given as a popular answer in the 2001 UK Census?
a: Hinduism
b: Christianity
c: Judaism
d: Islam

9) Put the following in order of line to the throne:
a: Stephen Fry
b: Delia Smith
c: Joanna Lumley
d: Jeremy Clarkson

10) Having a child under the age of 16 entitles you to:
a: Child Benefit payments.
b: Park in the good spaces at Tescos.
c: Bang on endlessly about them.
d: Five units of alcohol per day.

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