Lush Places: why I love where I live
This is the piece
I read out on World Book Night for the new book Dorset Voices:
Let me take you
now to Lush Places, an enchanted village where the luvvies seldom venture,
where the mist swirls around and around the top of Bluebell Hill like a
maelstrom.
Just down the
road is that well-heeled, genteel little Dorset town whose name all non-locals
mispronounce.
‘We love
Bee-minster,’ they say, their unintentional mistake instantly revealing that
they are not of this county.
They don’t see
the bored youngsters on a Saturday night, the sad, drug-taking loser in a dirty
flat, the lonely old lady living on her own, and the couple yelling at each
other in front of their children and a blaring television.
‘And we just love
Bridport,’ the incomers say. It’s so arty, so Bohemian, so cosmopolitan.’
And as they
venture through the artists’ quarter, picking up pieces of distressed furniture
for next to nothing but making a tidy profit for their owners who bought it
from Lawrences’ auction, they make their way to Waitrose for some figs and
Parma ham and a bunch of flowers from the stall outside.
They wander along
the street market, picking up pieces of junk and muttering that they used to
have something like that and should never have got rid of it.
They walk by the
Big Issue seller and the man with the tattooed neck, the woman with a large
behind who is wearing leggings and a snotty-faced child who still has a dummy
at the age of four.
They don’t see
the shoplifter hovering around Frosts, the deals going on up narrow alleys or
the mad woman made mad by the man who abused her.
Likewise, Lush
Places, does not appear on the incomers’ radar. It ducks it, scrambles it or
does whatever it needs to do to avoid detection. It limbos under the Beautiful
Bar and if you ever find it, it will be purely by chance.
And if you go
back to try to find it again, it won’t be there, it will have disappeared.
While the sun beats down in upmarket Beaminster and glows along Bridport’s
South Street like a blazing spacehopper, Lush Places quietly gets on with
everyday life, unhindered by tourists, the crowds and even people who just want
to get away from it all.
It is protected
by a bubble of mist and reveals itself only when it knows the incomers have
gone home for the day, or are safely tucked up in their boutique hotel beds and
quaint B&Bs.
This is the place
where I live, the place I love, where three-legged cats go hunting at night,
gutted rabbits are left as gifts by a gamekeeper in the morning and an
unhealthy interest is taken by the neighbours in other people’s recycling.
It’s where when
my washing machine and tumble dryer break down, I can rely on a neighbour to
not only provide me with an alternative but to offer to do the ironing too.
It is a place
where when a Londoner scrapes my car while doing a U-turn and then says this
kind of thing happens all the time in Highgate you can be sure that three
people have clocked his registration number and a fourth has offered to
rearrange his kneecaps.
It is a place
where when I fall off my bike into a hedge after too many drinks at a party
down the road, a passing policeman tells my husband who is cycling ahead that
he has just seen me crash, but can’t stop to help because he’s looking for
poachers.
It’s a place
where we take direct action against obtrusive street lighting, which pokes its
beams into our bedrooms in the name of Dorset County Council improvements, by
getting licensed deer stalker Mr Champagne-Charlie to take each one out,
individually, with a well- aimed rifle.
It’s a place
where the drinkers keep on drinking, yet the publican doesn’t have enough trade
to keep him afloat. It’s where the Jehovah’s Witnesses arrive en masse,
determined to shake up this godless place once and for all.
It’s the place
where when a door-to-door salesman makes an unwanted call on an elderly
neighbour, the village folk step in and direct him to Beaminster. Where when a
man trips over the kerb, six arms reach out to break his fall.
I see a lot of
things.
That's about it
(although there is more, as you'll find out if you get the book)
Love Maddie x
You make lush places seem like a wonderful place to live. I had to wikipedia some phrases, and I wonder is it pronounced Beam minster? I notices from tv, that world book night took place here in the midwest too.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful piece Maddie. I lived in 'Bemster' for ten years and have lived in Bridport for longer so I can read between your lines. The Lush Place is more of a mystery to me because when I lived in 'Bemster' there was a bit of rivalry with the Lush Places locals. Evocative
ReplyDeleteIt's a good thing I never had to say "Beaminster" when I was reading the news on Radio Devon - I would have got it wrong!
ReplyDeleteLush places is indeed a 'lush and beautiful place' and I can highly recommend it to all. Your piece was beautiful Maddie and I'm sure it went down a storm in the big metropolis that be Bournemouth
ReplyDelete