Earlier in this narrative, I mentioned the “modest
apartment” I was living in while I was toy wrapping at Harrods. Confession: I was being exceedingly generous with the
“modest.”
Weeks prior to my leaving on a month-long visit to Canada,
though I had rented a room in her house for seven months, my landlady, Mrs.
Tompkins, evicted me for having too many – I believe the number was two –
boisterous Canadian visitors ringing her doorbell asking, “Is Earl here?”
Boisterous Canadians.
Can you imagine?
Aware that I did not want to squander a lot of rent money on
a place that would be vacant during the month that I was gone – because I kept
whining and complaining about it at every available opportunity – “me mates”
found me inexpensive replacement
“digs”, not in cushy Hampstead where I’d been living, but in the Euston Station
area of London, a more downscale locale where, though it was 1967, the devastational
rubble from the “Blitz” had not entirely been carted away.
The rent for my new place, however, was a manageable two
pounds a week. (About five-and-a-half
dollars.) My accommodations, were I to
evaluate them today, would rate no more than a notch or two above “homeless” –
a shabbily furnished single room with an adjoining less-than-up-to-date kitchen,
a shared toilet down the hall, and…wait for it…
No bathtub and no shower.
Hey, what do you want
for five dollars a week!
I have written elsewhere about being required to visit the Oasis Public Baths on Shaftsbury Avenue,
a half a mile’s walk from my apartment, where, for the price of a shilling
(about fifteen cents), after waiting on a bench alongside coal-blackened
miners, my number would be called like in a bakery, I would receive a thin
towel and a tiny bar of soap, and I would be escorted down a corridor to a
small room with a bathtub in it, where I would be given fifteen minutes to do
my business, after which there would be a knock on the door, indicating that my
time was up.
In the dictionary beside the word “humiliating”, there is a
picture of me, sitting forlornly in that public bathtub.
The good news was…
The Harrods
“Employees Facilities” had showers.
Now – oh, happy day-ay – I could shower at work!
As I relievedly did.
On numerous lunchtimes, after eating my subsidized meal at
the canteen, I would excuse myself without explanation, and head happily to the
comfort and cleanliness of the locale that would spare me the indignity of
future visits to the public bathhouse.
And it was heavenly – a fancy store with a fancy
bathroom. Even for the employees. Now I could clean up at my leisure. No more fifteen-minute deadline, where, if I
was not finished on time, I got “The Knock.”
I don’t know, this may be just me. But whenever I’m in a tiled bathroom (or a
large parking garage), I sing. I can’t
help it, the acoustics are irresistible.
Also, when I’m happy, I
sing. Here I was, in a tiled bathroom
and deliriously happy.
So I sang.
“To dream…the
impossible dream…
To fight…the
unbeatable foe…
To bear…with
unbearable sorrow…
To run…where the brave
dare not go….
Man, I sounded good! So
good, in fact, that when I arrived at the end of “The Impossible Dream”…
I sang it again.
Finally, my unfailing internal clock – I do not wear a watch
– informed me that it was time to return to work. I dried off, I got dressed, I brushed my
hair, and I stepped into the store, returning, rejuvenated, to the back room
where there was some heavy-duty toy wrapping to be done.
My co-workers greeted me, all agitated and excited.
“Did you hear that?”
I had no idea what they were talking about.
What they were talking about, it turned out, was what all of
Harrods was abuzz about. Sometime while I was taking my shower,
bursting from all of the air vents in the building was this surreal and entirely
unexpected voice. And that voice was…
Singing.
Loud, declarative (I believe they used the word “bellowing”)
singing.
And despite a thorough investigation,
Nobody could figure out where it was coming from.
Of course, by now you are ahead of me. Apparently – and, of course, I did not know this – when you sing in the shower
of the Harrods Employees’ Men Room,
what you believe to be private entertainment emerges out of all of the air
vents in the store!
That day, everyone in Harrods
– the customers, the sales personnel, the managers, the toy wrappers – had all heard
me singing, “The Impossible Dream.” I,
of course, never revealed that it was me.
In fact, my only response to the matter was a simple,
“How did he sound?”
You would think that that would be the high point of my
entire toy wrapping experience at Harrods.
Until you hear about the even higher one in tomorrow’s post.
2 comments:
At least you didn't sing We Gotta Get Out of this Place.
Speaking of singers, a fond and sad farewell to the wonderful Joe Cocker. What an astounding career. RIP, Joe.
Adieu.
Oh, you boisterous Canadians! According to my brief research, the blitz took place over an 8 month period in 1940 and '41. It hardly seems possible that the rubble would still be there some 26 years later. Nevertheless, that speaks, perhaps, to the vast damage done by the Luftwaffe. And I'm sure there were other concerns, such as money.
Nice stories. Looking forward to your encore tomorrow mi amigo de La Mancha.
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