don wright
proper brummie kid
Part 8
So we ain't sherrins any more..... an it's payback time y'all.... 'Hey, so here we here we go' and so the new ones got what generation of sherrins had got cos all was fair in love and war wasn't it. Jim has reminded me of this :
'In fact your memory of sherrins reminds me of my first day and going to lunch and being unceremoniusly grabbed and dragged into the queue by none other than yourself and a couple of others and made to act as the tables servant, as was the custom then.
Please keep the memories flowing.'
which I don't remember, so sorry Jim.... but if he's the Jim I think he is, and he hasn't confirmed that he is yet, then if he is, I have to admit that he was a star and a credit to the school and should have a verse about him inserted into the school song.... especially for his exploits in woodwork with Harry the Plank. So there we were in 2L and being introduced to Latin, which I enjoyed initially as I had always been interested in the Romans, and their republican history, but for some inexplicable reason have never been able to get interested in the Greeks
Which reminds me of the Subshine 'Caf' on Vicarage Road which played an integral part in my life at Camp Hill..... and it's still there and going .... a tribute to bacon sarnies and fags, and stewed tea, as it then was .... a credit to British culinary excellence based upon lard and cholesterol, 'I might not know much about cooking, but I know what I like..... I am [thanks to John Cleese and Monty Python.]' For maths we had a Mr. Hudson otherwise known as Soapy, and he was a northerner, from Lancashire or Yorkshire 'although he did use the word 'the ' instead of 't' because since I was bored to tears with maths, and double maths was the bottom of the pit of despair, and when he would notice me dozing and leaning on the wall, and I am not a large person, he would shout out with subtitles, 'Hey you.... Goliath.... get off that adjectival wall!' ..... to which I'd say, sorry, can you run that one past me again, but this time in English? Well, I suppose I should have just got up and walked out to the front of the class but he had something wrong with his right arm and when he wrote high up on the blackboard..... and he wasn't actually Goliath either, he used to support his right hand by holding it up with his left, which is the intro to another lovely anecdote.... and since I've used the word left, this is an appropriate intro to another lovely incident which is an incredibly brave Lefty Wright payback moment ..... which I shall describe thereafter. The only person who ever helped me in maths was the lad who sat behind me was Richard Yates, whom I believe went on to study maths at university and because of him I actually managed to pass maths o level with a grade 5, even.... which was a shock to all concerned, especially moi!
In rugby we were now the under 13's and after having won both of our games at under 12 level we went onto greater successes until we reached the fifth form when we had to play with 6L and 6U. One of our team was my tight head prop, Roger Brookstein who went on to get a Cambridge blue and then after becoming a doctor played for Blackheath.... which also reminds me of an incident in a house game Tudor Vs. Beaufort when he was on the ground hogging the ball an' us Tutor heroes were basically kicking the S. H. ONE. T. out of him at he lay there prone, and the Shift gleefully blew his whistle and said, 'Penalty against Tudor for heeling the man! Yet again EPIC!
So we ain't sherrins any more..... an it's payback time y'all.... 'Hey, so here we here we go' and so the new ones got what generation of sherrins had got cos all was fair in love and war wasn't it. Jim has reminded me of this :
'In fact your memory of sherrins reminds me of my first day and going to lunch and being unceremoniusly grabbed and dragged into the queue by none other than yourself and a couple of others and made to act as the tables servant, as was the custom then.
Please keep the memories flowing.'
which I don't remember, so sorry Jim.... but if he's the Jim I think he is, and he hasn't confirmed that he is yet, then if he is, I have to admit that he was a star and a credit to the school and should have a verse about him inserted into the school song.... especially for his exploits in woodwork with Harry the Plank. So there we were in 2L and being introduced to Latin, which I enjoyed initially as I had always been interested in the Romans, and their republican history, but for some inexplicable reason have never been able to get interested in the Greeks
Which reminds me of the Subshine 'Caf' on Vicarage Road which played an integral part in my life at Camp Hill..... and it's still there and going .... a tribute to bacon sarnies and fags, and stewed tea, as it then was .... a credit to British culinary excellence based upon lard and cholesterol, 'I might not know much about cooking, but I know what I like..... I am [thanks to John Cleese and Monty Python.]' For maths we had a Mr. Hudson otherwise known as Soapy, and he was a northerner, from Lancashire or Yorkshire 'although he did use the word 'the ' instead of 't' because since I was bored to tears with maths, and double maths was the bottom of the pit of despair, and when he would notice me dozing and leaning on the wall, and I am not a large person, he would shout out with subtitles, 'Hey you.... Goliath.... get off that adjectival wall!' ..... to which I'd say, sorry, can you run that one past me again, but this time in English? Well, I suppose I should have just got up and walked out to the front of the class but he had something wrong with his right arm and when he wrote high up on the blackboard..... and he wasn't actually Goliath either, he used to support his right hand by holding it up with his left, which is the intro to another lovely anecdote.... and since I've used the word left, this is an appropriate intro to another lovely incident which is an incredibly brave Lefty Wright payback moment ..... which I shall describe thereafter. The only person who ever helped me in maths was the lad who sat behind me was Richard Yates, whom I believe went on to study maths at university and because of him I actually managed to pass maths o level with a grade 5, even.... which was a shock to all concerned, especially moi!
In rugby we were now the under 13's and after having won both of our games at under 12 level we went onto greater successes until we reached the fifth form when we had to play with 6L and 6U. One of our team was my tight head prop, Roger Brookstein who went on to get a Cambridge blue and then after becoming a doctor played for Blackheath.... which also reminds me of an incident in a house game Tudor Vs. Beaufort when he was on the ground hogging the ball an' us Tutor heroes were basically kicking the S. H. ONE. T. out of him at he lay there prone, and the Shift gleefully blew his whistle and said, 'Penalty against Tudor for heeling the man! Yet again EPIC!
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