I'll Teach You To Burn (IP)
By airyfairy
- 7432 reads
Fire was a dominant theme in my childhood. It was for most kids in the fifties and sixties. It was one of our earliest lessons on the contrariness of life.
My mother insisted that I had flameproof nighties. We had a guard round the sitting room fire and we had a Morphy Richards hairdryer, so I didn’t have to stick my freshly washed head up the chimney of a Sunday night, but my mother was a conscientious woman. Flameproof nighties it was.
‘Hold that,’ my Grandad used to say, when we went to visit. All the grandchildren got this job, when they visited. The day’s child stood before the mantelpiece, dangling a piece of unfolded newspaper in front of the grate, while the newly lit coals smoked and spluttered a bit. The newspaper helped to create a draught up the chimney, so that the fire would ‘catch’. There was an art to this, carefully taught to us by our loving grandparents. The art was, to watch the newspaper getting browner and browner, smelling more and more charred, and judge precisely the last moment before it and you burst into flames. It was at that moment, and not before, that you could be sure the fire had ‘caught’, and snatch the paper away. You got told off if you did it too soon and the fire hadn’t ‘caught’ properly.
My mother was quite happy for me to do this, in my non-flameproof skirt, jumper, socks and knickers, while she chatted to my grandad as he ceremoniously lit his pipe and brushed sparks off the armchair and on to the carpet.
We all knew what to do if someone did burst into flames, because we’d all read exciting stories of heroic kids saving stupid kids from being roasted. You pushed the fiery person down on to the floor, fire side up, and rolled them in the carpet. Or you flung your coat over them. I remember once considering this, after a particularly close shave with the newspaper, and wondering how I would get the carpet out from under the three piece suite and the table or, alternatively, how much damage would be done while I ran and got my coat from the peg in the hall. I contemplated the hearthrug, but it was a half-moon job that would only have covered quite a small child. The only answer seemed to be the heavy undercloth that my gran always kept on the table. I wondered if I should point this out to someone else before my next shift with the paper.
All our domestic arrangements were a conflagration waiting to happen. Too many plugs in one socket. The telly plug left in overnight. Chip pans. Candles on Christmas trees. Fairy lights on Christmas trees. Tinsel on Christmas trees. Angel Hair on Christmas trees. Christmas trees in and of themselves. Hairdryers left on the bed. Smoking in bed. Smoking in armchairs. Sparklers. Electric blankets. And, a few years later, heated rollers. Carmen, bringer of fire and destruction.
We knew all these were real and present dangers because, every so often, there would be an appalling story in the paper, often read upside down while we were ‘catching’ the fire, about an entire family destroyed by one of these hazards. My mother would then make my father check the wiring, chuck water on the ashtrays before he went to bed (‘Don’t empty them into the bin! That’s the worst thing you can do! We’ll all die in our beds!’) and buy new fairy lights for Christmas. No-one gave up smoking, or chips, or thought of using something other than a child to give a bit of oomph to the domestic hearth. We’d never heard of a household smoke alarm. Bri-nylon nighties with a flameproof coating were as good as it got.
I remember watching Top of the Pops when The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown came on hissing ‘Fire! I’ll teach you to burn!’ The Crazy World was basically one bloke in a white sheet, moving around with caution so as not to dislodge the two fiery prongs stuck on his metal hairband. I wondered if his white sheet was flameproof.
My mother was outraged. ‘They shouldn’t show that! It’s disgraceful! Kids all over the country will be setting themselves on fire! Come on, get your shoes on. We’re going over to gran and grandad’s. Oh – run upstairs and fetch my ciggies, will you? They’re on the bedside table.’
Fire. I’ll teach you to burn.
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Comments
Absolutely,
inflammably good. The past really is another country, except it is we who did things differently there.
Ewan
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that's about right. but the
that's about right. but the smell of a fire was gorgeous. And the plug when it overheated had a peculiar smell.
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Sparks memories! Rhiannon
Sparks memories! Rhiannon (Different eras seem to notice different dangers)
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My Grandad would throw used
My Grandad would throw used big Eveready Batteries onto the fire saying they were good fuel. Then one day they exploded. He would also put out his pipe into his cap and then put it back on his head. Then his head caught fire one day! Didn't stop him of course he just thought it was a "One off". Great days....
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This is our Facebook and
This is our Facebook and Twitter Pick Of The Day. Get a great read everyday with Abctales....
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Oh I love that song. This
Oh I love that song. This made me laugh, very enjoyable read. The funny thing is all those fire retardant chemicals are meant to cause cancer, I guess we're all damned...
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Great writing
and we played in the street and we walked to school on our own ..... How ever did we survive?
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Just read your I P airyfairy,
Just read your I P airyfairy,
such a memory jerker for me. In the early 1960s my Nann lived with us, she would smoke in bed and actually fell asleep with a lit cigarette catching the bed alight. Luckily we caught it in time, but that was so scary.
I enjoyed your trip down memory lane. Thank you for sharing.
Jenny.
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catching the fire
Fabulous AF - - the piece took me straight back too - - I could tell you were a dab hand with the catching technique, as well as being able to read upside down. A trick of my chain-smoking father's was to drop the ash into his turn-ups. And there was always that mysterious capacity for newly mown grass to self ignite!
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Loved reading this and it
Loved reading this and it brought back other memories too, like dropping a lighted cig when driving. Made me smile a lot.
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Hello Airy,
Hello Airy,
Yes, this is a nostalgic and humorous piece that I very much enjoyed reading This is only the second piece of yours that I've read I think but although I can't remember the title of the other one I do remember I thought it was terrific.
Moya
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Hi Airy
Hi Airy
This is a fun and interesting story about your adventures with fire.
I had two rather awful problems- which I have no doubt written about sometime in the past. The first was when I had put fish and clips on to heat and then took a huge bedspread out to hand on the line, and it was an impossible task, so took far too long, and when I came back in, the cooder was all aflame, and the smoke had covered the walls and ceiling. I remembered my fire safely class and used a stack of newspapers to cover the fire, and gave my son bread and cheese for lunch and took him back to school before I spent many hours cleaning the kitchen. And my husband never knew about it.
The other was when my husband was away and the kids and I were celebrating having done some house decorating, so we had a bunch of candles lit all around the room. I then went up to get have a bath, but before long I heard a noise which I interpreted as someone knocking at the door. So I got out of the baht, only to find the table one of the candles had stood on had burned through the wood, and was very near the couch and curtains. So again, a bunch of newspapers took out the flames, and I blamed my son who had been the one to take the candle out of its holder. As I shook him and we were both crying he said, "But you light fires too," and I decided it really was all my fault. He was only about 10 at the time. But again we hid the burned table in the attic and cleaned up the house so I don't think my husband ever knew about it, although he did give me a new small table for Christmas.
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