The Wheels of Lilliput
By Ed Crane
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The Wheels of Lilliput
Beneath ancient oak beams holding up the neat thatched roof of a Suffolk long barn, negotiating a maze of shelved nooks and racked crannies laden with not so antique forgotten household items and so-called curiosities, the contents of one alcove pushed my nostalgia button.
A multi-story carpark in miniature, displayed chipped and scratched classic vehicles in their affordable sizes. A model of the dustcarts that were once filled by men humping stinking battered dustbins. Fire engines, tractors, forgotten London buses, Rollers, Jags, Fords and Austins.
Pedigree Dinkys and a few mongrel Corgis. A brightly coloured hodgepodge of scruffy reminders representing all walks of another time. Each one had its price, even the two-tone De Soto with bent axles after someone’s long dead Nan trod on it, sixty years ago.
None of those examples would grace the hallowed halls of expensive auction houses, they were too real, too charming. Actual toys, actually played with. . . . Cough up a tenner and take home a piece of Granddad’s past.
Well-heeled middle Class nerds and speculative purists seek out perfection. Pristine examples inside mouldy yellow or blue and white striped card boxes. They pay well because they are, “works of art.”
Not a concept shared by capped schoolboys in uniform blazers and fifties grey shorts; grazing their knees and scuffing sensible shoes as they shoved miniature vehicles across cracked paving stones or sent them tumbling over the granite precipices of roadside curb stones.
To some these four-wheeled pets were a source of inspired imagination. Pushed across any available surface: carpets; bedspreads; backyard concrete and footpaths became superhighways; small town high streets; country farm lanes and even major airports. Dad’s freshly dug vegetable garden, a construction site or warzone and his neglected weed patches, dark forests hiding winding tracks. The possibilities endless.
Others had more energetic uses in mind. Speed races, oiled wheels carrying the little wagons as far as they could travel with one push. Bets were made and winners took all. These tiny machines used as currency for bartering, exchanged for balsa wood aircraft that actually flew, Jettex cars or Ian Allan train spotting books as tastes and fads waxed and waned.
Unwanted gifts for bookish kids or sporty types, in love with leather and willow, remained unopened or untouched. Stored in sheds and lofts they created a valuable motherlode for future “art collectors.”
Those that survived untouched, unscratched, unused for their intended purpose are now valuable windows to the past. Sterile museum pieces (private and public) destined to spend eternity displayed in glass cabinets or stored in dark vaults alongside Lowrys and Van Goughs. Future owners ignorant of the pleasure they gave or the world they opened for millions of young minds.
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if we want perfection don't
if we want perfection don't look to the past, but if we want lived life it's there in a box. Open it and see.
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'Used goods' can be more of a
'Used goods' can be more of a real-life window on the past, and probably popular in the type of museum where rooms and active scenes of previous eras are reproduced. Rhiannon
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This resonated with me.
This resonated with me. Brother, Son, Partner. All totally gooey when it comes to bashed up bits of metal with wheels at the corners. Remember digging one up while gardening, must have been there for years. Welcomed back like prodigal son, lovingly washed out and restored to car box to be with its mates. I had forgotten it going missing, he hadn't
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Exactly. When trying to make
Exactly. When trying to make some room in his room, I insisted we have to get rid of some stuff. When it boiled down to it the only really important thing to him was the car box. If I knew how to time travel, would go back every christmas and birthday and say, don't get (whatever expensive thing it is) because it won't be played with more than a year. JUST GET CARS.
Thinking about it, this piece of writing should be part of mum information packs on birth of first son :0)
I do think the colours are nice ...
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Nostalgia
A poinant reminder of the craftmanship of the past. My grandchildren 5&6 collect tiny little pieces of rubber? Plastic? Inch long pieces of something, wth something vaugely reminiscent of a disney character's face on it, they're called dum dums or something similar, and then we have lol dolls and little pieces of plastic like cakes ... but the thing is, these cheap, worthless collectables cost a flipping fortune. Will they stand the test of time in seventy years? But it has to be said, they do provide hours of pleasure as the girls line them up and play schools with them.
And Nana's no better, I pay a fortune for playing cards. I collect Magic the Gathering cards I have over 20,000 of them and my Ernam Djinn is worth a hundred and eighty one dollars...for a playing card! and that's nothing, Black Tulips sell for 30,000 Dollars. For a pice of printed cardboard. We are a world gone mad.
Your excellent writing is a little trip of nostalgia. Thank you.
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Four wheeled pets, thats for
Four wheeled pets, thats for girls. I'm gonna see the big beasts and go to the railway museums in York and Swindon! Enjoyed reading this.
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My mind's spinning through
My mind's spinning through tight manoeuvres on window sills or carpet traffic jams. Lino was best for a fast getaway. Lovely stuff, Ed. Yes, mothers like their sons to grow up and leave all that stuff behind. They often assist. Bless them. Happy Mother's Day.
Parson Thru
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