The Last New Year’s Eve

The big party was at our house as it so often was. The Parents weren’t fussy; we could drink, we could smoke, or just be. The regular gang were there, hanging out. Bottles of Smithwicks and Guinness, Cinzano and Gordons, littered The Mother’s prized teak table; they jostled for position with bowls of crisps and cheesy spreads and soggy canapés. The music was loud, the lights were low, and the usual culprits were snogging in corners. We had already played our two party tricks; wedging the youngest into a dustbin where it was left, abandoned, in the middle of the road; miming the pulling of an imaginary rope across the self-same road should a car have the nerve to pass by. When the demands to turn down the music escalated along with the passion in the corners, a new plan was hatched. We would go into town.

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There followed the jostle and giggle of arms into coats and scarves wound around; the dash out the door to catch the next bus. The scramble and leaping as off it went with only the half of us safely onboard; the helter and skeltering, pushing and boosting, up the curved stairs of the old number 10. Then the surreptitious passing around of the tickets; bamboozling the conductor that the fares were all paid. The ould wans giving us the stink eye; the young wans wishing they were happy like us.

Disgorged into dark streets we wended our way with the gathering crowd to Christ Church Cathedral. We’re still waving at friends and passing the mickeys when the crush thickens up and the countdown begins. Then the bells ring out and the ships’ horns sound off and strangers embrace us and dancing breaks out. Happy New Year we shout as the crowd flows around us; Happy New Year again when it ebbs on its way. Continue reading “The Last New Year’s Eve”

I Remember

I remember miles upon miles of white crosses.
I remember the sheer size of the Vimy Memorial.
I remember the suffering still palpable in the air over
the Canadian and German front lines, decades later.
I remember my great uncle, killed in action 101 years ago
when he was not much older than my sons.
I remember my uncle who fought in two wars
and survived a close encounter with a landmine.
I remember uncles who served in the navy and the army,
who lived to tell the tale;
uncles and my mother who followed their consciences
and entertained the troops for the duration.
I remember foolish politicians and oligarchs who through ambition and desire
for personal gain have pushed us close to the brink of war again and again.
I remember because forgetting isn’t an option.
I pray that my kids and their kids will never be called upon to do their patriotic duty
but I also pray that they will never forget those, both related and otherwise,
who made the ultimate sacrifice so that they might
live in peace.
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Clo Carey 2018
#Remembrance #LestWe Forget #Peace