MEMOIRS OF
AN
IRISH PIG

How youse doin’. My name’s Mickle
McPee and I’ve been married til Mildred for manys the long year. Now, I’d leck to tell youse a few wee things
about our marriage, along with a few other wee tales about me life before I got
hitched. So here’s a random selection of stuff that I’ve extracted from me
memoirs.
© mycallahvorie
ME MARRIAGE PROPOSAL
One Friday when I was still a
single man, I was feelin’ a wee bit grumpy towards me mammy. Not only was me breakfast not on the table
when I got up at noon, but when I wanted a drop of milk for me tay, sure she
hadn’t even got the cows milked neither.
Then when I had a look at all the new clothes she’d bought me that
mornin’, sure they wasn’t even the right size.
But did she seem to care or give a damn at all about me? Naw, she was far more interested in strokin’
her beloved cat Marmeduke and talkin’ a whole load of owl nonsense til it. But not only that, just before I was goin’
out for the night, I realised she hadn’t ironed me shirt, polished me shoes,
nor inflated the flat tyre on me car.
So I was in desperate bad humour when I got down til the pub and after
havin’ a lough of drinks, I decided I’d taych me mammy a lesson she’d never
forget, by givin’ her the sack and tradin’ her in for a newer model. And that’s when I asked this cuttie Mildred
to marry me.
Needless to say, when I woke up the follyin’ afternoon with a big
thumpin’ hangover, I immediately had second thoughts and for a lough of days
after, I lay real low, hopin’ me proposal’d be forgot. But when Mildred’s big hulkin’ hallion of a
da called by one day for to discuss the weddin’ arrangements, I realised that I
was caught hook, line and sinker and that there’d be no chance of backin’
out. So before I hardly knew where I
was, sure she had me up the aisle.
Man, it was one of the best weddin’s I’d ever been til and we all had
loads of booze and there was powerful crack.
But after about 15 hours of this, I began to feel a wee bit tired. So I decided to call it a day and go home til
me mammy and me own wee bed. But then,
just as I was goin’ out the dooer, someone reminded me that it was me own
weddin’ I was attendin’ and that the days of me goin’ back til me mammy was
over forever. And begod, when I looked
over at Mildred and her stern, no-nonsense face, I had this sudden premonition
about what was comin’ down the track.
Bejaysus, I felt leck cryin’.
What the hell had I gone and done!
STUFF FROM ME YEARS OF MARRIED STRIFE
DINNER AT SANDRA’S
A few nights ago, Mildred dragged me along til her new friend Sandra’s
for dinner. As we rode up the drive til
their place on our bone-shaker bicycles, the first thing I noticed was the size
of their huge modern mansion and the two big flashy, top-of-the-range cars
parked outside. So before I’d even met
Sandra and her husband, I’d made up me mind I didn’t leck them.
And things didn’t improve none neither.
Now whenever I meet someone for the first time, I just grunt at them and
if they’re damned lucky, I might even shake them by the hand. But that Sandra one, she’s intil all this owl
nonsense of kissin’ you on both cheeks and slabberin’ all about yee. Och, when she was kissin’ me on both cheeks,
I just wished I hadn't shaved.
Now while Sandra and Mildred was hashin’ away til each other, Sandra’s
husband Mark tried chattin’ til me. But
his attempts only lasted for about two minutes before he gave up.
Not long after, we went intil the dinin’ room. The first thing I noticed was these enormous
wine glasses which raised me spirits a bit, for I was certain I was in for a
good sup. But sure they only poured a
wee drop intil the bottom of each glass.
Now the way I look at it, if someone gives you a big glass, then they
should fill it right up til the top and to hell with all this owl nonsense
about stickin’ your snout intil it, for to smell its aroma.
But despite everythin’, I was lookin’ forward til a damned good big
feed. But sure all I got was a plate
with a few wee bits and pieces of strange lookin’ food stuck in the middle of
it. Sure I had the whole damned lot down
the hatch in about 10 seconds flat!
Well, to cut a long story short, when it came til time for to say
goodbye, Sandra wasn’t in no rush to come over and kiss me on both cheeks. In fact, I could tell from the cut of her,
that she’d have preferred takin’ me by the throat!
SHERLOCK
Now one of our neighbours is an owl doll called Gladys and
because she has no man to love, she loves her pets instead. First of all, there was her wee dog
Sherlock. Man, she was that close til
that wee dog, that she trayted it leck it was a child. Every day when they was goin’ out, she’d put
a wee coat on it, wee bootees on its feet and on the top of its head, she’d
place a wee Sherlock Holmes hat. In
fact, the only thing that was missin’ was a wee pipe in its wee gob.
And when it did its business, she’d immediately reach for her bag and
pull out a tissue for to wipe its wee arse.
But unfortunately she let it off the lead one day and it ran straight
intil the jaws of a big fierce Rottweiler called Moriarty and sadly, that was
the end of Sherlock.
The next pet she got was a cat called Tiddles. But although she loved that cat as much as
she’d loved Sherlock, the routine was a kinda different each day, for the cat
didn’t leck goin’ for walks on a lead, wearin’ clothes or havin’ its wee arse
wiped. So they just stayed at home
instead.
However, one day Tiddles climbed so high up a tree, it couldn’t get down
and so the fire brigade had to be called.
Well the boys came along, scaled the tree and rescued Tiddles. Now Gladys was that grateful, she insisted
the boys come in for a cup of tay.
Well it was when Gladys was wavin’ them off in their big red fire ingine
that she heard a yaowl and loud squelch and when she went to investigate, she
found the nicest wee cat mat you’d ever see in your whole life.
Gladys has a goldfish now. My
goodness, but I hope nawthin’ happens til it!!
SCOTCH BROTH
Mildred’s owl ma Aggie is still alive and kickin’. Now they say that you should always look at a
girl’s mother before you marry her. Well
unfortunately, it’s a piece of advice I’ve always regretted not takin’, for
Mildred’s ma is an owl battleaxe, just leck what Mildred’s become herself over
the years.
Well anyway, Aggie lives on her own and Mildred drags me along
to visit her for lunch every Sunday. Now
Aggie’s that thrifty that she never starts cookin’ until we get there, for fear
of us not turnin’ up and the ingredients for the meal goin’ til loss. So when we arrive, we always have to sit
about waitin’ in the parlour, while Aggie starts makin’ the lunch from scratch
in the kitchen, which seems to take forever, on account of her bein’ so slow.
And it’s the same owl thing week in, week out. She calls it Scotch Broth, but I have another
name for it, which you won’t find in no recipe book. Well anyway, while she’s makin’ this here
concoction, she always has a feg on, which she never takes out of her gob and
as a result, there’s always a big long grey ash on the end of it.
Now sometimes when I’m on me way til the bathroom, I look intil the
kitchen and I see her there laynin’ over the pot, stirrin’ this evil lookin’
brew. But there’s one thing that puzzles
me no end. There’s never any ashtray in sight, nor any sign of ash on the
flooer, worktop or cooker. So when the
long grey ash eventually falls off her feg, where does it go?
TRAYTED LECK A DOG
For some
peculiar raison or another, Mildred’s never done traytin’ me leck a dog. From the moment I open me eyes in the mornin’
til I close them at night, she’s on at me the whole time, naggin’, moanin’ and
yappin’. But the way I look at it, she
should be very grateful that I’m not one of them husbands, who gets under their
wife’s feet while they’re tryin’ to work.
Well one day
recently, Mildred was worse than usual and it got so bad, that I let rip at
her.
“Och for God’s sake,” I roared, “will you stop
traytin’ me leck a dog!”
“I’ll trayte you leck a dog
if I want!” she scrayched back defiantly.
“Och, whatever you leck,” I growled, “trayte
me leck a dog if you want ..... see if I care!”
Well, she took huff at this and there follyed the silent traytment. Aye, she didn’t say one word til me for the
rest of the afternoon and my goodness, but it was heaven.
Well when it
came near taytime, she went intil the kitchen and before long, these lovely
smells was waftin’ out about the place. My
goodness, I began to feel ravenous and by the time she called me intil the
kitchen, sure I was hardly fit to make it there, because I was that wake with
hunger.
Now when I sat down at the
table with me knife and fork in each hand, that’s when I got the quare gunk,
for instead of puttin’ the plateful of lovely grub down in front of me, she put
it down on the flooer in front of the dog, who didn’t say “naw” and immediately
got stuck in.
Now while I was lookin’ at all this in utter
amazement, she plonked the dog’s bowl full of Pedigree Chum down in front of
me. Well as hungry as I was, sure I
wasn’t gonna ate none of that!
LARNIN’ TO FLY
One day
recently while I was watchin’ TV, I glanced out the windy and saw that Mildred
was outside on the top of the big barn, tryin’ to fix the roof. Well anyway, the next thing I noticed was
her sailin’ down through the air. I
therefore assumed that she was either larnin’ to fly, or she’d slipped and
fallen. So I got up from me chair and
got down on me knees – not to pray for Mildred mind you, but to set the video
recorder, so that it would record the rest of the programme I was
watchin’. I then strolled out til where
Mildred was lyin’ in haype groanin’.
“Are you all right?” I asked her.
“Do I look all right!” she scrayched. “For
God’s sake, call an ambulance.” So I
dandered back intil the house and dialled 999.
Well when we
got intil the hospital, they took that long seein’ til her, that I started to
get scarred – in case I wouldn’t back in time for the start of the soaps on TV.
But to cut a
long story short, they eventually got her patched up and out she came, all
bandaged up and on a set of crutches.
Man but I was quare and relieved to see that she was fit enough to come
home – for I was gettin’ fierce hungry and I needed her back home in the
kitchen, for to make me my tay.
HOMEBREW
I got that
fed up payin’ high bar prices and also wakin’ up with a hangover and havin’ no
cure about the place, that I decided to make some homebrew. So I secretly got all the ingredients and
equipment and started the brewin’ process in the owl shed, which is me
sanctuary and a place Mildred never goes near.
Man every mornin’, I used
to sneak out til the shed for to inspect me beer and was I not lookin’ forward
til the time, when it’d be ready to drink.
Mind you, I didn’t tell Mildred nawthin’ about it and as far as I was
concerned, she didn’t have a clue as til what I was up til.
Then one night, when the
beer was just about ready to drink, I had to go out for a darts match. But when I returned home I got the quare
gunk, for Mildred had all her mates up.
My goodness, they was all in the front room, cacklin’ and scraychin’
leck a coven of owl witches and I could tell from the sound of them, that they
was all as full as shucks. But if that
wasn’t bad enough, sure it was nawthin’ til the shock I got, when I realised
they’d drained every last drop of me homebrew beer!
One day I
larnt that me uncle Jack had died and left me a fair stash of cash. Well there was no way I was gonna tell
Mildred, for if I had, she’d have been lookin’ for some of it for the house or
somethin’ just as daft. So when I
eventually got me hands on the money, I hid it all in me secret hidey-hole
under the loose flooer boord in the front room.
But a few days later, when
I was away up the country on me holidays, Mildred took it intil her head to
redecorate the front room. Now I’ve got
to hand it til her, she did a grand job.
Aye, the newly painted windies and ceilin’ looked great and the new
wallpaper was akinda nice too. However, I got the quare gunk when I saw she’d
laid that modern laminated wood stuff all over the whole flooer as well. My goodness, was I not downhearted. I mane, how was I gonna get til me cash now!
Well the next mornin’,
Mildred went shoppin’. Now there was
nawthin’ unusual about that. However,
when she returned with her hair all done and a whole pile of new clothes and a
funny wee smirk on her face, well that WAS unusual!
PUBLIC LOO ATTENDANT
I recently
got that fed up with Mildred’s yappin’, that I decided that the only way to get
any pace was to find meself a wee job.
So when I noticed they was lookin’ for an attendant for the public loo
down in the town, I was fierce interested, especially as it was right beside
the bookie’s and me favourite pub. I
also knew, that with regard til the claynin’ side of things, sure I could
always order Mildred to slip down from time til time durin’ the day and do it
all for me.
However,
after some thought, I decided agin applyin’.
First of all, there didn’t appear to be any career prospects and this
wouldn’t have suited an ambitious buck leck me.
Secondly, it wouldn’t have looked too good on me CV. I mane, if at some later stage, I went for an
interview for some high-powered job with some big company, sure they’d be
shoutin’ “next!” as soon as they’d see ‘public loo attendant’ on me CV.
But the main
raison why I didn’t apply was because owl Lizzie was still workin’ there and I
didn’t want nawthin’ to do with her, follyin’ a bad experience I’d had with her
a wee while previous.
One day I’d
walked intil the men’s loo just after she’d mopped the flooer and she clicked
her owl sour tongue when she noticed me footprints on the wet flooer.
“Och, if only I’d known you’d just done the
flooer,” I sneered at her, “sure I’d have flapped me arms, flown in and hovered
over the urinal.” Well bejaysus, she
gave me hell and ate the face off me. It
was desperate and I wasn’t none too playsed, let me tell yee. I mane, I went in there nearly every day in
life. So it was hardly the right way for
her to trayte one of her best customers, now was it!
One day
Mildred gave me a shoppin’ list and told me that if I didn’t do the shoppin’,
we’d starve. Now I didn’t want me mates
to see me carryin’ bags of shoppin’, so I moaned and groaned about havin’ to do
a woman’s job. However, I didn’t relish
the idea of goin’ hungry neither. So I
eventually caved in and away I trudged.
Well after
I’d got everythin’, I fell intil chat with this doll Gladys, who was just in
front of me in the checkout queue. Man,
it was a lovely wee chat we had, let me tell yee and I became that enamoured
with her, that I started to really lookin’ forward til gettin’ Mildred rizz, by
tellin’ her all about what a lovely woman Gladys was. Aye, I couldn’t hardly wait to tell her in a
barbed sort of a way, that it was an awful pity all weemen couldn’t be as nice
as Gladys.
Now not only
was I really enjoyin’ me chat with Gladys, but the checkout queue was movin’
quick as well. So I was sure I’d be out
in plenty of time for that race down in the bookies, that I was gonna bet on.
Well more fool me! First of all, when it came til Gladys’s turn,
she started hashin’ til the checkout woman.
Then of coorse, there was somethin’ in her basket with no price on it
and someone had go and get it. Then
there was somethin’ she’d forgot and away she went for to fetch it – and
bejaysus, she took ages! But if that
wasn’t bad enough, when eventually everythin’ had gone through, out came the
coupons and there follyed a long discussion as til what was valid and what
wasn’t. After that, she got out her
purse and started countin’ out all this change.
But to make matters worse, sure she didn’t have enough and there follyed
a whole pile more discussion as til what she’d layve behind.
And it was
ONLY THEN that she started to pack. My
goodness, I was gratin’ me teeth out of frustration and if I’d had any hair
left at all, sure I’d have pulled that out as well. Bejaysus, by the time that damned woman was
finished, sure I was near fit to take her by the throat. As for me horse, sure it was on its way home
by the time I got down til the bookies!
SHARIN’ EVERYTHIN’
One stormy day recently, Joey
and Tommy came intil the bar. Now
because it was so windy outside, their hair was all askew. So as Tommy was orderin’ two whiskies for to
warm them up, follyed by two stouts to then cool them down, Joey took out his
comb for to get his hair back intil some kinda order. Then after the drink had been set up, Tommy
decided he wanted to sort his hair out too and so he asked Joey for the loan of
his manky owl comb, which was full of owl hair, yella bits and other owl stuff
that would have turned your stomach.
Well as Tommy started combin’,
Joey took out his glasses and began to read his newspaper. Then when Joey'd
finished readin’, Tommy decided that he'd leck to have a wee read himself. And that's when he asked Joey for the loan of
his glasses. Now when Tommy started readin’
the newspaper, Joey decided that he was feelin’ a wee bit peckish and so he got
a big bag of paynuts.
Later when Tommy'd finished
readin’, he noticed that Joey hadn't finished all the paynuts. So he decided that he'd complete the job for
him. And that's when he turned til Joey
and asked him for the loan of his false choppers. Well my goodness, Joey didn't hesitate one
second. He took them out of his gob, handed them over til Tommy and although
they was all clogged up with nuts, Tommy didn't even give them a wipe, before
he stuck them intil his gob and started hanchin away leck billio on the rest of
the paynuts.
2 FOR 1 BARGAINS
Now although Mildred nearly
always does the shoppin’, there came one day when she wasn’t able and I had to
go. So she gave me a food list and some
money and off I went, moanin’ and groanin’ every step of the way. However, when I got intil the suppermarket, I
was that amazed at all the 2 for 1 bargains goin’, that I soon forgot all about
me bad mood. I also forgot all about
Mildred’s food list and instead, I got stuck intil snappin’ up all these 2 for
1 bargains.
Now I thought Mildred would
be fierce playsed at all the money I’d saved with these here bargains. But it was totally the opposite and man, did
she not lay intil me.
“Och, what’s all this rubbish!” she scrayched,
“sure we’ll never use ANY of it!! ..... I mane what do we want two leather
chamois’s for? ..... sure we haven’t even got a car!”
Well later on near dinner
time, Mildred went intil the kitchen. Now
normally it wouldn’t have been too long, until there’d have been delicious
smells waftin’ through the house. But
that day was different and when I went intil the kitchen to investigate, I
found her sittin’ at the table readin’ a newspaper, with nawthin’ on the go on
the cooker. So I was quare and surprised
when she called me in shortly afterwards for me dinner. She surprised me even further when she said
there was gonna be a lot of courses, because we normally never have more than
two.
Well I got the quare gunk
when she placed the first course down in front of me, for it was the two books
I’d got chaype on how to larn Russian in 5 aisy lessons.
“Now let’s see what I can find you for your
second course,” she said, as she started rustlin’ through me bags of
shoppin’.
SUPPERMARKET TROLLEY
Believe it or not, I sometimes
used to go shoppin’ with Mildred til the locial suppermarket. Havin’ said that, I didn’t actually do none
of the shoppin’, because my role was simply to folly Mildred around with the trolley.
Now although the job shouldn’t
have taken more than about 15 minutes, it always took a whole pile longer. This
was because Mildred kept bumpin’ intil these peculiar weemen, who actually
seemed to leck her for some strange raison or another. Now I didn’t really mind them stoppin’ to
hash, because it gave me the chance to duke in behind Mildred and have a REALLY
good look at all the talent that was there.
However, the last time I went shoppin’ with
Mildred, things sorta got out of hand.
Aye, Mildred bumped intil this owl doll she hadn’t seen for a while and
they started up a conversation. Well
that was alright for a while, but bejaysus the hashin’ went on that long, that
I started to get fierce fed up and decided that it was time to break it all
up. So I started to make the other woman
feel fierce unaisy, by starin’ contemptuously intil her trolley, shakin’ me
head from side til side and tut, tut, tutin’ scornfully. Man, it was no time at all till she stopped
listenin’ til Mildred and instead her eyes flitted anxiously between me and her
trolley, as she tried to work out what the hell I was tut, tut, tutin’
about. Needless to say, Mildred got the
hump at not bein’ listened til and stomped off in a huff.
Aye, as Mildred’d tell yee herself, I was a real
joy to go shoppin’ with.
One fine day, I decided to go
sweemin’. So I found me owl togs and I
headed off down til the locial sweemin’ pool.
But it wasn’t much fun. First of all, there was a squad of school
chillder, scraychin’, shoutin’ and dive-bombin’ and the only time any of them
ever stopped arsin’ about, was to take a piddle in the pool.
Then there was the professionals doin’ their
mandatory 50 lengths or so and whenever they went past me, not only did they
near drownd me, but their elbows kept hittin’ me and their toe nails kept
scrapin’ me.
So I was quare and glad when they all got
out. But the next thing I heard was the
dreaded babble of a whole pile of weemen and when I looked round, I saw what
looked leck a battalion of the Aquatic Division of the Weemen’s Institute
emergin’ from the weemen’s changin’ room.
Man, I was quare and glad I wasn’t in their road, for I’d have been
trampled underfoot.
Me heart sank.
However, when they all got in, they seemed more interested in hashin’
than sweemin’. So I remained well away
from them, at the far end of the pool.
However, it wasn’t long until somethin’ else
annoyed me. Aye, I suddenly noticed
somethin’ ghastly floatin’ on top of the water.
So I roared indignantly at one of the staff and he got a big pole and
fished it out, before disappearin’ out the back with it.
But what a shock I got next! When I looked round, I saw waves of them
weemen chuggin’ up the pool towards me.
It was time to go!! However,
there was just one wee sneg. The thing
that had been floatin’ on the top of the water and which the boyo had fished
out, had been none other than me owl togs.
My goodness, I was totally in the buff and all those weemen was gettin’
closer and closer!!!
Well, to cut a long story short, as well as
bein’ barred from the most of the pubs round our wee town, I’m now also barred
from the sweemin’ pool as well!
BUYIN’ A NEW BICYCLE
I recently
decided to take up cyclin’ again and so I dug out me owl bone-shaker from
behind all the rubbish in the shed. But
I got the quare gunk when I saw the rats had ate the saddle, that the chain was
all rusty and had fallen off and that the carbide lamp on the front wouldn’t work
no more neither. So I decided to buy a
new bike.
However,
that was aisier said than done. Man,
when I went down til the cycle shop, all they seemed to have was these flashy
things with no mudguards on them. But
what hell use would they be in a place leck Northern Ireland! Sure every time I’d go out cyclin’, I’d come
back with a wet arse.
Well anyway,
I did eventually find one with mudguards.
So the next thing was to get a helmet.
But once again, they only had these flashy modern lookin’ things.
“You don’t happen to have one designed leck a
flat cap?” I asked the man. He shook his
head. But then I had an idea. So I put a helmet on and then perched me flat
cap on top of it. But sure that didn’t
work neither, cos me cap kept fallin’ off.
Later when I
got home, I turned til Mildred.
“You know,” I said, “an owl buck leck me
wearin’ one of them flashy helmets ..... sure it’d only make me look leck an
eegit.”
“Och darlin’, you shouldn’t worry about
lookin’ leck an eegit,” she replied, “sure everyone already knows, you
ME DINNER
As soon as Mildred told me
that she was goin’ away for a day and’d be stayin’ with her sister overnight, I
was quare and playsed. But she had one
BIG problem to solve before she went: who was gonna make me my dinner that
evenin’? However, that was quickly
resolved, when our neighbour Flo said she’d do it.
Well anyway, Mildred left and
that evenin’ Flo came til our dooer, with a big plate covered in a cloth. Now I was quare and relieved about this, cos
I was absolutely wake with hunger.
Later on, while I was out the
back lookin’ for the beer I’d hidden at the top of the garden, who should stick
their snout over the hedge, but the bowel Flo.
“Well,” she said cheerily, with a big smile on
her face, “how did your dinner go?”
“Och, it was great,” said I, “the dog really
enjoyed it.” My goodness, the first
thing that disappeared in a flash was her big smile and the next thing was
herself, as she stomped away, lookin’ as black as thunder.
Well you know, when I went til
bed that night I couldn’t sleep at all, on account of me belly rumblin’ from
hunger the whole night. Then the next
mornin’, there wasn’t no breakfast in bed.
But on top of that, when I did eventually get downstairs, sure the TV
wasn’t on neither and I had to turn it on meself. And things didn’t get no better. So what with
one thing and another - and although I hate to admit this - I was quare and
glad when Mildred got back.
COLD BLUES
I had a fierce bad
cold yesterday and when I was grumblin’ about it til me owl pal Aristotle, he
tolt me that a cold won’t never layve yee, until such times as it finds itself
another host, which is the only raison why it forces you to sneeze, cos this
way you spread the virus. And he went on
to tell me, that if I wanted to get rid of me cold real quick, I should go
intil some busy place leck a suppermarket or a popular bar, then creep up on
some unsuspectin’ victim, before sneezin’ full-blast right intil their face,
because if I did this successfully, the cold would find itself a new host and
therefore immediately layve me.
Well I decided to
folly his advice and bejaysus, I can vouch for every word he said, for after
I’d sneezed right intil the face of this big rough lookin’ hallion in the
suppermarket, me cold suddenly disappeared leck magic.
Now I’m quare and
playsed that me cold has now gone. The only sneg is that I now have to go and
find Aristotle, for to see if he has an instant cure for a couple of black eyes
and a thick lip!
GOOD FOR YOU
I’ve just larnt that Goji
berries are fierce good for you because they’re so full of anti-oxidants. So that’s yet another thing to add til me
never-endin’ list of things I should buy for the good of me health.
It seems that there’s hardly a day goes by but I
don’t larn of somethin’ new, that’s supposed to be full of health enhancin’
properties. But I am gettin’ desperate
cheesed off by it all. Not only is it a
fierce tedious job continually addin’ things til me ‘GOOD FOR YOU’ list, but it
takes about 3 shoppin’ trips each day to buy all these wonderful things. Furthermore, because I’m that afraid of
missin’ out on the magical effects that each thing is gonna have on me, I seem
to spend the most of me time atin’ them all!
But not only that, it’s costin’ me an absolute fortune!
Aye, I really am gettin’ fed up with it all,
especially as these things don’t actually make me feel any better at all. In fact, they just make me feel bloody
awful! But what makes it even worse, is
that although there is just one item on me ‘BAD FOR YOU’ list, I know from
experience, that it would do me far more good than all those other things put
together and make me feel so much better.
Aye, a big slap of DRINK!!!
LITTLE SCRATCH
Whenever I watch a TV
programme leck Holby City or some hospital documentary, I’m always puzzled as
til why they always warn the patient when they are gonna to give them an
injection, that they’ll experience “a little scratch”, because whenever I’ve
been in hospital, it always felt more leck a little prick, which I would
suggest is a more accurate description.
But I suppose it’s all down til political correctness. I mane, it mightn’t go down too well, if some
male doctor was to approach a woman patient and tell her that he was now gonna
to give her a “little prick”.
As for me wife Mildred, if she
was in hospital and was told to expect a “little prick”, she’d probably reply:
“Why, is me husband comin’ to visit me?”
PET NAMES
Now one of me neighbours is an
owl buck called Phil and he’s different from all the other farmers round here,
in that he traytes his animals leck pets and gives them all names. For example, his favourite hen is called
Gertrude and his three bullocks are Tom, Dick and Harry.
Well I was walkin’ down the
lane the other day, when I noticed he’d gone and got himself a new boar. Bejaysus, what an odejious, ugly, revoltin’
lookin’ baste it is. And you should see
the dirt on him, and all the slabbers!
And the stink of him too! But on
top of that, sure I’d know to look at him, that he’ll obviously be good for
nawthin’, except gruntin’ and stickin’ his snout intil where it’s not wanted.
Well anyway, when Phil spied
me lookin’ at this here boar, he came amblin’ over, for to find out what I
thought of him.
“A fine baste,” I lied, “a fine baste.”
“Um,” he said wistfully, takin’ a pull on his
pipe.
“And what name are you gonna give him?” I
asked. He took another pull on his
pipe.
“Och,” he replied, “in light of what you’ve
just said, I think Mickle would be a most suitable name ..... wouldn’t you
agree?”
NEW NEIGHBOUR
I was quare and sad when me
neighbour Archie sold up and left recently, because he’d been me mucker and
drinkin’ partner for manys the long year.
Well although I wondered what
sort of useless whoers’d be movin’ in, I didn’t have to wonder long. About 3 days after Archie left, there was a
rap at the dooer and because Mildred was out diggin’ drains with a shovel, I
had to get up from in front of the TV and go answer the dooer meself.
Needless to say, I was none too playsed and when
I opened the dooer, I had one quare big black glower all over me face. But this was instantly replaced by a big
smile, when I saw there was a very tasty lookin’ bit of stuff, standin’ on the
dooer step.
She said her name was Molly and then explained
that she was gettin’ Archie’s house fit for habitation and was wonderin’ if I
could give her a hand to move somethin’.
“Of
coorse, of coorse,” I instantly replied and follyed her over til Archie’s, chatterin’
away merrily all the while.
Well she was a quare attractive woman and it
began to cross me mind, that maybe if I played me cards right, I’d be in with a
chance, especially as there was no ring on her finger, nor any mention of a
husband.
Man, I couldn’t do enough for her and I was up
there every day thereafter, doin’ all sorts of jobs for her. Needless to say,
Mildred wasn’t none too playsed with this new development and after a lough of
days of holdin’ her whisht, she eventually let rip.
“Och, you
silly owl goat,” she cried, “if I ever ask you do anythin’ for me, you just
grumble and groan and do nawthin’ at all ..... but when that Molly one clicks
her fingers, bejaysus you’re up and away to do all yee can to help her.” But I
just gave her a contemptuous look and dismissed her with a wave of me
hand. Aye, I was far too busy dreamin’
about me and Molly, to be payin’ any attention til all of Mildred’s venomous
yappin’ and callin’ me an owl ballocks.
A few days later, there was a rap at the dooer. Now Mildred had just come in after buildin’ a
byre and so she went to answer it. I
expected her to roar for me, to let me know it was Molly lookin’ for me. But naw, I just heard some murmurin’ and then
she disappeared. I was of coorse very
curious as til what was goin’ on and so I got up and looked out the windy. And bejaysus, that’s when I got the quare
gunk, for what did I see, but Mildred headin’ over til Archie’s, with this very
handsome lookin’ man.
Needless to say, I was desperate curious to find
out who the hell he was and I couldn’t hardly wait for Mildred to get back, so
I could quiz her all about him. But she
was up there for absolutely ages and it put me in fierce bad humour, especially
as I could see that me tay was gonna be late.
Well anyway, when she eventually did get back,
she looked sorta all aglow.
“That’s
John,” she cooed, “he’s our new neighbour.”
“Eh!” I
exclaimed all disappointed. “Is he Molly’s husband then?” She shook her head.
“Naw,”
she replied, “he’s her brother ..... and he’ll be livin’ over there ..... and
all on his own too ..... Molly was only gettin’ the place ready for him while
he was away abroad ..... but she’s gone away back til England now ..... til her
girl friend.” Me mouth dropped open.
“But,” she went on, “if you’d spent less time
tryin’ to impress her and chattin’ all about yourself, sure she’d have told you
all this herself.”
Well do you know, Mildred’s up at John’s nearly
every day now. But not only that, she’s
taken til brushin’ her hair, dollin’ herself up, puttin’ on warpaint and
there’s always a scent of perfume about her.
It’s bloody disgraceful behaviour!
But then what else could you expect from a woman!!!
THE FLAT TYRE
One day last week, I was walkin’ down the road
whistlin’ a merry tune, when suddenly I spied with my little eye, a woman
lookin’ at this here flat tyre on her car.
Well I don't know what the hell she hoped to achieve from starin’ at it
leck that, cos it was hardly gonna repair itself, now was it! But then, when it comes til cars, weemen know
damn all about them, except that they have an accelerator and a steerin’ wheel,
although you'd often think that they don't know much about the latter.
Well anyway, to get back til the story, this
here dame gave me the sad eye and cos she was such a tasty young bit of stuff
and wearin’ such a short skirt, I was all polite and offered me services til
her, leck a knight in shinin’ armour rescuin’ a damsel in distress.
But bejaysus, it was an odejious job, let me
tell yee. The nuts on yon wheel was
fierce tight and the drum as graysy as hell.
Sure it took me ages and I got all covered in muck and oil. Of coorse, all the time I was workin’ at this
here wheel, she was as sweet as pie and she chattered away til me all friendly
leck. So I asorta got til thinkin’, that
she'd maybe taken a wee bit of a shine til me, on account of me bein’ so
charmin’ and helpful and all that.
Well anyway, I eventually managed to finish the
job and as I got up on til me feet all smiles, I was asorta hopin’, that seein’
as I’d done her a good turn, that maybe she’d now do a good turn for me .....
behind the ditch. But bejaysus, she just
about managed to grunt “thanks”, before jumpin’ intil her car and zoomin’ away
off down the road. Now I wasn't best playsed for a while, but then when I
cooled down, I put it down til her bein' in such a hurry and that if I was
patient, she’d give me my reward some other time.
Now the next day, there was a terrible steep of
rain and within no time at all, I was absolutely wringin’. So I had no choice but to seek shilter under
a tree, hopin’ and prayin’ that someone would come along soon in their car and
give me a lift. But typically of coorse,
there wasn’t a soul about. Aye, whenever
you’re out for a stroll on a sunny day, the whoers damn nearly take the arse
off yee every couple of minutes, as they roar by in their cars. But whenever you really want them, sure
there’s never a one to be seen.
However, I eventually did hear the sound of a car
approachin’ and when I looked round, I saw it was her motor comin’ over the
brow of the hill. Well me heart leapt,
let me tell yee, for I was sure I’d be gettin’ me reward sooner than I’d
expected. So I jumped out on til the
road with me hand up and a big smile on me face. But bejaysus, if she didn't whizz right past
me through a big puddle and nearly drownd me, before roarin’ away on up the
road. But then what else would you
expect from a woman! The ungrateful
wretch!!
BLANKET FOLLY
One of me neighbours Eddie is a crusty owl
bachelor and when I was talkin’ til him theday, he told me a wee tale about
blankets. Aye, a lough of weeks before, he heard this rap on the dooer of his
wee cottage and when he went to see who it was, he found this very pretty young
woman standin’ out on the dooer step.
Now she was sellin’ blankets and although he had
no need for any damned blankets, he was so took by her short skirt, her good
looks and the very sociable way she smiled at him, that he began to hatch a wee
plan and as a result, he agreed to buy a couple on hire purchase, with payments
bein’ collected on a weekly basis.
“And so
what was your wee plan then?” I asked him.
“Well, it
was simple,” he replied. “Me idea was that when she came back for to get the first
weekly instalment, I'd put it til her straight, that either she went til bed
with me, or she could go to hell and take the two blankets away with her!”
My goodness, I could hardly believe me
ears. Although Eddie’d obviously been a
handsome enough sorta ram when he was young, bejaysus he’s an awful sight
now. Sure there’s more dirt on him than
in a middlin’ sized garden and what wee bit of hair he has, sure it’s goin’ in
all directions. Not only that, but
there’s hardly one tooth left in his head and he’s in dire need of a damned
good shave. But to top it all, there’s a
bigger stink off him than you'd get off a buck goat. Sure a more unattractive sight til weemen you
couldn't find. And him over sixty five
as well!
“So what
happened when she returned for the first instalment,” I asked him.
“Och,
sure this here big rough lookin’ hallion turned up instead of her,” he replied,
“and he tolt me it’d be him who’d be collectin’ the money every week .....
well, I wasn’t hardly gonna put me proposition til him, now was I! ..... by the
way, you wouldn’t be interested in buyin’ a couple of blankets would yee?”
PET FOOD
I believe
there’s some move afoot to stop people from rattlin’ their collection boxes at
yee. Well I think it’s a damned good
idea, for there’s nawthin’ more hateful than that odejious carry-on. Man, there’s days when I’m as wicked as a bag
of buck weasels and me nerves are so ragged, that when some clift goes and
rattles their owl collection box right under me snout, sure I get that rizz,
I’m often sorely tempted to take them by the throat and shake them til their
teeth start janglin’ in their head.
Well anyway one day last
week, I was goin’ intil the locial suppermarket, when this very thin, gaunt
lookin’ woman stopped me.
“Could you spare me some pet food?” she
pleaded, lookin’ at me with these big pitiful eyes. Well I looked at the scrawniness of her and I
instantly felt sorry for her, for I thought it was terrible sad, that a woman
could have fallen on such hard times and descended til such depths.
So I layned
over and whispered in her ear.
“Would you not prefer a wee sandwich?” I asked
her, “sure it’d do you a lot more good than atin’ a tin of Kitty Kat.”
Well this
here woman instantly looked aghast, before pointin’ at this sign beside her
invitin’ people to donate pet food to a locial pet charity. Well, it was my turn then to look
aghast. So I beetled off inside the store
as quick as I could go and I got her a couple of tins of Whiskas! But sure, it was the least I could do in the
circumstances.
BLACK BOB, THE WONDER DOG
As I was
trippin’ down the road the other mornin’, with me flat cap on and me long coat
flappin’ in the breeze, I bumped intil me owl mucker Alec, who told me
excitedly that he’d just got this new black puppy dog, which he’d named Bob and
which, accordin’ til him, was a quare smart young dog, because he’d been able
to taych it a whole pile of new tricks already.
Well I pretended to be
interested, although I was really just lookin’ forward til bein’ on me way as
soon as possible. But then he invited me in to see him. Bejaysus, sure me heart sank, for I was in no
mood for such eegitry, or any damned mutt slabberin’ about me. But sure what could I do but folly him intil
the house, to see this here wonder dog.
“Right,” said Alec excitedly til this here
puppy, “SIT! ..... SIT! ..... SIT!”
Well black
Bob the wonder dog must have misunderstood him and thought he’d said somethin’
else, because instead of sittin’ down leck he’d been tolt, he immediately did a
nice wee job instead, right there in the middle of Alec’s lovely new carpet.
MODERN TECHNOLOGY
The world’s
goin’ clayne mad, what with all this new technology that’s about. Aye, there’s all these new fangled gadgets
around these days and to be quite honest, I don’t know what the hell the most
of them is for. Now the other day,
someone asked me if I’d be gettin’ a mobile phone. But what sort of a stupid question was
that! Why the hell would I be wantin’ a
phone with wee wheels on it!!
As for video
recorders, it took me 15 years to work out how to use ours and now I’m told
they’re doin’ away with them and replacin’ them with DVD machines. But as far as I’m concerned, they can keep
all this new technology. If I ever want
a new gadget, I make it meself from what bits and pieces I have out in the tool
shed.
For example,
Mildred’s always complainin’ about the cost of elecatricity and about how I use
so much of it watchin’ TV all the time. So
bein’ a bit of an inventor, I came up with this bright idea. So I got the owl bike, put it on a stand,
took the back tyre off and then put a band round the back wheel, before
attachin’ it til a wee generator.
Now I thought it was a
great idea and was sure Mildred would be fierce playsed. But naw, not so. She took one look at it and stalked off,
mutterin’ that there was no way she was gonna pedal on that bike for hours on end
generatin’ elecatricity. Och, she’s
nawthin’ but a Luddite and an ungrateful wretch!
It has
always been quite clear since the dawn of time, that us men are the superior
sex in every sense of the word. As for that other lot, although they’ve
tried their best to imitate and match us boyos, sure all their efforts over the
centuries have been laughable and in vain, which is why we mock them for tryin’
to be men and dismiss them contemptuously as bein’ nawthin’ more than ‘wee
men’, which is where the term ‘weemen’ originally came from.
But it’s strange you know,
although it’s obviously pointless for weemen to try and compete with us men,
they never seem to accept that reality and as a result, they never quit
tryin’. However, the struggle eventually
always takes its toll on them and they all eventually begin to flag when they
get older and that’s when they begin to crack up and start goin’ all odd and
peculiar.
Well many moons ago, there
was this group of very frustrated owl weemen, who had got that fed up tryin’ to
keep up with us men, that they started a weemen’s movement and they put a
rallyin’ cry article in a national newspaper, which started off with the
follyin’ words: “Men, oh pause for a while and consider how you can give us
women our fair and just rights.” It then
went on to spout a whole pile of other owl nonsense, which is too ludicrous to
mention here.
Now although this here
newspaper article was ignored by men, it was read by most weemen, who started
to refer to it as the ‘Men, oh pause’ newspaper article. Man, was it not
debated far and wide by bitter twisted weemen everywhere! And whenever any of these here witches got up
to praych about weemen’s rights, men used to screw up their faces and instantly
dismiss them sneeringly as bein’ yet another one of one of them damned
‘menopause’ weemen. So that’s where the word ‘menopause’ came from. Aye, when weemen eventually reach that stage
in life, when they go all odd and peculiar, men describe them as bein’ weemen
who are sufferin’ from the ‘menopause’ syndrome.
BIRTHDAY
PRESENTS
It was
Mildred’s birthday recently and although I don’t normally never buy her
nawthin’, I decided to get her two wee things this year, just for a change.
Now the
first thing I bought her was a wee pair of sharp scissors, which I thought
would be great for trimmin’ that big black moustache what she has on her upper
lip. Bejaysus, you should see it. A
regimental sergeant major would be fierce proud of it!
As for the
second thing I got her, it was a pair of sheep shears. It’s not leck we’ve got any sheep about the
farm nor nawthin’ leck that. It’s just
that I thought they’d be handy for daylin’ with those big, bushy armpits of
her. Jaysus, they’re an awful bloody
sight! But not only that, I hate it when
she raises her arm, for I’m desperate scarred a rat or summat awful’s gonna
lepp out at me.
Well anyway,
Mildred wasn’t none too happy with me two presents. But then that’s hardly
surprisin’. I mane you just couldn’t playse weemen, now could youse boys.
But the
present that surprised me the most was the one me daughter Martha bought. When I asked Martha a couple of weeks before
Mildred’s birthday what she was gonna get her, she tolt me that she’d already
bought her a two week fishin’ holiday away up the country, which surprised me
no end, because whereas I love fishin’, I know for a fact that Mildred hates
it. But I didn’t pass no remarks about
it at the time.
Now when it
came til the day of Mildred’s birthday, Martha came round with the
present. But instead of givin’ the envelope
with all the holiday stuff in it til Mildred, she gave it til me instead, which
totally confused me. So I took Martha
til one side.
“Look Martha,” said I til her, “it’s not my
birthday theday you know, it’s your ma’s.”
Well bejaysus, she rared up at me somethin’ desperate.
“Do you think I’m some kind of a bloody eegit
or somethin’!” she roared. “Of coorse I know it’s me ma’s birthday theday.”
“Well,” said I back til her, “why are you
givin’ the fishin’ holiday til ME, rather than her then?”
“Because,” she replied, “when you go away on
that there fishin’ holiday, me ma’ll get two whole weeks total pace from yee,
you miserable owl whoer yee ..... and what better birthday present could I give
her than that!!”
Well Jaysus, have youse
ever hear the lecks of that in all your life! I mane, do your
daughters talk til youse ones leck that.
My goodness, the chillder of the theday have absolutely no respect
whatsoever for their elders and betters!
DOG’S POO
Although where I live is a
very nice town, there’s one wee sneg about it: there’s an awful lot of dog’s
poo on the streets. This manes that when
I’m wanderin’ about stickin’ me neb intil other people’s business, I always
have to keep lookin’ down, for to make sure I avoid it and don’t step in
it.
The bonus of
this however, is that I find all the small change that the chillder don’t leck
carryin’ about in their pockets and which they therefore toss out on til the
ground. Aye, it’s nice wee way of makin’
money, let me tell yee and last year, I earned £18.74 before tax.
But to get back til the
dog’s poo, no matter how careful I am, there inevitably comes that time, when
I’m walkin’ along and I lift me eyes momentarily from the pavement and bejaysus
next thing, I feel that dreaded wee skid, which always only ever manes one
thing - that me foot has come intil contact with a nice big mound of revoltin’
dog’s poo.
Well
although it’s disgustin’, most people can nearly always wipe it off on the side
of the kerb or on a clump of grass. But the thing that really sickens my arse,
is that when it happens til me, I’m nearly always wearin’ me Doctor Martens
with those big deep treads on the soles and as a result, kerbstones and clumps
of grass are no damned use at all for claynin’ it off.
But with
regard til them ones that don’t clayne up after their mutts, I often wonder
what they themselves think, when they experience that dreaded wee skid
themselves.
RECYCLIN’ BOXES
With regard til them recyclin’
boxes that the council’s given us, one of me neighbours recently told me that
she doesn’t put their empty beer cans and cider bottles in theirs and when I
asked her why not, she wouldn’t say. But
I reckon it’s cos she’s afeared that if she did, then them boys on the recyclin’
lorry would quickly spread the word around the whole town, that “them ones that
live at no 9 Eegits Row are desperate boozers!”. Well if that is her raison, she should folly
my example and do what I do. Now
although my box is always full of empty porter and whisky bottles, nobody would
ever know that I touched a drop. This is because my next dooer neighbour is a
teetotal Methodist praycher and I always switch my box with his on collection
day - when he’s not lookin’ of coorse.
But do you know the way you
can make people feel very uncomfortable, when you stop and study the contents
of their suppermarket trolleys with contempt.
Well you can achieve the same result by lookin’ intil their recyclin’
boxes. That’s why I always look forward
til recyclin’ day.
Aye, I wander about and when I spy one of these
here boxes, I stop and stare at it until I’m sure the owner is lookin’ out the
windy at me. I then bend down and take
the lid off the box, before straightenin’ up again. The next thing I do is stare down at the
contents of the box and shake me head disdainfully from side til side. I even take bottles and cans out and hold
them up for all the whole world to have a damned good look at. Then, when I’m sure I’ve got the box owners
rizz good and proper, I move on til me next victim.
Now although this annoys
people no end, very few of them come out and have a go at me. This is because
they know that if they do, I’ll go and get me Rottweiler and set it on
them. Aye, Mildred certainly does have
her uses.
BOB THE BLOW
While I was
walkin’ down the lane yisterday mornin’, it was me misfortune to bump intil
this owl farmer who’s called Bob the Blow, on account of him forever blowin’
about what a great man he is and all the marvellous things he’s ever
done. Now he was carryin’ a shotgun and when I asked him what he was up
til, he told me he was out after magpies.
“And how many have you shot so far theday
then?” I asked him.
“49,” he replied nonchalantly.
“49!” I exclaimed incredulously.
“Aye,” he replied, “and all of them with just the
one cat-erich.”
“You shot 49 magpies with just the one
cartridge!” I retorted in total amazement.
“Aye,” he said most proudly, “just the one
cat-erich.”
“And how the hell did you manage that?” I
asked him all puzzled.
“Well you see,” he replied, “I came across
this here tree and my goodness, but there was 49 magpies sittin’ up on the one
branch.”
“49 magpies sittin’ up on the one branch!”
“Aye,” he replied, “so I raised me gun ..... and after
aimin’ real careful-leck, I pulled the tricker ..... and the whole
49 fell deed at me feet ..... all with only the one shot!”
“My goodness,” I exclaimed, “that was an
absolutely amazin’ feat Bob ..... but here, when you’re tellin’ people about this feat, why don’t you just
round the figure up from 49 til 50 magpies.”
He looked at me all aghast.
“What!” he retorted, all shocked. “Och, sure I wouldn’t tell a lie about one
bird.”
THE OWL CLOCK
One day, when I went up til
King Artur's Court for to visit me owl mucker Artur, I found him busy tryin’ to
fix this here owl clock. I immediately
looked round for Artur's wife May, but he tolt me that she was messin’ about
out the back somewhere. Well when I
heard that I was fierce playsed, cos it meant me and Artur'd be fit to talk
freely, without her continually stickin’ her oar in. However, no sooner had Artur sat me down near
the big roarin’ fire, than the kitchen dooer opened and May stuck her head in
and nodded at me with a divilish look on her face.
“Well,” she cackled, “is that owl clock goin
yit?” Artur shook his head and replied
“naw” before he started takin’ it til pieces yet again.
“Och, this is about the tenth time you've
started takin’ it til pieces ..... are you never gonna to get it to go at
all?” Artur shook his head defiantly.
“Look,” he said, “this here owl clock is
definitely gonna go, let there be no doubt about that at all!” But May didn't look none too convinced and
she disappeared out the back again.
“Now before we go any further Mickle, would
yee leck a wee sup?” he asked. But then he realised that that was one damned
foolish question for to be askin’ me and so without waitin’ for a reply, he
went away intil another room and returned in no time at all with a bottle of
what looked leck water.
“Here,” he said, “have a wee drop of the
craytur ..... I got it yisterday.” Well
as soon as Artur mentioned the word ‘craytur’, I knew he'd laid his hands on
some poteen. He then got a tall glass
and he put a drop of lemon intil it, some sugar and a good pour of the
craytur. He then filled the whole glass
with hot water from the kettle on the range, before givin’ it all a damned good
stir.
“There you are,” he said, “that's such good
stuff, it'd even put hairs on a woman's chest!”
And I took a sip and found it was indeed the real McCoy.
Now as we chattered merrily
away, he continued workin’ on this here owl clock and when he had it all
reassembled yet again, he gave it a couple of shakes. But bejaysus, despite all
his efforts, the damned thing still wouldn't go tick-tock. It was at that point that May reappeared yet
again.
“Och, that owl clock’s never gonna go,” she
sneered and with that she disappeared out the back again, hootin’ with mockin’
laughter. Artur sighed and shook his
head.
“She seems determined to annoy yee theday,
Artur!” I said. Artur shook his head
from side til side and smiled.
“But not any more,” he said. And with that, he
arose from his chair, grabbed a holt of the clock and he made his way across the
kitchen til the back dooer, where he put the clock down on the step.
“Well, is
that owl clock goin yet?” asked May yet again, with a sneer all over her chops.
Artur looked over at her in amongst the pigs.
“Aye, it's goin all right,” he replied .....
and with that, he drew back his foot ..... and kicked it half way up the
yard.
DUSTIN’
Man, I hate
it when Mildred starts dustin’! There I
am, sittin’ in a haype watchin’ TV in the front room and in she comes, with
that dreaded duster in her hand. Well
what with all her bobbin’ and weavin’ about and her hummin’ away, that’s the
end of me watchin’ the TV.
But what a
performance! Firstly, all the owl
ornaments have to be lifted and put til one side, before the actual dustin’
begins. Now if it was down til me, it’d
be one quick wipe and that’d be it. But
not her. Instead she slowly wipes the
dust very carefully intil a dust pan.
You see, her theory is that if you just run a duster over a surface, the
dust only goes up in the air, before settlin’ back down a wee while later. So
she believes that the ONLY real way to get rid of dust is to actually GET RID
of it. So it ALL has to go OUT of the
house and intil the bin.
You know,
she once told me that the majority of dust is actually wee tiny bits of human
skin. Well that started me
athinkin’. Now if your house was
previously occupied by other people and has never been dusted properly, then
all their microscopic bits and pieces’ll be there too. What a thought! I mane, it’s bad enough havin’ to share me
house with Mildred, let alone a whole pile of other people as well! So I suppose her way of dustin’ IS actually
the best way.
Now with all
this sunny weather we’ve been havin’, I’m feelin’ fierce druthy. The only sneg
is I can’t go til the pub, cos I’m short of funds. So if any of youse have a dust problem, just
slip me a few quid and I’ll send Mildred round for to sort youse out.
What are eyebrows for? Now your nose is for stickin’ intil other
people’s business, your eyes are for keepin’ a close watch on what your
neighbours are up til and your ears are for listenin’ til all the locial
gossip. Furthermore, nearly all the
other bits and bobs on your body seem to have some definite purpose. But eyebrows, I just can’t think what they’re
for.
Well anyway, I asked me owl
mate Aristotle about it one day and he suggested that maybe we have them to
stop the sweat from our brow runnin’ intil our eyes. Well that theory could be true enough as far
as weemen is concerned, because they’re born to work and so you’d expect the
sweat to be baylin’ off them. But us
men, we’re born to take it aisy and as a result, we never ever break out intil
sweat. So that theory obviously can’t be
right as far as us boyos is concerned.
But anyway, eyebrows is a
damned nuisance. For example, when I’m
sittin’ watchin’ TV, I can hardly see anythin’, because it’s leck lookin’
through a couple of owl bushes hangin’ over me eyes!
FARTIN’
Have youse ever wondered why
weemen are nearly always in such bad humour?
Well, I know the answer – and it’s quite simple. You see, contrary til
what all weemen would have you believe, they actually do fart, just the same as
us boyos. The only difference is that
they don’t do it while they’re in company.
Whereas we men just let rip any time we feel the
need, they have to hold it in till they’re on their own. My goodness, it must be torture for
them. So you see, if you walked around
continually with clenched buttocks, would you not be in fierce bad humour all
the time too!
GRUMPY OWL WEEMEN
Grumpy owl weemen! Well Mildred’s certainly one of them all
right! But not only is she fierce
grumpy, she’s jumpy, stumpy, frumpy, lumpy, as well as bein’ desperate humpy
too. Man, you just couldn’t playse her!
Now I don’t have a clue as til why it is, but
she has a sour owl face on her the whole damned time. In fact, I sometimes have to get the photie
album out and have a look at that photie of her when she was still young, free
and single, for to remind me of what she looked leck, when she smiled.
THE GRUMPINESS BEFORE THE STORM
Although Mildred’s always
grumpy, I have this very unaisy feelin’ that I’m goin’ to experience somethin’
a lot worse in the not too distant future.
It’s all to do with that piggy bank of hers, which she keeps on the
dresser and intil which she puts all the loose change from her purse.
Now there’s manys the time
when I’m in desperate bad need of a cure, but have no entrance fee intil the
pub. So whenever she’s out tarmacin’ the
lane up til the house, or buildin’ a byre or whatever, I take the opportunity
to unscrew that yoke on the bottom of the piggy bank. I then extract all her money and replace it
with metal washers, so she’ll be none the wiser.
But somethin’ is tellin’ me,
that the proverbial you know what is gonna hit the fan any day now, when she
empties her piggy bank and finds all the money has gone. In fact, every time
she goes anywhere near that there piggy bank, I start edgin’ towards the dooer. However, I’ll keep youse posted on what
happens – that’s if I’m still alive of coorse!
SAINT MILDRED
The mane raison I married
Mildred was because she had a great figure – aye, a great figure in the
bank!!! She wasn’t short of a bob or
two, let me tell yee. Boys a dear, it
did me heart good to watch her herdin’ her dowry of 25 cows the 8 miles from
her home til mine. However, although I
was happy enough to keep the cows, I just wish I could have returned her as
faulty goods.
But I’m sure youse ones must
think I’m desperate hard on Mildred and if you ever met her and larnt all about
the good deeds she does for all our neighbours, you’d probably think she was a
saint, who deserved to go til heaven.
But don’t be fooled; it’s all a front!
Aye, Mildred has an ulterior motive for bein’
such a saint. You see, she’s convinced
that I’m already doomed to go til hell and after sufferin’ so many years of
hell with me already, she doesn’t want to go there again. So she’s doin’ all she can to ensure that
when she kicks the bucket, she’ll be sent til heaven and not til hell, to be
with me, for eternity.
GOLDIE
When I recently heard Victoria
Beckham bummin’ on about how many fabulous friends she has, I decided to count
all me friends on me fingers. However, I
never got past me second finger. Aye,
I’ve only two friends – Goldie and me shadow, who’s been with me every step of
the way through life.
Now Goldie is me goldfish and
him and me have a lot in common. For
example, we’re both good for nawthin’ eegits, who spend all day goin’ round and
round in circles. Furthermore, while his
house is his goldfish bowl, from where he looks out ontil the world all day
long, my house is my goldfish bowl, where I go from windy til windy, lookin’ out
ontil the world all day long.
Well anyway, I used to feel
fierce sorry for Goldie, because I felt he led a desperate dreary borin’ life,
goin’ round and round yon bowl all day long.
Of coorse, I used to try and lighten his day by talkin’ til him. But sure he was leck everyone else ..... he
just ignored me!
But now someone’s just told me that a goldfish
only has a 5 second memory span, which means in effect, that every time he sets
off on another round of his bowl, sure he’s actually startin’ off on yet
another brand new journey of adventure, full of excitin’ and interestin’
sights. So I no longer feel at all sorry
for Goldie. In fact to be quite honest,
I feel desperate envious of him!
It was always my
understandin’ that if an egg floats in water, it manes that the egg is bad. I
was therefore fierce surprised when I heard some owl doll statin’ the opposite
recently and that a floatin’ egg indicates that it’s fresh. Now I was
sure she was just talkin’ a whole load of owl ballocks and that’s why I decided
I would check it out on the intronet, where I came up with the follyin’:
Old eggs float in
water because of a large air cell. The air cell forms as the egg cools after
bein’ laid and, as the egg ages, air enters the egg and the air cell becomes
larger, which makes the egg float.”
But if anyone still has any doubts, I would
suggest that they carry out the follyin’ experiment. First of all, loiter round
a chicken run and when you eventually hear a chicken goin’ bonkers, you’ll know
it has just laid an egg, which you should immediately retrieve and place in a
bowl of water. You’ll then see that
although the tip of the egg may point towards the surface of the water,
the vast majority of it will be below the water surface.
To complete the experiment, you should hold on til the same egg and
after say 6 months, place it in a bowl of water and you will see that
the egg now floats on the water surface.
Now, if any man should happen to drop the egg ontil the flooer
durin’ this latter part of the experiment, I would suggest they make a bee-line
for the kitchen dooer and layve it til the wife to clear up the mess, because I
can tell yee from experience, that the smell is absolutely odejious.
But while I’m on the subject of eggs, someone told me the other
day that if you want to find out if an egg is soft or hard-boiled, you should
spin it on a worktop, because if it’s hard it’ll not spin much, but if it’s
soft it’ll keep on spinnin’, on account of the liquid in it.
Well anyway, I decided I’d leck a boiled egg the
other day, but because I didn’t want to take a chance on Sam and Ella comin’
til me dooer, I decided I’d better boil it hard. So after the egg had been in the boilin’ water
for a while, I took it out and span it on the worktop. Well it was still soft for it kept
spinnin’. However, the only sneg was
that it span that much that it span right off the worktop and on til the
flooer, where it shattered intil smithereens and spattered the whole of me
trousers with yella yoke. So I didn’t
bother havin’ an egg after all!
URBAN MYTH?
I have heard it on the QT,
that the government has become so concerned about the declinin’ numbers of
criminals bein’ detected and convicted, that they are gonna introduce a drastic
new measure in the next year or so, which will dramatically improve the
situation in the long term.
It will eventually involve the insertion of a
microchip intil the heads of all human bein’s.
However, they’ve decided that because it would be too costly and inconvenient
to microchip everyone at the same time, these microchips will initially only be
implanted intil the heads of all new born babes. Then, with the aid of
satellites, they’ll be able to track every single move a microchipped person
makes throughout their lifetime and if they commit a crime, the police will
know it was them. For example, if a crime is committed by a microchipped person
at point X at 12.43 p.m. on a certain day, police computers will be able to
tell who it was who was there at that precise point in time.
Obviously it’s goin’ to take many years before
the whole population is ‘chipped’, but there will eventually come a time, when
virtually all crimes will be almost instantly resolvable and all criminals
detected and convicted. The other
advantage of this scheme is that its very existence will deter people from
committin’ crimes, because they’ll know damned fine that they’ll definitely be
caught if they do somethin’ bad.
The one downside however, is that in order for
the signal from the microchips to be picked up by satellites, they will also
have to insert an aerial intil the heads of all those ‘chipped’ babes. So if any of youse ones are plannin’ on
havin’ chillder, but don’t want them runnin’ about with wee aerials stickin’
out of their heads, then I would suggest that you start couplin’ right away and
make sure you have your ba before the government introduces this new measure.
ALBERT
Me boozy mate Albert was recently invited
til a weddin’ which was conducted by a very staid praycher, who
was staunchly teetotal and regarded booze as bein’ the divil’s own
brew. Now after the marriage service and
just before the reception, most people retired til the bar for a quick drink
which the married couple was payin’ for.
Needless to say, Albert was first til the bar
and he ordered himself a drink. Then, just as the barman was servin’ it up til
him, the praycher came intil the bar lookin’ for the bride's da. Albert
immediately turned til him.
“Now what
would you leck to drink?” he asked him. The praycher recoiled in horror,
before rapidly movin’ on. The barman
looked at Albert and shook his head vigorously.
“Och,
that man’d rather commit adultery than have a drink!” he said til Albert.
“What!”
said Albert back til the barman. “Here, take my drink back ..... I didn't know
there was a choice.”
COTTAGE WALLS
Things is so different these days from when I
was a young man. Aye, though life was
hard them days, it was an awful lot simpler and generally spaykin’, we was happy
with the little we had. And another
thing, the most of us didn’t have mortgages and there wasn’t no credit cards,
nor nawthin’ leck that. So although most
people was poor, they wasn’t up til their eyes in debt, leck what they are
these days. So at the end of each week,
we could spend all our wages enjoyin’ ourselves. Aye, Christmas used to come every weekend for
us boys them days.
But it’s all different
now. These days, all the youngsters want
nawthin’ but the best and they want it immediately, no matter what it costs, or
what debt it gets them intil. And as for
newly-weds, they all want to live in spankin’ new houses with all the latest
modcons. So if you offered them one of
those owl abandoned cottages up the mountain for nawthin’, my goodness but if
they wouldn’t turn their noses up at your offer straightaway.
However, what they don’t realise is that a whole
pile of those there owl cottages have walls that are built with money. Aye, this is because a lot of them was
occupied by crusty owl bachelors a long time ago and in them days, a whole pile
of them didn't trust banks. So they used
to hide their money behind stones in the walls of their cottages and of coorse,
when all these owl bucks died, sure they left their money behind them. Aye, there's plenty of money to be found up
in those owl cottages ..... if only you just knew where to look!
MALONE
Now for those of youse who don’t know, there’s a
road in Belfast called the Malone Road and when I was talkin’ til me wise owl
mucker Aristotle theday, he told me where the name came from.
Apparently when King Billy first arrived in
Belfast, after a brave few gruellin’ days on the road, his troops was all so
weary that he told them they could take it aisy and rest over the next few
days. He then slipped away for to do a
wee bit of shoppin’.
But on his way til Smithfield Market for to look
for some bargains, someone told him that there was far better 2 for 1
offers goin’ at Lisburn market, but that if he wanted to avail himself of them
he’d have to hurry, because they was goin’ leck hot cakes. So he immediately rushed back til his men and
told them that there’d been a change of plans and that they’d have to go til
Lisburn that very day. Well although his
men was all exhausted, sure they had no choice but to comply with his
wishes.
However, they’d only gone a short way down the
road, when King Billy suddenly took it intil his head that he wanted to deviate
from the main route and go up this owl by-road, for to see where it’d lead and
what it was leck up there.
Well it was at this point that his exasperated
generals gathered round him on his big white horse and told him that he should
stick til the main route, as it was shorter and would be a lot less strenuous
on all his extremely tired foot soldiers.
Now King Billy was a stubborn man and as a
result, he was totally determined to go up this other road. But he eventually saw their point of view and
so he agreed til a compromise.
“Okay,” he said til the generals, “you and all
the men continue on down the main road there ..... and I’ll go up here on ma
lone.” So thereafter, that there road
was called Malone Road.
By the way, by the time they got til Lisburn,
sure those great 2 for 1 bargains was all gone!
One sunny mornin’ I was
sittin’ in me comfy armchair in the front room, studyin’ the horses in the
paper and enjoyin’ a big mug of sweet tay, while I chomped me way through an
enormous plate of chocolate biscuits and sticky buns. Man, was I not as happy as a wee pig in
shite. Aye, things had been goin’
desperate well of late and everythin’ in the garden looked fierce rosy. But then as per usual, Mildred just had to go
and spoil it all.
“Right,” she suddenly announced after burstin’
intil the room, “I’ve been listenin’ til a doctor on the radio talkin’ about
the dangers of bein’ overweight and everythin’ what she said made sense .....
so I think the time’s right to folly her advice about goin’ on a diet!”
I looked at Mildred over the top of me newspaper
leck as if she was mad, because the way I saw it, there was absolutely no need
for her to go on a diet. I mane, what with her forever diggin’ trenches,
buildin’ byres, climbin’ up trees and loppin’ off the tops of them with a chain
saw, luggin’ bags of coal on her shoulder the three miles up from our wee town
and so on, sure she’s as trim and as tidy a wee woman as you’d ever see. Man, she’s every cannibal’s nightmare, for
there’s not a pick on her.
“Och, you don’t need to go on no diet,” said
I.
“Aye, I agree with you entirely,” she
retorted, “but it’s not me who’s goin’ on a diet ..... it’s you! ..... doin’
nawthin’ all day long, except stuffin’ your face and layin’ about in a haype in
front of that there telly, sure you’re miles overweight.” I looked at her all
aghast.
“What!!! ..... me go on a diet!” I cried, “no
chance, no chance at all, at all ..... anyway, it’s only weemen who goes on a
diet ..... men never go on no diet.”
“Well that’s not true at all,” she replied, “there’s
piles of men go on a diet these days.” I
shook me head.
“Look Mildred,” I growled dismissively, “if
you can show me one man from around these parts, who’s gonna go on a diet, then
I promise you that I’ll join him and go on a diet as well.”
Now I was hopin’ that’d shut her up. But bejaysus, the next thing was she suddenly
looked til her right and scarred the wits out of me by lettin’ a blood curdlin’
scrayke out of her, that would have put a banshee til shame. I immediately looked til me left, expectin’
to see a mad man with an upraised axe or summat. But sure all I saw was the reflection of
meself in the mirror on the wall.
“There you are,” chortled Mildred
triumphantly, “you’ve just seen a man from around these parts, who’s gonna go
on a diet ..... so you’ll have to live up til your promise and go on a diet!”
“Och, I’m not goin’ on no diet,” I roared
defiantly, “so there you are ..... let that be the end of it.” Mildred’s face
turned intil stone.
“Right me man,” she said coldly, “you have a
choice ..... you can either go on a diet ..... or you can larn how to cook and
feed yourself!” And with that she stormed out of the room.
Well anyway, that was a couple
of weeks ago. As for me diet, it’s
bloody awful. But havin’ said that, it’s
still a whole pile better than starvin’ til death!!!
THE BAR OF CHOCOLATE
One of the many snegs
about bein’ a grandparent is that you’re often called upon for to baby-sit
grandchillder.
Now one black, wet, windy,
cowl afternoon, me daughter Annie dropped by with her wee cuttie Susie and she
persuaded Mildred to go shoppin’ with her in the big city. Well I thought this was a great idea, because
I assumed it’d mane that I’d get a lough of hours pace from the owl witch,
which was gonna suit me just fine, as there was racin’ on the telly. However, me dreams about a nice quiet
afternoon in front of the telly was shattered, when I was tolt that Susie was
bein’ left behind and that I was to entertain her.
Me heart sank leck a stone, for
I knew from past experience what was gonna happen next. I mane, how does an owl whoer leck me keep a
10 year old cuttie amused? For a start,
she has absolutely no interest at all in horse racin’ and as for me, I can’t
stand Monopoly, Inspector Cluedo and all that other owl shite. But anyway, after Mildred and Annie left, I
took young Susie intil the front room in the sorta forlorn hope that she’d sit
in a corner and keep her trap shut, so that I could watch the racin’ in pace.
But naw, she twisted and
turned and moaned and gerned and complained she was bored and asked me a whole
pile of odejious silly questions, about all sorts of nonsense. Bejaysus, I
couldn’t get concentratin’ on one damned race!
But then I had a great idea.
“Hey Susie,” I said til her, “how do you fancy
walkin’ down intil the town ..... and gettin’ me a really big bar of
chocolate?” And I gave her a big wink.
She immediately perked up.
“Aye, okay,” she replied all excited. So I gave her the money and she went out of
the house intil the wind and the rain to walk the three miles down intil our
wee town, for to get this here big, big bar of chocolate. Bejaysus, pace descended upon the house and I
was able to get back til me racin’. Man,
it was heaven.
Well anyway, about two hours
later, young Susie reappeared. Man, she
was soaked through and looked leck a drownded rat. I gave her a big smile.
“Did you get the big bar of chocolate all
right?” I asked her, holdin’ out me hand.
She nodded and as she handed it over til me, she had a big expectant
smile all over her wee face for some raison.
“Ta very much,” said I til her, before turnin’
back til the TV. I ripped open the
wrappin’ on the chocolate and devoured the first four squares with one bite.
I then heard a pitiful whimper and when I looked
round, there she was standin’ beside me.
The poor wee divil, so small and frail, soaked til the skin and
shiverin’, with her hair all wet and bedraggled and her wee pale face all
covered in spatters of mud. But it was
her big blue eyes that really got me - they looked so sad. Me heart melted. I looked down at the big, big bar of
chocolate and then back at those huge doleful eyes. I then broke off a square and I gave it til
her, before turnin’ back til the racin’ and scoffin’ the rest of me big bar of
chocolate.
THE GALWAY
SHAWL
I was listen’ til the raddio yisterday, when
they suddenly played ‘The Galway Shawl’ and my, did it not remind me of a dance
I went til at Orenmore in the County Galway, one pleasant evenin’ in the month
of May, many, many years ago.
Aye, I mind it well. There I was all alone and
feelin’ desperate lonesome, when I suddenly spied this here damsel; man, she
was young and handsome and her beauty fairly took my breath away. Not only that, but she wore no paint nor
powder, no, none at all. However, what
really attracted me til her was the fact that she wore no jewels, nor costly
diamonds, which indicated til me, that if we became an item, she'd probably be
low maintenance. However, I must say
that she was dressed a wee bit odd-leck for a dance, cos she was wearin' a
bonnet with a ribbon on it and around her shoulder was a Galway Shawl.
Now when the band started
playin' ‘The Galway Shawl’, I took that to be an omen that me and her should
get together and as shy as I was, I went over til her and asked her for a
dance. Well not only did she agree, but
she stayed with me til the end of the night.
But what made it even better was she said “aye”, when I suggested that I
walk her home. My goodness, me heart leapt
with joy.
Now as were walkin’, she kept
on talkin’ and when her father's cottage came intil view, she said til me:
“Come in, sir, and meet my father and play to please him ‘The Foggy Dew’.”
When we went inside there was no sign of her da,
cos he was in the loo. So me darlin’ sat
me down beside the fire and soon her mother had the kettle singin’. Now it had been my intention that when her
father appeared, I’d play ‘The Blackbird’ and ‘The Stack of Barley’, ‘Rodney's
Glory’ and ‘The Foggy Dew’, with me darlin’ singin' each note like an Irish
linnet, whilst the tears stood in her eyes of blue. I also had this here romantic notion, that
when her father’d meet me and hear me play, he’d throw his arms around me, call
me “son” and invite me intil the bosom of his family. But things didn’t quite work out leck
that. For a start, when I first clapped
eyes on him, not only was he six feet tall, but my goodness, he was the
roughest, wildest lookin’ hallion, I’d ever seen in me whole life.
Well anyway, although I gave him a wee bit of a
sickly sweet smile, bejaysus but if he didn’t take one look at me and then rush
over, grab me by the scruff of the neck and the sayte of me trousers and
heelball me out of the cottage and intil the yard. He then proceeded to frogmarch
me the whole way down the lane and when I looked over me shoulder to get one
last glimpse of me darlin’, she was standin’ by the cottage dooer.
“Goodbye, sir,” she cried and then blew me a
kiss.
When her father got me down til the main road,
he gave me such a big kick up the arse to help me on me way, that it lifted me
clayne off the ground and when I came down, I certainly hit the road for old
Donegal with some clump, let me tell yee!
And so that’s why, me heart has remained with
that there Galway shawl till now.
THE GALWAY SHAWL
(the original lyrics)
At Orenmore in the
County Galway,
One pleasant evenin’
in the month of May,
I spied a damsel, she
was young and handsome
Her beauty fairly took
my breath away.
Chorus: She wore no
jewels, nor costly diamonds,
No paint or powder,
no, none at all.
But she wore a bonnet
with a ribbon on it
And round her shoulder
was a Galway Shawl.
We kept on walkin’,
she kept on talkin’,
'Till her father's
cottage came into view.
Says she: “Come in,
sir, and meet my father,
And play to please him
‘The Foggy Dew’.”
She sat me down beside
the fire
I could see her
father, he was six feet tall.
And soon her mother
had the kettle singin’
All I could think of
was the Galway shawl.
I played ‘The
Blackbird’ and ‘The Stack of Barley’,
‘Rodney's Glory’ and
‘The Foggy Dew’,
She sang each note
like an Irish linnet.
Whilst the tears stood
in her eyes of blue.
'Twas early, early,
all in the mornin’,
When I hit the road for
old Donegal.
'Goodbye, sir,' she
cried and kissed me,
And my heart remained
with that Galway shawl.
DREAM HOME
No doubt youse have heard of the term ‘dream
home’. Well there was one time, when me
and me brothers was only young cubs and we temporarily
became homeless. However, not only did me ma soon find a place
for us to rent, but it turned out to be my dream home.
It was a fantastic mansion of a place, situated
about 2 miles off the main road and sittin’ on a hill, with forests til
the left and the right and a fantastic view of Lough Erne, straight out the
front. Mind you, there was no runnin’
water nor elecatricity, but sure what did we care. If we wanted water, all we had to do was pump
some up from the well. As for lightin’,
sure the oil lamps and candles was more than sufficient. Aye, when we was in the livin’ room at night,
it was great sittin’ there in the flickerin’ candlelight, in front of the big
roarin’ log fire, as snug as wee bugs in a rug.
I have lovely memories of that place; the carpet
of bluebells stretchin’ out across the cool, dark, silent forest flooer for as
far as the eye could see; the foxes, badgers, hedgehogs, birds and all sorts of
other livin’ creatures roamin’ about; the early Sunday mornin’ journeys by cot
across the lough til the church on the other side and the mysterious little
island we passed, which had a wee tower on it and which I so wanted to explore,
but never got the chance. [I larned
subsequently that this was Crichton Tower on Gad Island]
Then there was that one and only Halloween night
that we was there, when we lit a big bonefire and as we sat round it enjoyin’
the warmth, our potatoes baked in the glowin’ ashes. Now at Christmas, there was the big Christmas
tree which me da’d cut down in the forest, with real candles on it and as for
the turkey, it was cooked in the log-burnin’ stove. And one time this here pig escaped from the
smugglers and sought refuge in our home.
That grunter became our beloved pet and wherever we went, it follyed us
leck a dog. Aye, us cubs had the great
times, ridin’ about on yon boyo’s back.
Then there was that
time the sparrowhawk swooped down ontil the wood pigeon and although we created
such a commotion that the hawk dropped the pigeon, the poor wee thing was
unfortunately deed by the time we got til it.
Man, was we not upset! But we
didn’t grieve too long and me ma roasted it for our tea. And when we rode the two miles til the main
road for to catch the school bus, we used to have to layve our wee bikes in
this farmer’s shed and he had this awful fierce lookin’ dog, that used to bark
at us and scar the wits out of us. But
sure it was only a barkin’ dog and we never got ate.
One time, I asked me elder brother to buy me a
lough of sweets on his way home from school and I opened a wee sweet shop in
the house. However, the only sneg was
that I had no customers and so I had to ate all the sweets meself. Then me younger brother and I started a private
detective agency. But that sort of
petered out too, because the only case we ever got was lookin’ for some owl
tool me da had lost and to be quite honest, it was a job that didn’t appeal to
us boyos, cos we was only really interested in solvin’ murders, detectin’ bank
robbers, ketchin’ spies and excitin’ things leck that.
Aye, I have so many other beautiful memories
from that wonderful place. We had the time of our lives there and were
quare and sad when we had to layve a year later. I talked about me dream home for manys the
long year afterwards. Then one time, I
decided to go back down Memory Lane with me then girlfriend. However, when we drove down the 2 mile lane
til the house, sure it was no longer there, not one single brick left
standin’. I felt so sad it was gone
and tears came til me eyes. Me
girlfriend took me hand.
“Don’t be too upset,”
she said gently, “as along as you are alive, it will always still be there
..... in your heart.”
I was sufferin’ that bad
recently from stress, anxiety and total confusion that I went to see me doctor,
who informed me that I am yet another victim of a medical condition called
BOXBINITIS, which is apparently sweepin’ the whole country. Now this really is one desperate desaize, let
me tell yee! You see the trouble is that
I have a black box, a red box, a brown wheelie bin and a dark grey wheelie bin
and not only am I forever trippin’ over them the whole damned time, but I can
never remember what the hell I’m meant to put in each of them, or when I’m
supposed to layve them out for emptyin’.
So I tolt the doctor that I’d got this desaize so bad, that if I
couldn’t get cured, I’d go clayne mad altogether!
Well although I was asorta
hopin’ that the quack’d be able to give me somethin’ for it, he tolt me that
there’s no real cure for it yit and as a result, I had to come home
empty-handed, except for an owl leaflet which listed all the locial support
groups out there for victims of this here condition Boxbinitis. Well I wasn’t gonna go til no support group,
so I just put the leaflet intil the black box, which is for recyclin’ paper,
tins and plastic bottles.
But then I had a
brainwave and I’m real playsed to say that I have now fully recovered from it and I’m
feelin’ a whole pile better. This is because I found a cure for it. Aye, I handed the whole boxes and bins job over
til me wife Mildred.
Mind you,
she wasn’t best playsed at first, but once she stopped gernin’, she got stuck
intil it in her usual fierce positive way.
First of all, she decided that all these here bins and boxes needed a
home of their own and so she built a wee outhouse from breeze blocks and put a
fine slated roof on it, with gutterin’ besides.
And it’s a damned good job, let me tell yee. But then of coorse, she’s had years of
experience buildin’ byres, barns, outhouses and the leck around the farm, so
what else would yee expect.
Well the
next thing was she put these big charts and timetables up on the kitchen wall,
so she can monitor the whole operation and ensure that she never makes no
mistakes. Then, when it comes til a collection day, it don’t matter if it’s
bucketin’ cats and dogs, she lugs the damned bin or box the whole way down our
lane til the main road, before rushin’ back til the house for to make me ma
breakfast and then bring it til me in ma bed.
So you there are - problem
solved! Now, if there are any other men
out there who’s sufferin’ from Boxbinitis, they should do what I did and
they’ll be all right in no time. But
doesn’t this all just illustrate how obvious it is, that the obvious is rarely
obvious.
CORNER
Many moons ago when I was unemployed, I became a
corner boy. Every mornin’, I used to layve the house and wander up and down the
streets of our wee town, wonderin’ what the hell I was gonna do with meself all
day. Now if I'd had an entrance fee on
me, I’d have gone intil the pub and hung about in there the whole day. But as I never had one penny piece, I didn’t
never have no choice, but to stand on the street corner and watch the cars
goin’ up and down.
Now it often used to make me
feel fierce depressed, for I knew that unless things changed for the better,
I'd end up spendin’ the rest of me life just standin’ on street corners
watchin’ cars goin’ up and down. Then
eventually, when someone'd ask me on me deathbed, what I'd done with me life,
sure I’d have no choice but to ruefully reply: “Nawthin’, except watch 10
million cars go by.”
Now back then, every day was
more or less the same as the day before.
However, there was the odd one that was different from the rest and I
mind one such day in particular. There I
was, standin’ on the street corner feelin’ very low and when I opened me mouth
for to yawn, bejaysus but if a dirty big black fly didn't zoom in and go
straight down me throat. Well, what wee
bit of resolve I had left, just vanished.
“Bejaysus that fly had the whole of Ireland to
fly around,” I lamented mournfully til meself, “and yit the whoer just had to
go and fly intil me mouth and down me throat!”
My goodness, but I thought the whole world was agin me and man, did it
not fill me with even more self-pity than before.
But then somethin’ happened
that raised me spirits. Aye, a big
smiley dog went by and stopped a wee bit up the street for to do a big steamin’
number 2, right in the middle of the pavement. Well I immediately forgot all
about me woes and instead focused all me attention on that there dogshite, for
I knew it'd only be a matter of time until some unfortunate clift'd come
bouncin’ along and layve a lovely big footprint right through the middle of
it.
Aye, and generally spaykin’, I knew it'd be some
eegit wearin’ shoes with real deep treads, which'd soak up the shite good and
proper, so there’d be no aisy way of claynin’ it off, no matter how much they’d
feck and damn and hop about scraypin’ their foot on the side of the pavement. Man, it was great crack waitin’ eagerly for
the poor victim to come along and when he eventually did, his face was an
absolute picture when he realised instantly from that dreaded tell-tale slip,
that not only had he struck brown ice, but that he’d landed right in the middle
of a big pile of it.
Well I’m away off down Memory Lane now til me
favourite street corner. I wonder how
many cars I’ll see goin’ up and down theday.
DEFLATION
I read the other day that
when a man goes til bed at night, it takes him exactly seven minutes for to go
til sleep. Well, I can vouch for
that. From Sunday til Friday, when I go
til bed at night, I’m always fast asleep in seven minutes. As for Saturday night, it always takes one
minute longer – that’s because that’s the night I always demand me conjugular
rights off me wife Mildred!
Now while I’m on the
subject of conjugular rights, I might as well tell youse about somethin’ what
happened a wee while ago. Mildred sometimes invites her cronies round til our
place for a hash and as soon as they arrive, I’m off, cos I’m not gonna sit in
the midst of that coven of owl hags of witches.
However, I don’t never go too far away.
In fact, I always stand outside the dooer, for to earwig what they be
talkin’ about.
Well anyway, one night one
of them asked Mildred how she rated me as a love-makin’ machine. God when I
heard that, I put me ear right up til the dooer, so as not to miss one single
word of all her glowin’ praise.
“Och, on a scale of one til
ten,” she said with a sneer, “I give him one ..... and that’s bein’ damned kind
til the silly owl ballocks!” Well you
should have heard the snickers and the cackles of the rest of them. My goodness, but it was the first time in me
life, that I really ever understood what the word ‘deflation’ meant. Aye, up until that point in time, I had just
assumed that there was no better lover around than meself and that I was
without doubt, definitely the locial Casanova.
Now because I knew that
Mildred’s revelation was gonna go round our wee town leck wildfire and do
serious damage til me image and reputation, I decided I’d have to pull me socks
up tout suite, if I ever wanted to swagger round our wee town leck a
turbo-charged top-gun rooster again. So I
decided to do a wee bit of research intil love-makin’ and bejaysus it wasn’t
long til I realised - much til me surprise - that there’s a whole pile more til
all this than I had ever realised.
So I went away up til the
big city on the QT cos nobody knows me there and I duked about leck a rat from
shop til shop, with me flat cap down over me eyes and me dark glasses on,
gettin’ a whole pile of books on the subject and then I spent all me time
secretly studyin’ them, rather than the horses.
Bejaysus, was it not one eye-opener!
My goodness, but I never knew weemen had so many bits and bobs and this,
that and the other!
Well anyway, me memory’s
not the best and I kept forgettin’ all the things I’d read. But one Saturday
night, I couldn’t wait no longer and I decided the time had come for me to put
everythin’ what I’d read in these here books intil practice. However, I soon got the feelin’ that Mildred
wasn’t none too impressed by the whole operation or me new found prowess.
But then on reflection, I
suppose I can understand why. You see,
when we went til bed, I had books open on the pillow, in the bed, on the bed
and on the bedside cabinets and every time I went to try somethin’ new, I’d say
til her: “Now just howl on there for a few ticks.” And then I’d scrabble about for me glasses,
look around for the right book and then flick through it, till I’d get til the
page I was lookin’ for.
But to be quite honest with
yee, it didn’t really matter til me what Mildred thought, cos I just knew that
this was only the beginnin’ and that in next til no time at all, I’d be a super
stud and that it wouldn’t be too long until there’d be masses of weemen comin’
from far and wide to seek me services and I’d have no choice but to tell them
to form an orderly queue and patiently await their turn.
So the next mornin’, when I
strutted intil the pub and met me chums, man was I not full of it. Aye, it was great tellin’ them that I was the
quare lover and I really enjoyed braggin’ til them green-eyed envious whoers
that I’d been at it leck a rabbit the whole night long with Mildred. But when I got home and tried to find me
glasses for to read the Sunday rag, bejaysus I couldn’t find them nowhere. So I tackled Mildred about it.
“I’ve got your glasses
hid!” she exclaimed, “and furthermore they’re gonna remain hid, until you get
rid of all them damned books!!” Now no glasses meant no studyin’ the horses,
nor TV, nor readin’ juicy scandals in the Sunday rag and this, that and the
other! So bejaysus, I had the books on
the bonefire and the glasses back on me snout within 2 minutes flat!
CATTINESS
One real wet miserable cowl day a wee while ago,
I was sittin’ by the roarin’ fire in the front room watchin’ the racin’ on TV,
when suddenly the dooer burst open and in came Mildred lookin’ leck a
half-drownded rat.
“I’m fed up milkin’ cows,
claynin’ out pigs and diggin’ drains!” she scrayched, “so I’m gonna give up the
farmin’ and open up a cat’s funeral parlour instead.” Well although this here news alarmed me
somewhat, I knew from past experience it’d be wiser to say nawthin’. And anyway, as long as she keeps bringin’ in
the money, sure I don’t really give a damn what she does.
Now Mildred’s a very capable,
busy wee woman and in no time at all, she had the new business up and
runnin’. But although she did get a few
customers at the start, there’s actually very few people round here, who are
intil havin’ a wake, a hearse, a wee mahogany coffin or a funeral service etc
for their recently departed moggies.
So that’s when she decided
she’d have to extend her business, by offerin’ a weddin’ arrangement service
for cats as well. But once again,
although she did get a few customers at the start, there’s not actually many
around here, who’d be willin’ to pay top dollar for a weddin’ service with all
the trimmin’s for their beloved pussies.
Furthermore, none of these cat marriages went as planned. For example, Mildred just couldn’t get the
cats to stay in one place and as for the cats’ speeches at the weddin’
receptions, bejaysus they was absolutely diabolical!
Aye, it wasn’t long until it
looked leck Mildred’s cat business was gonna flounder. But then she got a wee bit of a
lifeline. One of our farmer neighbours
Clarence is a very good-livin’ religious man and one day he arrived up at our
house with an unusual request.
“You know,” he said, “me and
me family are all very happy up there in our wee heaven. However, there’s just one wee thing that
spoils it all and it’s really buggin’ me ..... you see, I have six cats up
there on the farm and they’re all heathens ..... so because I know you can
organise virtually anythin’ for cats, I was wonderin’ if you could arrange to
Christianise them so that they’d be saved, just leck the rest of us.”
“No problem at all,” said
Mildred immediately, without battin’ an eyelid, “I’ll see til it straight
away.” And over the next few days, she
got everythin’ set up. For example, she
converted one of Clarence’s outhouses intil a wee church, furnished it with
flowers, got a font for the baptism and hired a praycher for to carry out the
service.
But unfortunately, things
didn’t quite work out as she had planned.
You see, I’m afraid it’s a simple matter of fact, that there’s
absolutely and utterly no way whatsoever, that anyone on this earth would be
fit to baptise 1 cat let alone 6!!! Aye,
I’m afeared that for some strange raison or another, cats just aren’t too fond
of water.
And how are things now, you
ask? Well, I’m still sittin’ by the
roarin’ fire in the front room watchin’ the racin’ on TV. As for Mildred, she’s outside in the cowl and
the rain, milkin’ the cows, claynin’ out the pigs and diggin’ drains!
One time, when Mildred went away up the
country for to see her sister for a week, she left me a whole pile of homemade
mate and spud pies in the frayzer and the idea was that I would take one out
each mornin’ for to let it defrost and then heat it up in the oven in the
evenin’ for me tay.
Now when the cat’s away the mice will play
and so there was no way I was gonna hang around the farm while Mildred was
gone. So after I got up on the first day
she was away, I took one of them pies out of the frayzer, put it on a plate on
the kitchen table for to defrost and then it was straight down intil the town,
for a day’s great crack with me mates in the pubs and bookies. However, I got the quare gunk when I got
home, for bejaysus some whoer had got intil me home and stole me pie.
However, I decided that it was just a
one-off and that it wasn’t gonna stop me from enjoyin’ meself. So when I got up the next day, I took another
one of them pies out of the frayzer and then after double-checkin’ that all the
dooers was locked, it was straight down intil the town, for another day’s great
crack with me mates in the pubs and bookies.
However, I got another quare gunk when I got home, for the whoer had
somehow got intil me home and stole me pie again.
Well bejaysus, I was totally perplexed,
especially as I couldn’t work out how the gobshite was gettin’ in. But then I suddenly had a cunnin’ plan and I
rang Archie who agreed to loan me his ferocious, foamin’-at-the-mouth
Rottweiler guard-dog, whose first name is Groucho, cos he’s a mane sort of a
bastard and whose second name is Marx, cos he layves marks on you when he bites
yee.
Now when I got up the follyin’ mornin’, I
took another one of them pies out of the frayzer and after puttin’ it on the
kitchen table to defrost, it was straight down intil the town again, for yet
another day’s great crack with me mates in the pubs and bookies.
Well later, when I was walkin’
up the lane homeward bound, I heard this awful commotion near our house and
when I looked up, I saw Groucho pursuin’ this buck across the fields and I was
quare and playsed to see that not only was the miserable whoer fleein’
empty-handed from me house, but the arse was hangin’ out of his trousers too.
Bejaysus, was I not as happy
as a wee pig in shite! There’d be mate
and spud pie for me tonight, thanks til Archie’s mutt Groucho. However, when I got in through the dooer, I
got the quare gunk, for bejaysus the pie was gone, apart from a few wee bits
and pieces beside Groucho’s bed.
So I suppose the moral of the
story is this: you just can't trust dogs to guard your food!
Now Saturday week ago, when we went round til
Mildred’s 97 year-old ma Aggie, she surprised us no end by tellin’ us that
she’d decided that the time had finally arrived, for her to start thinkin’ more
about lookin’ after her health and that as a result, she was gonna give up the
booze and fegs and take up power walkin’ for exercise.
Well, I didn’t pass no remarks, for she’d had a
brave few wee ports that mornin’. So I
just assumed that she was talkin’ nawthin’ but a whole load of owl nonsense and
that there wouldn’t be one more word about it.
But bejaysus, she surprised me no end, let me tell yee. My goodness, on Sunday mornin’, she was up at
the crack of dawn and true til her word, she went out the dooer and started
power walkin’. Well it was a very
commendable thing for an owl doll leck her to do. The only sneg however, is that we don't know
where the hell she is now.
I’LL TELL YOUR MA
Now here’s a wee song what I sang til me
chillder, when they was nawthin’ but young skitters of cubs and cutties and
they was misbehavin’, when me and them was out on a day trip one time:
(til the tune of 'I'll
tell me ma').
I’ll tell your ma,
when we get home
She’ll tan your hides,
for sure I know
She’ll clip your lugs,
and make youse moan
Youse had your
chances, but now they’re blown
She’s not handsome,
she’s not pretty
When she is angry, and
oh so livid
She’s gonna bate
youse, one two three
So larn your lesson,
and be good for me
I’ll tell your ma
.....
£10 MILLION LOTTERY WIN
Bejaysus,
some lucky whoer has just gone and won £10 million on the lottery. Why couldn’t it have been me! Why am I so damned unlucky! I’ve been spendin’ a pound a week on it since
it started and apart from the odd tenner, sure I’ve won damn all. My God, but I’ve just no luck at all, at all.
But the
thing that really sickens me arse about this latest big winner, is that he’s
announced that it’s not gonna change his life. So why did he bother his arse
buyin’ a ticket in the first place!
Bejaysus,
things’d be quare and different if I ever won such a big prize. The first thing I’d do is tell everyone about
it and then really enjoy lookin’ at their envious expressions, when I’d tell
them how I was gonna travel the world, live in the lap of luxury and spend,
spend, spend. Then I’d head down for to see me bank manager, who I’m sure
wouldn’t be just as obnoxious as what he normally is towards me and I’d tell
the wee whoer, that I wanted a chequebook with 1,000 cheques in it.
The next
thing I’d do is sit down and think about all the people I have had daylin’s
with throughout me whole life and then make a list of all those who’d be
suitable candidates. After that, I’d
write each of them a cheque for £100,000.
Man, it’d be great to see them bein’ all fawnin’, sickly sweet and
syrupy towards me. But they’d
get the quare gunk when they’d have a closer look at their cheques and realise
that they was all post-dated by a year.
My goodness,
they’d all be quare and nice towards me for the follyin’ 11 months or so. However, they’d have been far better not
botherin’ their arses, because I’d cancel all those cheques just before they’d
become valid for payment. But sure it’d
be damned good medicine for them. Aye,
it’d be hell slap it up them all, for bein’ such whoers til me, when I had
nawthin’!
SOCIABLE WEEMEN RELATIVES
When we was down in the pub theday, we was talkin’ about wives and
hospitals and weemen relatives. Well anyway, Dixie was there and he told us a
good one. Now Dixie puts his missus in the family way every year without fail,
which manes she has to go intil hospital on an annual basis for to drop the ba
and of coorse, while she's in there, his head gets a bit of pace from all her
naggin’ and yappin’. However, the
downside is that when she's in hospital, she's not at home for to see til his
conjugular rights. So he has to find
someone else to roll about with for a lough of days, until his missus gets back
home. But then that's never been a real
problem in the past for Dixie, cos his wife’s sister always comes to stay for
to look after the chillder and she's never been slow in jumpin’ intil Dixie’s
bed, for to see til all his needs until his missus gets back home with the new
ba.
Well after Dixie had finished tellin’ us this, Frank chirped up to tell
us, that although he’d got a very sociable sister-in-law as well, it didn't do
him no good. He then went on to explain
that his sister-in-law Mabel cuts men's hair in her own home and as far as most
of the wives round our wee town is concerned, that's all she does. But little do they know, that besides cuttin’
hair, she also lets any man have his way with her as well ..... and all just
for the price of a haircut! Needless to
say, this was all very interestin’ and some of the boys immediately began
checkin’ their hair in the bar mirror.
“But why doesn’t this here arrangement work til your benefit Frank?” I
asked him.
Poor owl Frank lifted his cap for the very first time that any of us had
ever seen and bejaysus, but if he wasn't as bald as a coot.
“Now what excuse would I have for goin’ to see her with a head leck this!”
UNDERTAKIN’
When I was down in the pub theday, who should come in but owl Teddy and
that damned undertaker Foorde. I
immediately moved up the bar away from them, for although I don’t mind owl
Teddy, I didn’t want that undertaker Foorde anywhere near me. It’s not that I really have anythin’ agin
him, it’s just that he always give me the creeps. He seems so cowl in his black suit and stiff
white shirt. Sure if I ever had to shake
his hand, I’d imagine it’d be a bit leck shakin’ hands with a lump of ice.
But that Foorde one really does have some brass neck on him, let me tell
yee. I mind one day there was this here
family a lough of miles up the country and they and a whole pile of relatives
and friends was all huddled round this owl boy Barnie, who was on his death
bed. Well this stranger suddenly came in
and nobody had any idea who the hell he was.
But because he had flowers and was all sugary sweet smiles and words of
sympathy and kindness and all that sort of owl shite, they didn't rare up at
him and tell him to feck away off out of it.
However, when he was gone and a few inquiries was made, bejaysus but if
they didn’t find out that he was none other than the bowel Foorde. Well I ask you, what a way to drum up
business! But I suppose at the end of
the day, it wouldn't have been so bad, except that the owl Barnie boy knew by
the cut of Foorde what he did for a livin’ and needless to say, that didn't do
his owl ticker no good at all!
Now with regard til owl Teddy, although he used to work full-time in a
bacon processin’ factory, he’d also once had a strange part-time job, which'd
give you the creeps. Aye, when anyone
died round our wee town about 40 years ago, the first person they always
summoned was the bowel Teddy. Man, he'd
come along right away and the widow, or whoever, would give him a half-bottle
of whisky and when he'd had a few sups, he'd wash the body and plug it all up
good and proper. Well anyway, Teddy was
fierce fond of the booze and sometimes he was that druthy, that he drank all
the whisky before he done the body. Sure
there was even one time when they found him lyin’ drunk, asleep and snorin’ on
the top of the table, alongside the corpse.
Another job that Teddy used to have was diggin’ graves. Jaysus, he was a desperate man and was
forever gettin’ that drunk, that sometimes he didn't right know where the hell
he was diggin’ and he'd dig holes in the ground, where there was already
graves. Sure when the locial dogs used
to see him staggerin’ drunk up til the cemetery, with a spade droopin’ over his
shoulder, they all used to bark leck hell and get all excited and folly him,
for they all knew fine well, that there was a damned good chance of a few bones
bein’ turned up, for them to chaw on.
WILD DUCKS
I was down in the pub theday when owl Ceecil nearly fell in through the
front doer, with this big bag over his shoulder. Well we all instantly perked up, cos whenever
Ceecil’s around, it generally manes that there's gonna be a bit of good
crack.
Well, after depositin’ the bag out in the hallway and gettin’ himself a
half’un and a bottle, Ceecil informed us that his brother had got tired of
havin’ him as a lodger in his house and had thrown him out, on account of him
always bein’ drunk and hashin’. Now it’d
been a desperate shock til Ceecil, especially as it was mid-winter.
Now at the time, he didn’t have no clue as til where he’d go and thought
he'd be sharin’ a hedge that night with the hedgehogs. But then by chance, he’d met and fallen intil
chat with this here widow woman relative of his and when she’d heard all about
his plight, she’d took pity on him and offered to put him up, on the condition
that he’d earn his keep by helpin’ her run the farm. Needless to say, he’d immediately accepted
her offer. However, she was no mug and knew his record well and, as a result,
she’d gone on to warn him sternly, that it was goin’ to be all work and sleep,
and nawthin’ else!
“Well, I'll be good at the sleepin’ part,” he’d nearly tolt her.
Now after he’d had a few more half’uns, he told us that although he’d
nearly got froze on his way til the pub, he was now beginnin’ to feel a wee bit
warmer.
“And so you should,” said I til him, “sure you've already drunk the
price of half a hunderdweight of coal over the last ten minutes or so.”
Well anyway, later on when Billy the barman went out intil the hall with
some empties, his attention was drawn til Ceecil's bag, for it was movin’ and
there was strange noises comin’ from it.
So he stuck his head round the dooer intil the main bar.
“What's in that there bag, Ceecil?”
Ceecil looked a wee bit confused for a few moments and then he
remembered. His eyes lit up and he
rushed out and got a holt of the bag.
“Right youse farmers,” he roared at the top of his voice, “gather round,
for I've got somethin’ to sell youse.”
The whole bar went quiet as he opened the bag. Then he turned it upside down and out came a
squad of ducks. Jaysus, the quacks of
those ducks was a terra and they went flutterin’ about in all directions.
“Hey boy,” shouted Billy, “get those ducks out of the bar, or else I'll
have to throw you out!” Ceecil looked
desperate startled at such an awful threat.
“Jaysus Billy, there's a fierce storm goin’ on out there and you know
fine well, that I'm no sailor.” And he
proceeded to shoo all the ducks out the front dooer on til the street, to let
them find their own fate and destiny.
NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH
Last night, me and the boys had one desperate session down in the pub
and bejaysus, it wasn’t til after 2.00 am that I set off home, goin’ two steps
forward and one step back the whole way home .
Well anyway, as I was staggerin’ along, I noticed owl Snedder dukin’
about in the shadows and it was obvious that he was on his way up til Biddy
Bowles, for to get a holt of her while her husband was away on night
shift.
Oh ho, the badness got intil me and bejaysus, I was all for follyin’ him
and then, when I’d be sure he was in Biddy’s bed, I’d throw some stones through
the windy and create a commotion. Boys a
dear, when the neighbours'd come out for to see what the hell was goin’ on, I'd
cry: “Bejaysus, I've just seen a burglar goin’ intil the Bowles’s house .....
someone call the peelers!”. But then I
decided I'd let Snedder go on ahead about his business. Sure what good would it have done, landin’
the whoer in the shite leck that!
TOUGH STEAK
Mildred cooked me a wee bit of steak thenight and it was that small a
wee piece, I almost started complainin’.
But then I remembered what happened til that Ronny boy and I said
nawthin’. Oh bejaysus, what happened til
him would soon larn yee that it doesn't pay to be too damned greedy, for you
can sometimes pay an awful price. Aye,
one night he went intil a restaurant when it was fierce busy and ordered a
steak. Now when the waitress brought it
down til him, he kicked up all hell, sayin’ that the steak was far too small
for all the money he was payin’ and he demanded a bigger lump.
Well rather than have a scene goin’ on with so many customers about, the
manager immediately agreed til his request and a lump of steak twice the size
was brought down for him to get his choppers intil. Well Jaysus, he took intil it leck a man
possessed who hadn’t had a bite to ate for at least six weeks. But unfortunately, he was that hungry a
whoer, that a big lump of it got stuck in his throat and bejaysus, but if he
didn't go and choke til death. Aye, if
he hadn't been such a greedy whoer and settled for the smaller bit of steak,
sure the eegit would have still been alive today.
DOCTOR’S APPOINTMENT
Now I leck
atin’, smokin’, drinkin’ and layin’ about in a haype all day long. But a wee while ago, I began to feel a wee
bit off colour, so I decided to go til the doctor.
But sure it
was a nightmare. The waitin’ room was
packed and there was all these chillder runnin’ about scraymin’ and shoutin’
and generally creatin’ hell. Then there
was this owl doll who near turned me head tellin’ me all about her aches and pains. I also started gettin’ fierce annoyed when I
began to notice that people who’d come in after me, was gettin’ seen til before
me.
Now by the
time I eventually got intil the quack’s surgery, sure I was chokin’ for a drink
and a feg. So I was akinda hopin’ he’d
quickly prescribe me a lough of pills for to sort me out, so that I could be on
me way tout suite down til the pub. But
naw, he insisted on examinin’ me and askin’ me a whole pile of damned stupid
questions about me life style.
Well, the next thing he did
was to get a bit of paper and then start writin’ on it. I was sure it was a prescription for pills he
was writin’, so I got the quare gunk when I saw that instead of that, it was a
long list of things I should do for to improve me health. For example, it said things leck: no smokin’,
no drinkin’, no Ulster fries, buns, biscuits nor cakes. He even suggested, that instead of layin’
about in a haype watchin’ TV all day, I should take plenty of exercise by
helpin’ Mildred round the farm and the house!
Man, I was quare and
downhearted. I mane, I’d come til the
quack for to get cured and sure all he’d done, was to send me til hell before
me time.
POOLS WIN
One fine day a lough of years
ago, fortune shone its big blue eyes on me and bejaysus, I won tens of
thousands of pounds on the football pools.
Well, that was the end of workin’ for me, because I decided there and
then to become one of the gintry and let other people do everythin’ for me, for
bejaysus I was certain the money I'd won couldn’t never possibly be spent in my
lifetime.
Boys a dear, I went clayne mad
and I bought tractors, trailers and all the latest farm machinery and a nice
big tub of a car and bicycles and toys for the chillder and nice clothes for me
wife Mildred. And as for meself, sure I
was hardly ever out of the pubs, where I spent the most of me time studyin’ the
pools, for I was sure that it'd be no time at all, until I'd win again and that
this time, it'd be the real big one.
Then the haymakin’ saison came
along and needless to say, because I was gintry now, there was no way that I
was gonna do any work on the hay meself.
So as per usual, when I wanted any work done, I invited a lot of the
locial boyos up til me farm for to do all the work for me. Bejaysus, there was piles of boys from round
our wee town just dyin’ to get workin’ for me and man, there was soon more
volunteers than would have manned an army.
Jaysus, they thought it was
great and they all used to roll up as soon as the sun got rizz. However, damn the many of them ever wore
workin’ clothes and in fact, it was more leck they was goin’ til a party. Aye
bejaysus, when they turned up in the mornin’s, sure they’d all be grinnin’ and
laughin’ and not all miserable leck most workmen you’d see.
Then they used claah about leck owl hens for a while,
until it was time for the mornin’ tay-break.
Some tay-breaks they used to be!
Jaysus, I always used to turn up with big boxes of booze and grub and
then we'd all sit down on the grass for to take this here tay-break. But as the sun bate down, the only work that
was ever done thereafter wasn't on the hay, but on the openin’ of bottles.
Then, when the sun'd go down,
so would I, what with all the boozin’.
But sure me ‘workers’ was all great fellas and they never saw me stuck
and they always took me home, via the pub of coorse, where they'd always have
another damned good session at my expense.
My goodness, some of them hardworkin’ boyos was knockin’ in 18 hour days
and sure everyone was havin’ a whale of a great time.
But then one day, me and me ‘workers’
never even got til the hay and instead we landed up in the pub, in search of a
cure. But once in, we couldn't layve and
sure it was great. There was no owl cowl
porter that day. Naw, it was all
whiskies and large ones at that. Well,
when the crack was goin’ real good, me wife Mildred suddenly appeared through
the dooer, lookin’ akinda worried. She
tolt me that I should layve the bar that very minute and go til the fields to
make the hay while the weather was still good.
Well I wasn't none too keen on this here suggestion.
“Och, bring it in here,”
I said til her, “and sure I'll make all the hay yee want.” Man all the boys hooted with laughter. Sure it was all great valyeh and I was
certain it'd all never end.
But the next day, the sun went away and the rain
came and the hay that'd been lyin’ in the fields all rotted. Then bejaysus, but if the bank manager didn't
arrive and inform me that the unbelievable had happened and that all the money
was gone - after only nine months! And
on top of that, there was a whole pile of bills that urgently needed
payin’!!
Well I was in a real owl hank then. So when I eventually sobered up, I called
once more for help from me ‘workers’.
But they'd heard the bad news too and damn the one appeared. Aye, and do yee know what, not one them
whoers ever showed their face round my place again.
MARRIAGE
BLUES
Now although me wife Mildred
doesn’t really never annoy me too much any more, it was of coorse different at
the start when we first got wed. Aye,
until she got herself a titter of wit, she acted leck a typical woman and tried
her damndest for to change me in all sorts of ways. For a start, she was death on drink and was
never done praychin’ on at me about the evils of the divil's brew.
So when I'd get back from a boozin’ session,
there'd always be a damned good chance that there'd be hell to pay. So whenever I got up near the front dooer, I
always used to throw me cap in first and if it didn't come straight back out
again, then I’d know it was probably reasonably safe to go in.
But I remember well the very
first time I came home scootered. It was
a cool, fresh night and there was a full moon. My goodness, it was great and as
I went along the road, I sang 'Home on the Range' at the top of me voice and it
echoed all around the silent hills. But
she soon put the singin’ out of me, for as soon as I got in through the front
dooer, she hit me a box in the mouth and landed me on me arse right on the
range, amongst all the pots and pans.
Aye, I was certainly home on the range alright!
Now Mildred was determined
to cut the drinkin’ out of me. So one
day, she had this bright idea and she hid all me boots and shoes. But she might as well not have bothered her arse,
for it didn’t stop me and I got down til the pub anyway. Man, I had a great night, even though I did
have to endure some funny looks and a few smart remarks about standin’ there at
the bar in me bare feet.
But although Mildred has cooled down a lot over
the years, she’s still a real typical woman.
If I come back early, she'll say til me “you’re back early theday!” And if I come back late, she'll say “you’re
back late theday!” Och, you just
couldn't playse them.
But marriage can be an awful desperate
disease. I mane, it's one thing wakin’ up
after a big session with an odejious hangover, but it's a whole sight worse to
wake up and find a woman standin’ there naggin’ at yee and buzzin’ about your
head and stingin’ away at yee leck a wasp.
Aye, isn't it a shame that they're born with tongues. Man, if a woman’s ever in bad humour, my
goodness but her tongue goes leck a handbell and bejaysus, she goes through you
leck a physic of salts. Sure it's no
wonder us boyos drink so much. But at
the same time, though it's desperate hard livin’ with them, us men can't really
live without them neither. I mane, how
the hell would any of us boys cope at all!
When me wife Mildred turned
menopausal, she became even more odd and peculiar then usual and she made me
life real hell for a while. But then she
said she was goin’ on til
Now after Mildred started
takin’ these here tablets, things definitely did improve in many respects. But then somethin’ happened one night, that
really shook me up. Now just after we
got married, I couldn’t get enough of her.
But it wasn’t too long until I’d have preferred atin' a bucket of cowl
vomit til tacklin’ her and after a lough of months, the normal routine at
bedtime was for me to turn me back on her and get meself comfortable, before
disappearin’ intil the land of nod.
However one night, several weeks after Mildred
started on HRT, she gave me the quare gunk when she put her hand upon me thigh
and made it very clear, that she was interested in a lot more than just
listenin’ til me snorin’. Well this
scarred me no end, especially when I subsequently larned that
Now Mildred suffers from
Arthur-rightis, so I told her that to save her the walk down intil the town for
her repeat
Mind you, I had to go back til
puttin’ up with all her peculiar moods and tantrums. But sure anythin’s better than that dreaded
hand upon me thigh!
CAREFUL WHAT YOU
You have to be so careful what
you say, or else you could land yourself in a whole pile of bother.
I larnt that lesson the first
time me owl battleaxe of a mother-in-law Aggie came til our house with a whole
pile of her cronies. Now me wife Mildred
and the whole lot of them went intil the kitchen for to hash, layvin’ me all on
me lone in the livin’ room watchin’ TV.
But then not too long after, I heard someone
knockin’ at the front dooer. I of coorse
expected Mildred to go and see who it was.
But naw, she and the others just kept hashin’ away. Needless to say, the person at the front
dooer kept knockin’.
Well
do you know, it was actually ME who eventually had to get up out of me chair for
to go and answer the dooer and I wasn’t best playsed, let me tell yee. But what made it worse, was that it was
nobody for me. So I had to go
“Mildred,” I growled, “you’re awantin’!” Well as soon as I said that, Aggie leapt til
her feet. Then she drew out and hit me
such a box in the mouth, that she landed me on me arse in the corner.
“Don’t you ever dare call my wee daughter a
wanton again!!!” she snarled.
Well although it might be a
wee bit leck tellin’ your grandma how to lay eggs, but here’s a wee piece of
advice for yee, if you’re considerin’ buyin’ a house. Now before you go lookin’ at prospective new
homes, be sure to make a checklist of all the things to look out for when
you’re doin’ viewin’s.
We once put our place up for
sale because Mildred said she was that fed up doin’ all the work around our
farm, that she wanted to give it all up and move til a new house down in the
town. And that’s when she sat down and
compiled her checklist. So as not to be
outdone, I did one too.
Now these checklists turned
out to be very useful indeed. For
example, when we started lookin’ for somewhere to buy and went to view the
first house on our list, Mildred had a look at her checklist and then went
round the whole place lookin’ at the plumbin’ and electrics etc, before gettin’
up on the roof for to check out the slates, the flashin’ and the gutters
etc. As for me, I looked at my
checklist too and then made a beeline for the livin’ room, for to check out the
TV reception and see if the room’d be large enough to accommodate me big
rockin’ chair, me foot stool and me crates of Guinness etc. I also had to make sure that the view from
the windy was such that I could keep a close watch on all me new
neighbours. Needless to say, it was also
desperate important to make sure that the nearest pub and bookies was near til
hand.
Now although the house met all
my criteria, we didn’t actually buy it.
This is because Mildred unfortunately fell off the roof and by the time
she’d recovered a few weeks later, sure that particular house was sold.
GOIN’ BACK GENERATIONS
I have this
theory that all weemen was elephants in a previous life. Well if they wasn’t, then all I can say is
that they certainly have memories leck elephants - for they never forget
NAWTHIN’! My goodness, when you’re
havin’ a barney with them, sure they’ll go back generations to dredge up some
owl thing from the past that’ll help them get a real good stingin’ dig at yee.
Now
normally, when me wife Mildred asks me a straight question, I never tell her
the truth. Aye, I only ever tell her
what I know’ll playse her and shut her up.
However, I wasn’t always so wise.
33 years ago, on the 6th June 1972, she got that rizz about me drinkin’
so much, that she turned til me with a fierce snout on her.
“You know,” she scrayched, “I believe you’d
far rather have a bottle of Guinness than me!”
Well although that was true enough, I would normally have replied:
“Och no my sweetness, I love you more than
anythin’ else in the whole wide world.”
But that day, I was fierce druthy and in desperate need of a cure. So I made a fatal mistake.
“Aye, you’re right there,” I heard meself
sayin’ wistfully, “I would indeed prefer a bottle of Guinness.”
Boys, did I
not regret that remark! Man, it was
thrown back up in me face many times afterwards. Even til this day, when she has some of her
owl cronies in, she’ll turn til them with an owl sour look on her face.
“Do you see that boy there,” she’ll snarl,
“well I’ve been the best wee woman a man could ever hope for and yet he’d
rather have a bottle of Guinness than me!”
So when all these weemen turn to stare aghast at me, with nawthin’ but
contempt on their faces, that’s always my cue to bate a hasty retreat, to layve
her to recount the whole story yit again, right down til the very last damned
detail!
FROM A JACK
TIL A KING
Now although me brothers are nearly all good for
nawthin’ losers leck meself, there is the one exception and that’s me brother
Jack, who lives up in Belfast. Now when
he lived in our wee town, he was far worse than the rest of us. For a start, he never had any sort of a job
at all and was permanently on the dole.
But not only that, none of this here dole money ever went intil the
house. Aye, Jack used to spend the whole
of his dole money on himself, layvin’ his wife Maggie with nawthin’ but the
child benefit to bring up their squallin’ brats.
You know, as soon as he’d get his dole money on
a Friday, bejaysus his first port of call was always the pub and apart from wee
trips til the bookies next dooer, he remained in the pub for the rest of the
day and the whole of Saturday as well.
Mind you, by the time Sunday came round, sure there was hardly a bob
left for the News of the World, which meant that until Friday rolled round
again, he never had no choice but to spend every day hangin’ round the street
corners, kickin’ his heels.
Now his wife Maggie originally came from Belfast
and one day, her and Jack decided that they’d go and live with her owl ma Mary
up in the big city, because it’d save them rent and layve them more money for
drinkin’, smokin’, gamblin’ and generally eegitin’ about.
Well anyway, Jack had never been further than
ten miles away from our beloved wee town in his whole life and that’s why we
was so sure that the useless whoer’d
find Belfast such a desperate alien place, that he’d sink quicker than a stone
and would soon be back home, with his tail between his legs. Now we was right in one respect, in that it
wasn’t all that long until he did come back.
However, it was only for a visit and far from him havin’ his tail
between his legs, man it was waggin’ leck billio, for the whole world to
see.
My goodness, but we hardly recognised him. For a start, he wasn’t short of money and in
fact, he had big thick wads of it. He
also had a big tub of a new car and was wearin’ fancy clothes and a whole pile
of gold jewellery. But not only that, he
tolt us that he could now afford to hang around the bookies and the pubs every
single day in life and not just the odd day leck the rest of us.
Now as well as bein’ fierce envious, I was also
desperate curious about all this and so I tackled him about it down in the pub.
“So if
you’re not workin’,” I said til him, “then where the hell are you gettin’ all
the money from?”
“Och,
I've started a brothel,” he told me as bold as brass. “Mind you, I've only
started in a small way ..... with the wife and the mother-in-law.”
Well whether he was jokin’ or not, when I heard
this here story, I took a long hard look at Mildred and her owl ma Aggie. But then after some consideration, I put the
thought from me mind forever. I mane,
who in their right mind was ever gonna pay me good money, to get intil a clinch
with either of them two owl witches!
I mind one
lovely sunny Sunday away back in the mists of time, when Mildred and me was
still akinda inter-rested in each other and we was out for a walk along the
seafront in Carrickfergus.
Now Carrickfergus is an
unusual sorta place in that it boasts not one, but two castles – one at each
end of the promenade. Aye, near the town
centre stands the really owl castle, which is a fine lookin’ place, let me tell
yee. And then at the other end of the
promenade, stands the more modern Kilroot castle. Now although it’s not half as impressive
lookin’ as the owl castle, it has one claim til fame. Of all the castles in the whole wide world,
it has the highest tower of them all.
Well anyway,
as we was standin’ lookin’ out over Belfast Lough towards Bangor, we fell intil
chat with these two bucks we’d never seen before. Now they was very friendly sorta boyos, but
there was somethin’ about them that really intrigued me and that was their
accent. You see, I’d never heard an
accent leck theirs before. But then I’d
never travelled much and in fact, I hadn’t been outside Carrickfergus for quite
a few years, apart from that one day that we went up til the big city for a
lough of hours and I just couldn’t wait to get home, on account of me feelin’
so scarred and homesick. Well anyway, I
was that curious I just had to ask them.
“Where are
youse from anyway boys?”
“From de
Sowt,” one of them replied.
“De Sowt?” I
said all puzzled, “and where the hell is that? ..... I’ve never heard of
it.”
“Och, now
come on,” said the buck, lookin’ at me all quizzical-leck, “yeh must be coddin’
me ..... yeh must have heard of de Sowt.” I shook me head, totally
perplexed. Mildred rolled her eyes and
gave me a sharp nudge with her elbow.
“He means
the South, yee bloody eegit yee,” she growled.
Well anyway,
we continued hashin’ and it soon became apparent that they was lookin’ for
work.
“Aye,” said
one of them, “we came up here til Carrickfergus, because someone told us there
was piles of work goin’ here.”
“And have
youse found anythin’?” I asked. The buck shook his head.
“Naw,” he
replied sadly, “the only thing we saw was up there at the forestry place .....
aye, there was a big sign pinned up til the gate ..... and it said that they
had job vacancies ..... for tree fellers.”
“So why
didn’t youse apply then?” I asked.
“Och, how
could we!” replied the buck, “sure there was only the two of us!”
WEEMEN’S LIB
Up until
recently, Mildred and I’d had a great wee system goin’. Aye, it ran leck clockwork and I was as happy
as Larry. Take mornin’s for example. When Mildred’s alarm’d go off at 5 am, she’d
turn it off as quick as possible so as not to disturb me and then she’d get
dressed real quick and go outside for to feed all the bastes, clayne out their
lairs and milk the cows etc.
Then she’d come back intil
the house for to make me my breakfast, which she’d bring til me in me bed. After that, she’d shave me and lay out me
clothes, before sloppin’ out the bucket I keep by the bed, to save me havin’ to
go til the loo durin’ the cowl nights. Then she’d always go downstairs to light
the fire in the front room to get it all nice and warm for me, when I’d eventually
come downstairs to watch TV. After that,
she’d go outside to plough fields, fix fences, dig drains and so on, before
comin’ back in at noon for to make me my dinner.
However,
when Mildred’s young niece Sharon came to visit, she filled Mildred’s
empty head full of a whole pile of owl weemen’s lib nonsense and sadly
everythin’s changed for the worse since then.
For example, I now have to see til me clothes, slop out me bucket and
get me own breakfast etc.
Aye bejaysus, I have to do
everythin’ for meself now. But what
makes it even worse is that Mildred sneers at the way I do things. For example, when I iron a shirt, you should
hear her scornin’ me when I only do the collar.
But sure the way I look at it, I always wear a jersey, so the only part
of me shirt that anyone can ever see is me collar. So why would I need to iron any other part of
the shirt!
Bejasysus,
how I wish I could get Mildred back til the way she was, before that damned
Sharon came avisitin’!
CHRISTMASSY TALES
CHRISTMAS TURKEY
Early one Christmas Eve
mornin’, Mildred’s very snobby and imperious sister Doreen rang her to announce
that she and her hubby was comin’ to spend Christmas Day with us. Now because our chillder had all left home,
we didn’t normally bother much with Christmas any more. But because Mildred
wanted to make a good impression on Doreen, the first thing she did was rush
out and buy the best Christmas tree she could find and a whole pile of fancy
decorations. Then it was out intil the
cowl and the rain, trudgin’ around all the surroundin’ fields lookin’ for
holly, before returnin’ to bake a Christmas cake and mince pies. After that she went clayne mad, dustin’ and
sweepin’ the whole house from top til bottom, before decoratin’ the whole
place.
And as I sat in me chair in front of the TV, I
could see her face gettin’ redder and redder and my goodness, but the sweat was
baylin’ off her. Now because it made me
feel a wee bit guilty, I decided I’d better give her a hand and so I
volunteered to get the turkey. However,
I didn’t fancy ploddin’ all the way down til the butcher’s and then luggin’ an
owl turkey all the way back up til the house.
So because I’d noticed an ad in the locial newspaper about chaype fresh
turkeys that they’d deliver til your dooer, I gave them a ring and placed me
order.
Now I was expectin’ the turkey
to be delivered within a couple of hours, but sure the buck didn’t turn up til
after 10 o’clock at night. Well Mildred
was quare and relieved when he did eventually arrive and she rushed out for to
get this here turkey. But that’s when
she got the quare gunk. Aye, when the
buck opened the boot of the car, she expected to see a lovely turkey, leck what
you’d see on a butcher’s slab. However
instead of that, this here evil lookin’ bird almost the size of Mildred stepped
out of the boot, with a menacin’ look on its face. Well anyway, I’d done me bit by gettin’ her
the turkey, so I headed away off down the pub for a lough of drinks before
closin’ time.
Now Mildred did a grand job
makin’ the whole house Christmassy, but when it came til the Christmas dinner,
sure she let us down desperate badly. I
mane, imagine servin’ up spam instead of turkey!
DOREEN’S ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PARTY
Although Christmas is a
great time in many respects, there are a few things about it that I could well
do without. For example, Mildred’s
sister Doreen holds a pre-Christmas party every year and she always invites us
til it. But the sneg with Doreen is that
she’s a real snobby, uppidity, pretentious sort of person, who thinks she’s
upper middle class and a cut above the rest of us country bumpkins. In fact, she’s just leck that Mrs Bucket you
see on the telly.
But my goodness, you should
see her house. It’s is just leck a
palace and because she’s such a cleanliness freak, it’s always sparklin’. In fact, it’s just leck a show house, with
absolutely nawthin’ out of place. That’s
why I always hate receivin’ the invite til her pre-Christmas do, because I just
can’t feel comfortable or relaxed in her home, especially as all her posh chums
are always there too, lookin’ down their snouts at me.
Now last year when we went
til her party, the divil was in me. So I
wore me owl mucky Wellington boots for to annoy Doreen. However, she insisted that I took them off at
the front dooer and so I had to pad round her place in me sock soles.
Then when we entered the
parlour, everythin’ of coorse was in order as per usual, with not one single
thing out of place. So when she and her
hubby Ernest was out in the kitchen, I went round the room pretendin’ to be
inspectin’ all her fancy ornaments, when all I was actually doin’ was just
movin’ them around and jumblin’ them all up, out of pure badness. Needless to say, when she came back intil the
room, she immediately noticed and bejaysus, she couldn’t settle until til she’d
got everythin’ put back in its proper place.
But
I wasn’t finished with me divilment yit.
You see, I had some dust in one of me pockets, a ween of soot in another
and a whole pile of wee tiny bits of white paper in another. Now without anyone noticin’, I sprinkled the
dust over the top of a cabinet and then when Doreen and her posh guests was
lookin’, I ran me hand over the cabinet before starin’ at the dust on me
fingers, with a look of absolute disgust on me face.
As for the soot and the wee
tiny bits of white paper, it wasn’t long until there was black smudges all over
her glistenin’ white dooers and her very expensive thick-piled Axminster
carpets was all covered in what looked leck a mixture of dandruff and
snow. But although Doreen was goin’
clayne mad, I still wasn’t finished and when I went up til the loo, I left a
lough of stink bombs in there and then a dead rat on the landin’ flooer.
Now Doreen
normally sends out the invites til her Christmas party in mid November. But ours must have got lost in the post this
year.
CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS
I came from
a fierce large family and me parents was desperate thrifty people. Aye, nawthin’ was ever wasted and everythin’
was recycled one way or another. For
example, all our clothes was ‘hand-me-downs’ and me ma used to make us
underpants from owl cloth meal bags and me da used to repair our shoes with
owl bits of tractor tyre.
Now when it
came til Christmas, me da used to go out intil the garden and dig up this
scraggy owl bush, which he’d bring intil the house for to act as a Christmas
tree and after Boxin’ Day was over, he’d replant it back out in the garden. As for Christmas wrappin’ paper, me ma bought
15 chaype sheets of it just after they was married and these 15 sheets was
recycled year after year. With regard
til Christmas presents, it wasn’t any better.
We didn’t get a whole pile of new presents leck today’s’ kids. Naw, we only got one each and that was
all.
When the
first ba was born, me parents bought one Christmas present for it. But a lough of days after Christmas, the
present was took off the ba and stored away. They then had their second ba the
follyin’ year and when it came til Christmas time, the first child was bought a
new present and the first present that had been stored away, was given til the
second child. Then a lough of days after
Christmas, the 2 presents was took off the two chillder and stored away until
the follyin’ Christmas and as our family increased in size, this process was
repeated year in, year out.
Now I was
the last of 12 chillder and by the time I came along, all these recycled
presents was more than a little battered.
For example, the fire-ingine I got one year had no wheels on it and the
doll I got another year had no head on her.
But what did I care. Sure I was
damned lucky to have got anythin’ at all.
So all youse ungrateful weemen out there, who complain about gettin’
things leck football boots or a fishin’ rod or a motor bike from your husbands
at Christmas, well at least youse are gettin’ somethin’ new!
CHRISTMAS HANGOVER
BLUES
Well, they
forced that much drink down me throat on Christmas Day, that when I woke up on
Boxin’ Day mornin’, I had such a fierce hangover on me, that the first thing on
me mind was to find a cure. So I dragged
meself outta me pit and went downstairs.
But sure there wasn’t a drop about the place. So I roared up the stairs til me wife Mildred
and I tolt her to get up out of her bed and go down intil the town til the
offie and get me a lough of bottles.
Well I can’t repeat what she scrayched back down the stairs at me.
Bejaysus, I
was beginnin’ to feel akinda desperate, until I suddenly had this bright idea and
I made a beeline for that box of unopened liqueur chocolates, that someone had
given us as a Christmas box. I ripped
the box open, bit the tops off the wee chocolate bottles, drained the contents
and then put the empty bottles back in the box, for to give as a birthday
present til a grand-child at some later stage.
But I might as well have not bothered me arse, for I just ended up
feelin’ worse than before.
But then I
had another bright idea and I dragged meself intil the kitchen, where I opened the
fridge dooer and grabbed the bowl with the brandy butter in it and I scoffed
the lot in one go. But sure that didn’t
work neither and only made me stomach go intil convulsions.
Then
suddenly Mildred appeared out of nowhere behind me and it was at this point,
that I gave her a belated Christmas present - right down the front of her
nightie.
UNWANTED CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS
Every
Christmas time, everyone goes clayne mad rushin’ about, scratchin’ their heads
and wonderin’ what presents to buy for people.
Well it’s not a problem that afflicts me, for I don’t buy nobody
nawthin’. Mind you, some people aren’t
none too happy about this, but the way I look at it, sure I’m doin’ them a
favour. First of all, I’m savin’ them
the disappointment of gettin’ somethin’ from me that they don’t leck. And secondly, they don’t have the bother of
then tryin’ to pretend that they’re playsed with me present.
But with
regard til some of the presents that was give til me this year, I wasn’t
playsed with them at all, at all. Now me
daughter Annie normally buys me a bottle of whisky and a dozen stout. But my goodness, there was none of that this
year. Naw, all I got from her this year
was a pair of long-johns, a muffler and a lough of owl socks for to keep me
warm, as she put it. Warm indeed! A big bottle of whisky and a lough of stout
would have made me a whole pile warmer.
As for one
of me sons, the clem went and bought me one of those new-fangled digital
cameras. Now what hell use would I be
wantin’ a digital camera for! However,
seein’ as it was Christmas time, I didn’t tell him to go stick it up his
arse. But it was later, when he
suggested that I use the camera to take a few photies of him and the chillder
round the Christmas tree in the parlour, that I nearly blew me top. I mane, how the hell could I take any photos
with this here damned digital camera!
Sure the eegit hadn’t given me a roll of film to put in it!
GERTIE, AN UNWANTED
CHRISTMAS VISITOR
One of the
raisons I don’t leck Christmas is because so many unwelcome people come
avisitin’ and this Christmas was no exception.
For example, there was our former neighbour Gertie. When she arrived up with us, all she could
talk about was her skitters of chillder.
Well not only can I never remember none of their names, but to be quite
honest, I’m not a bit interested in any of them. Well anyway, as she was talk, talk, talkin’,
I sat there nod, nod, noddin’, until eventually I just nodded off. Well needless to say, she wasn’t none too
playsed with me, especially as this wasn’t the first time that I’d done this
sorta thing on her.
Aye, I mind
other that time I was standin’ in a long queue in a bank waitin’ to be served,
when I suddenly felt this hand upon me shoulder. I looked round expectin’ it'd be one of me
mates, suggestin’ that we go for a wee snifter together after we’d completed
our bankin’ business. But naw, it was
Gertie and me heart sank.
Well anyway,
she started rabbittin’ on at me most excitedly about her chillder yit again and
as per usual, me mind began to wander.
But even so, I tried me best to appear interested, although all I was
really thinkin’ about was gettin’ out of there tout suite and intil the nearest
pub for a lough of drinks. And while she
was hashin’ away, we gradually got nearer and nearer til the head of the queue.
But then
when she suddenly paused for to give her tongue a wee bit of a rest, I decided
I’d better say somethin’ to break the silence.
“So how’s
your young daughter Amy gettin’ on?” I asked her. She immediately stepped back all aghast,
right on til the foot of the person behind her.
“What do you mane how is Amy gettin’ on!” she
scrayched angrily, “sure I’ve just spent the last 15 minutes tellin’ you all
about her!!”
It was at
this point that the cashier cried “next please” and it was music til me ears,
when I realised it was me she was talkin’ til.
SYLVESTER, ANOTHER UNWANTED CHRISTMAS VISITOR
Another Christmas visitor
we had was me cousin Sylvester, who’d arrived in unexpectedly from Amerikay in his
check jacket and bejaysus, did he not sicken me arse with all his hashin’,
blowin’ and braggin’ about what a great place Amerikay was.
Well I decided to take him down til the pub
because I asorta assumed that with all his money, he’d be doin’ all the
buyin’. But I was wrong, for he never
put his hand intil his pocket once.
However, after I’d bought three rounds, I decided I’d buy no more. I mane, it was torture enough havin’ to
listen til the gonch dronin’ on and on, without me havin’ to fill him full of
free drink as well!
Aye, he put years on me croakin’ on and on about
what a great job he had, and the marvellous house he lived in, and the big
flashy car he had, and all the money he earned and all that sort of owl
shite. And while Sylvester was hashin’
on, I just sat there gratin’ me teeth and starin’ at me empty glass, hopin’ and
prayin’ that he'd shut his trap, quit sickenin’ my arse for just for one minute
and get his own arse up til the bar for to get me a drink.
Well you know, I eventually got that fed up
listenin til all this owl shite that I couldn’t help meself and I suddenly
rared up on him.
“Och, for
God’s sake,” I roared at him, “if Amerikay’s such a great place, why the
hell don't you feck away off back there then, as quick as you can go and give
our heads pace!”
MARTY, YET ANOTHER UNWANTED
CHRISTMAS VISITOR
Another Christmas visitor was me brother Marty,
who arrived unexpectedly from England.
Well although we could have done damn well without him, we tried our
best to pretend we was playsed to see him.
Well anyway, Mildred offered
Marty somethin’ to ate, but he said that he'd had somethin’ a wee while before
and was so full that the buttons was almost poppin’ off his waistcoat. So when he and I started to hash away til
each in the front room, Mildred remained in the kitchen for to cook a turkey,
bake a whole pile of cakes and make a big trifle for the weemen's institute
Christmas do the next day.
Jaysus, she spent until nearly
10 o'clock that night slavin’ away preparin’ all this lovely grub. Then, just as she was about to sit down for a
well earned rest, the bowel Marty chirped up and said that if it was all right
with her, he would leck to have a wee bite to ate after all, on account of him
now feelin’ akinda famished.
Well I could see from the
expression on Mildred’s face that naw, it wasn't all right with her and that if
he really wanted to know what would be all right with her, it would be for him
to feck away off back til England and the sooner the better. But she somehow managed to conceal her true
feelin’s and instead she gave him a rather sickly smile and forced herself to
say through clenched teeth “certainly Marty”.
And she went out once more intil the kitchen and cooked up a big fry for
him.
Well when she eventually had
it all cooked, she put it down in front him and bejaysus, he took intil it leck
he hadn't seen grub for a lough of weeks.
My goodness, but he had the plate completely cleared within a couple of
minutes and to show his contentment, he follyed it all up with a string of
burps. Well anyway, this was follyed by
a lot more hot air from him and he kept us up until two o'clock in the mornin’
with all his hashin! However, when
eventually Marty began to yawn, Mildred was that relieved at the prospect of at
last bein’ able to get til her bed, that she momentarily felt asorta kindly
towards him.
“Now if you feel hungry durin’ the night
Marty,” she said, “you can always rustle yourself somethin’ up from the
Christmas leftovers.” Well do you know
what the owl whoer did! At around four
o'clock in the mornin, he got up and went down intil the pantry and bejaysus,
he ate big lumps outta the new turkey, cut intil every single newly-baked cake
and then finished off this here late night snack, with an enormous helpin’ of
the freshly-made trifle and cream. And
back off til bed he went contented.
Now when Mildred saw the damage the next
mornin’, my goodness, but if there wasn’t a fierce explosion and man, did she
not tear intil him and ate the face of him.
Well as Marty was hurriedly packin’ his bags for to abandon ship, there
was big tears in his eyes and his face was all akinda crumpled.
“Och,
what did I do wrong ..... sure I was only feelin’ a wee bit peckish,” he kept
sayin til himself, over and over again.
SANTA CLAUS
When I was chattin’ til one of
me grandsons the other day, bejaysus, but if he didn’t launch an awful odejious
attack on Santa and how he’d really disappointed him two years in a row. Now when I quizzed him about this, he tolt me
that the previous year he took it intil his head that he wanted to become a
musician. So he posted a letter off til
Santa, tellin’ him what he wanted and when his ma Martha asked him later what
he’d requested, he tolt her he’d asked for a big set of drums and a trumpet.
Well when it came til
Christmas Eve, he was that excited he could hardly get til sleep. But when he eventually did, he was suddenly
awoken by a strange noise. So he
immediately switched on his bedside light and the first thing he saw was his ma
and da standin’ by his bedroom dooer and he could tell from the startled looks
on their faces, that he’d ketched them red-handed, comin’ in to stayle his
presents from Santa.
“You know granddad,” he said til me, “although I
know Santa doesn’t bring no presents til parents, that didn’t give them the
right to creep intil me room and stayle mine!”
But if that wasn’t bad enough, when he looked down at his presents from
Santa, sure there was no drums nor trumpet.
My goodness, but he was fierce disappointed. So he concluded that either Santa couldn’t
read or else he was a for-ner, who didn’t understand English.
Well anyway, when Christmas
came round the follyin’ year, he was that worried about his parents creepin’ in
to stayle his presents, that after he’d made sure that the chimlay was clear
for Santa to come down, he’d locked the dooer til his bedroom for to keep his
ma and da out, before climbin’ in til his bed.
Once again, it took him a fierce long time to drop off. But he got the quare gunk the next mornin’
when he woke up, for not only had Santa not delivered what he’d asked for, but
sure he’d left him nawthin’ at all!
BUYIN’ CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS FOR WEEMEN
By the way, here’s a wee
tip for men who don’t know what to buy for their weemen at Christmas. Just go on til the intronet, type in “chaype
Christmas presents for weemen” and when the website pops up, close your eyes,
stick out your finger towards the screen and whatever item it lands on, get her
that and they’ll deliver it straight til your dooer. Aye, it’s the best way of doin’ things, let
me tell yee. Sure you don’t even have to
move out of your chair!
MILDRED STICKIN’ HER OAR IN
PUTTIN’ THE HRT RECORD
STRAIGHT
by MILDRED
Mickle was recently
spoutin’ a whole load of owl garbage about how
A big lorry has just
delivered a whole load of blocks. So I’m
away off out now, for to build a new byre.
MICKLE’S LAZINESS
by MILDRED
Isn’t it amazin’ how lazy
men can be! Although I’m rushin’ about
leck a mad thing from dawn until late at night, tryin’ me best to keep on top
of things, that there Mickle one hardly moves a muscle. If he’s not lyin’ about stinkin’ in his bed,
he’s sittin’ in his armchair down in the front room lookin’ at TV. In fact, if for some peculiar raison, I ever
needed to make a plaster-cast mould of his arse, all I’d have to do is send
them the cushion on his armchair, for it’s got the shape of his arse well and
truly imprinted in it, cheeks and all.
You know, the only exercise
he ever takes, is when he jumps out of his chair to rush til the windy for to
get a peek at that doll from further up the lane, when she waltzes past in her
mini-skirt. So I decided one day, that I
was gonna make him take more exercise, whether he lecked it or not. But the
only thing I could think of to get him to move was to take the batteries out
the TV remote control, cos I knew he’d then have no choice but to get out of
his chair to change the channels.
However, although it worked at first, he soon had me bate, for he
actually made the effort to walk down intil the town to get some more
batteries.
Well anyway, I continued to
keep naggin’ at him to cut down on the drinkin’ and take some exercise
instead. Now although I did eventually
manage to stop him goin’ down til the pub, I still couldn’t get him to take no
exercise. But then one day he took me
completely by surprise, when he said that I was right and that he really did
need to take more exercise. So he said
he was turnin’ a new leaf and that he’d start by takin’ the dog out for walks
every day.
Now I was quare and glad I
was sittin’ down when he said all this, for if I’d been standin’ up, I’d have
keeled right over from the shock.
However, I soon began to have me suspicions. For example, I noticed that every time he
returned from these here dog walks, his eyes was always akinda glazed and he
was forever staggerin’ about and bumpin’ intil things. So one day, I decided to folly him and, lo
and behold, when I got down intil the town, what did I see, but the dog
tethered up outside the pub, lookin’ desperate miserable. So I stormed intil
the pub and that was the day, Mickle got his first ever beer shampoo!
Well anyway, I’m away off
out now, as I have to get the long ladders up and clear out the gutters.
DRESSIN’ UP
by MILDRED
My goodness, but don’t men
make you sick. Now there comes the odd
time, when we have to go out til a family celebration of some sort and it’s
always a fierce battle tryin’ to get Mickle to wear somethin’ half dacent. You know, I have bought him so many lovely
clothes over the years. But does he wear
them? Naw, no chance! Aye, they’re all up in the chest of drawers,
still in their original packagin’. But
it’s desperate bein’ married til a rag and bone man and I often despair of him,
for he just doesn’t seem to give a damn about his appearance.
Now I’m so different from
him. I always spend absolutely ages
doin’ me hair and make-up and gettin’ meself as nicely dressed as possible in
me best clothes. However, when I go downstairs and ask Mickle if I’m okay, he
always says: “Och, you look lovely darlin’.”
Well that’s fine, apart from the fact that he always says it without
givin’ me a glance, or takin’ his eyes off the damned telly. So one night, I was that fed up with him,
that I got meself all dressed up in black plastic bags and then I went downstairs
for to get his opinion.
“Och, you look lovely darlin’.” he said as per
usual without lookin’. This was follyed
by a yelp, when I hit him over the head with the fryin’ pan I just happened to
be carryin’.
Well anyway, I’m away off
out now til the forge I built, for to make a new set of shoes for the horse.
Then I have to ketch the horse and put the shoes on him. But it’s not gonna be
an aisy job, for he’s an awful awkward, cantankerous owl brute. In fact, he’s
damned nearly as bad as that Mickle one.
MICKLE’S SELECTIVE EYESIGHT
by MILDRED
Isn’t it amazin’ what
selective eyesight men have! They only
ever see what they want to see. For
example, whenever I ask Mickle to do a wee job about the house, he immediately starts
moanin’.
“Och, me eyesight’s got that bad,” he wails,
“that I wouldn’t be fit to see right to do that job.” But for someone who’s supposed to have such
poor eyesight, he never seems to have any difficulty seein’ a pretty girl. Aye, on those VERY RARE occasions, when I
have absolutely no choice but to be out and about with him, sure he’s always
tryin’ to take wee sneaky peeks at every woman that passes us by. Mind you, he doesn’t realise that I’ve
noticed this. But there’s damn the much
that I miss, as far as that clift’s concerned.
So what I do now is this:
whenever I see a pretty woman comin’ along, I always make a make a point of
standin’ right in front of Mickle and lookin’ at him straight in the eye. Man, it’s great fun for me to see the
frustration on his face. And as she gets
closer, I can see that he’s hopin’ and prayin’ that I’ll look away, for even
just a split second, so that he can get at least one wee look at her. But I never do. And my goodness, his eyes never stop
twitchin’, as he tries desperately to stop himself from havin’ a surreptitious
wee peek, as she walks by ..... and away out of sight. Mind you, he’s never too
playsed. But hell slap it up him, the silly owl ballocks!
Well anyway,
durin’ this cowl spell Mickle’s been heavin’ the coal on til the fire, leck as
if there’s no tomorrow and now he’s grumblin’ that we’ve near run out. So
I’m away off out now to walk the 3 miles down intil the town for to get a
hundredweight bag of coal and lug it back home on me shoulder.
MICKLE’S ATIN’ HABITS
by MILDRED
You know, I spend many long
hours makin’ Mickle lovely big feeds.
But what does he do when he sits down!
For a start, he never takes his eyes off the telly and then all that
lovely grub that I spent hours cookin’ for him, sure it all just goes down the
hatch, without hardly even touchin’ the sides.
But not only that, he ates leck a pig.
Even when I dragged in a trough one day and served up his grub in that,
sure he still didn’t get the message.
And as for him sayin’ “thank you” or “that was nice”, such phrases do
not appear to exist in his vocabulary!
Now I go to visit me ma
every Wednesday afternoon and as I never get back til nearly six, I layve it
til Mickle to make the tay. Well do you
know what he does! He does me one boiled
egg - every bloody week!!
Well anyway,
I’m away off out now, as I have to strip down the engine on the tractor.
MICKLE’S SELECTIVE HEARIN’
by MILDRED
Isn’t it
amazin’ what selective hearin’ men have?
They only ever hear what they want to hear. For example, Mickle tells me he’s deaf in one
ear and has tinnyitis in the other and that’s why he says he can never hear
anythin’ I say til him. But for someone
who’s supposed to be so desperate hard of hearin’, it’s strange how he never
seems to have any bother hearin’ the latch go on the front gate, when one of
his mates is comin’ to take him down til the pub and man, he’s out of his
chair in a flash and away out the dooer, before I can get me lips formed round
the word “NO!!!”
Well anyway,
I’m away off out now for to dig a long trench in the bottom field and then I
have to cut down two big trees in the meadow with an axe.
MILDRED’S
EMAIL TO A PHONE-IN LOCAL RADIO STATION
Hi, this is Mildred. I was goin’ to give youse a ring to tell
youse all about me marriage til Mickle, but when he realised this, he tried to
put me off by tellin’ me that youse don’t talk til weemen on air. But what he doesn't realise, is that I listen
til your programme too and so I knew that this was yet another damned lie, cos
I’ve heard youse talkin’ til Mary doll, the desperate housewife. Well goin’ on that, I’m assumin’ you’ll talk
til me, especially as I’m a lot more desperate than what she is.
The next thing he told me, was
that our phone line doesn’t reach all the way til Newtownards. Now, although
I’m not a very technical person, I knew that this was another whole pile of owl
nonsense, cos if I can ring me sister Wilomena in Canada, then our phone line
must be fit to reach youse.
Now when I went to pick up the
phone, I asked Mickle for the Newtownards diallin’ code and he told me
it was 9135879. But when I used that, all I got was some robot
tellin’ me I'd dialled the wrong number.
Man, the bowel Mickle thought
that he had me bate, for the first time ever in our married strife. However, I soon put the smile off his face,
cos I got the right number from the telephone book. My goodness, you should
have seen the look on his face then. Boys
a dear, but was he not quakin’.
But
then when I went to ring youse, I had second thoughts. You see, whenever I
start talkin’ about that good for nawthin’ useless eegit, sure it's never
too long until I start comin’ out with a whole pile of bad language and you
couldn’t very well have that on air, now could youse!
Now although I’m no good at spellin’, I knew
there was a ‘spall chucker’ on this computer that would keep me right. So I've decided to write you this email
instead.
Unfortunately I can’t write any more just now however, as I have so much to do. For example, I have to get the horse out and
plough a lough of fields out the back. I also have to repair the fence that
Mickle broke, when he fell over it staggerin’ about drunk on his way back from
the pub on Christmas Eve. Then I have to
get up on the roof for to replace a slate that's come off. But I'll be
back in touch in no time, for I have a fierce amount to say about men and all
their many bad habits. It really is
about time we weemen shut them up completely, once and for all!
THREE-LEGGED HORSES
by MILDRED
Saturday is Mickle’s bettin’ day in our
house. As soon as the paper arrives in
the mornin’, he’s straight intil the front room, where he spends hours studyin’
the horses, while I’m outside sloggin’ me guts out, tryin’ to keep on top of things.
Then, when he’s made his selections, he rings his ‘certs’ through til the
bookie’s. Needless to say, the clift
rarely wins a shillin’.
Well anyway, I got that fed up at him doin’
nawthin’ around the place and wastin’ good money on three-legged horses that
ran backwards, that I decided to play a wee trick on him. So one Saturday mornin’, I bate him til the
paper when it arrived and away I raced to lock meself in the bathroom, where I
took out Saturday’s racin’ page and replaced it with Friday’s. Man, did I not enjoy hearin’ him outside the
locked bathroom dooer, pacin’ up and down and mutterin’ and moanin’.
Well I eventually put him out of his misery and
I gave him the paper and away he went til the front room for to make all his
selections. Man, he was in there for
hours studyin’ all the horses and just before the racin’ started, he rang up
the bookie for to lay his bets. But he
got the quare gunk when the bookie told him he was a day late. My goodness, but he was not hoppin’. But sure hell slap it up him, the silly owl
ballocks.
Well anyway, I’m away off out now til the lower
meadow, til those trees I cut down last week.
I have to chop them up intil blocks and carry them all back up til the
house on me back. I hope I manage to get
the job done before nightfall.
ERNIE’S CAR
by MILDRED
The other day, Mickle’s
brother Ernie loaned us his car for the two weeks he’s gonna be away visitin’
relatives across the water. Man, I was
quare and playsed and looked forward til us usin’ the car for fetchin’ and
carryin’ heavy stuff from the town. I
was also lookin’ forward til bein’ driven out on day trips and visitin’
relatives up the country.
Now Ernie’s almost as tight
as that there Mickle buck and when he left us the car, sure the tank was near
empty. So yesterday, I gave Mickle a few
quid and told him to drive down intil the town and fill her up. However, when he got down there, instead of
spendin’ the money on petrol, he went intil the bookies and put it all on a
sure-thing horse called ‘Forlorn Hope’.
Needless to say, that nag didn’t win and the last thing I heard, it was
still runnin’. Well anyway, there was
just enough petrol in the tank for to get Mickle back home, before it conked
out. So I am away off out now to walk
the three miles down intil the town for to get a can of petrol.
You know, if I could drive,
I’d be away off over the horizon and that Mickle buck would never, ever see me
again!
OUR
WASHIN’ MACHINE
by MILDRED
Aren’t men the most useless
craturs! One mornin’, I was in that much
of a rush to get down intil the town for to do the shoppin’, that I forgot to
put a wash on. Well although it was
sunny, rain was predicted for the afternoon.
So I rang Mickle up from a phonebox in the town and asked him to put a
wash on, so that it would be ready for me to hang out in the sun by the time I
got back within the hour. Needless to
say, he didn’t have a clue how to operate the machine, so I had to explain til
him where to put the soap powder and the conditioner and also what settin’ to
use. Mind you, although he moaned and
groaned a lot, he eventually did get it goin’ and that’s when I rang off.
About an hour later, when I
was strugglin’ up the lane with all me heavy bags of shoppin’, I could see that
there was dark clouds away in the distance.
However, the sun was still shinin’ and there was a good breeze. So I knew from past experience, that there
was still about an hour’s good dryin’ time to go before the rain set in. So I rushed up til the house, put all me bags
down in the kitchen and went intil the utility room I’d built on til the side
of the house and I was quare and playsed to see that the machine was goin’ the
best and had nearly finished its washin’ cycle.
However, there was just one wee sneg.
That jack dunkey Mickle hadn't put the clothes in!!
I’m away off out now. I have to make a new gate and hang it down in
the field where that horrible owl bull is.
And I don’t mane Mickle!!
FROM ME TEENS
PUCKERIN’ UP
When we was in our early
teens, we used to play a game at parties called ‘Postman’s Knock’. Now the idea behind this game was that
someone had to go outside the room and then call out the name of somebody of
the opposite sex, who would then join them outside for a wee kiss. Then the first person would come back intil
the room, layvin’ the second person to call out the name of someone else and so
on.
Although I always used to look forward til
playin’ this game, it rarely worked out the way I would have lecked. There’d
always be one person in the room whom I really fancied, but whom I’d never got
close til before and it was always me hope, that I’d be able to use that game
for to ‘break the ice’ with them. But
for some raison or another, things would never work out the way I’d planned and
I never ever managed to get til grips with the object of me dreams.
But the main sneg about that game was that
there’d also always be some absolute monster there, who’d have been better
suited in a zoo and who was so repulsive, I’d rather have ate a bucket of cowl
vomit than kiss them. However, not only
would I continually get chosen by that person, but it would soon become clear
til me after a few revoltin’ kisses, that they really fancied me and that as
far as they was concerned, we was both now an item.
But what made it so much worse, was when they’d
lock their wet slobbery lips on mine and stick their tongue half a mile down me
throat, it would be all covered in bits of chayse and onion crisps!!!
Goin’ back til our pre-teen days, we used to
play a game called ‘Nelson’s Eye’ at parties.
Now we all had to go outside the room and when your name was called,
they put a blindfold on yee. You was
then led intil the room and when a hat was placed in your hand, you were tolt
it was Horatio Nelson’s hat. Then when a
telescope was placed in your hand, you were tolt it was his telescope. But the best bit was when they tolt you to
stick out your finger, which was then guided intil a hole in an orange, which
was supposed to be Nelson’s eye.
Needless to say, there used to be quite a few blood-curdlin’ shrieks -
mostly from the boys!
VALENTINE’S DAY
There was a time in me
teens, when all me mates had girl friends and I had nobody. So I was the odd man out and this made feel
desperate lonely. I was therefore quare
and playsed when I got an anonymous Valentine’s Day card one year. However, the only sneg was that I just
couldn’t figure out who’d sent it. And
this only increased me sense of loneliness.
Now the
follyin’ year, I had a quare notion of this cuttie Lizzie. So I decided I’d send her a Valentine’s Day
card. However them days, cubs didn’t do
soppy things leck sendin’ Valentine Day cards til cutties. So to make sure nobody found out, I got on me
bike on the day before St. Valentine’s Day and I rode the five miles til the
next town to buy one and then I posted it off til her. However, I was that shy I didn’t sign it.
Well I fretted so much
about not signin’ it, that I crept up near Lizzie’s house on St. Valentine’s
Day in the hope that she’d show her face, so that I could tell her the card was
from me. And me patience bore fruit, for
after about 6 hours waitin’ behind a hedge, I suddenly saw her comin’ down the
lane with me card in her hand and a big happy smile on her face. So I stepped out from behind the hedge, with
me heart poundin’.
“Look,” she said excitedly, holdin’ up the
card, “I got a Valentine’s Day card this mornin’ ..... and I’ve
worked out it must be from Robbie ..... so I’m away
off down the town now to see him.”
Och, me heart sank leck a
stone and although I should have told her that it was from me, I was too shy
and scarred. However, I was sure
Robbie’d put her straight and that I’d still be in with a chance. But sure the lousy whoer didn’t do no such
thing and instead he let on that it actually had been him who’d sent it.
So that was
the beginnin’ of their big romance ..... and all
because of MY card! And as for me, sure
I was left all on me lone ..... yet again!
KISSIN’
When us
young cubs was runnin’ about playin’ japs and jerries, if we came across a
squad of cutties, we used to brush them aside out of our road, with looks of
utter contempt on our faces. But it
wasn’t long til we forgot all about the japs and jerries and had other games on
our mind. So instead of ignorin’ these
here cutties, we used to hover round them, showin’ off and tryin’ to be smart,
in the vain hope that we’d be impressin’ them.
Now
these days you ‘fancy’ someone, but in my time, you had a ‘notion’ of
them. Well there was this cuttie and I
had a fierce notion of her. However, I
was desperate shy and I didn’t want me muckers to know, so I hid it the best I
could. But sure they soon twigged on,
which was maybe because I went bright red whenever her name was mentioned, or
she suddenly appeared round a corner, or whatever.
Well anyway, some time later we started to coort and there
eventually came that time when we had our first ever kiss. Now although the
earth didn’t move, me stomach certainty did. It was absolutely disgustin’!
I remember thinkin’ on me way home, that although I loved that
girl and wanted to marry her and spend the rest of me life with her, I was
definitely never, ever gonna kiss her again!!!
HOMEWORK
When I was coortin’ me
first love, I was a desperate shy, odd sort of a buck and I was that afeared of
me chums taysin’ me, that I kept the whole thing secret. But the sneg was that me and me girlfriend
lived on opposite sides of our wee town, so the only way I could get til her at
nights without bein’ seen, was by dukin’ about leck a rat from bush til bush,
across the wet boggy fields round the edge of our wee town.
Now this
could be scary enough at times and I remember one dark night when I heard a
loud noise beside me and it scarred me that much, that I jumped about 3 foot
intil the air. But sure it was only an
owl cow coughin’.
Well anyway, when I’d get
til her place, I’d go round til the back and in through the basement dooer
she’d left unlocked for me. I’d then
flick the light switch a lough of times and this would cause a flicker on the
TV screen in the livin’ room upstairs, where she’d be sittin’ with her
family. Now that would be the cue for
her to tell her parents that she was goin’ downstairs til the basement to do
her homework.
Well there was damn the
much homework done by either of us them days and as a result, neither of us did
too well at school. But sure what did we
care. We was in love.
HEDGE JUMPIN’
When I was
coortin’ me first love, her parents knew nawthin’ about me, which suited me
just fine as I didn’t want to know nawthin’ about them neither, especially as
her da was a headmaster and a fearsome sorta buck.
Now although
we normally duked about in the dark together, there was a few times when we’d
come out in daylight and go for a walk together, hand in hand. But there was the odd time I’d spy her mother
comin’ away in the distance and bejaysus, I used to clear the ditch with a buck
lepp and beetle away out of sight as quick as I could go, layvin’ me startled
girlfriend lookin’ down at her empty hand.
But there
eventually came the day, when the whole truth came out and me girlfriend took
me to meet her ma. Well she took the
quare look at me and me big red face.
“Ah,” she exclaimed, “so you’re the boy who
jumps over the hedge every time he sees me!”
YESTERYEAR’S DANCEHALLS
From what I
can gather from youngsters today, modern day dancehalls are a lot different
from when I was a cub. For a start, they
tend to be all dark and atmospheric inside. So you can lurk about in the
shadows and sure nobody would hardly notice that you were there or what you was
up til. However in my day, when you went
til a dancehall, they’d have every damned light in the whole place on and
there’d be nowhere to hide. So everyone could watch your every single move,
which tended to be a wee bit off-puttin’, let me tell yee.
Now, when I
went til dances all those years ago, it’d nearly always be the same: all the
weemen would be standin’ at one end of the hall, with the men at the other
end and of coorse, nobody would be up dancin’.
But eventually you’d get
the courage up and decide it was time to ask a woman to dance and so you’d
start off on the very long walk up the hall, imaginin’ that every single eye in
the whole place was upon yee. Man, your
head would be sweemin’ and as you wobbled along, you could hear the beer
swishin’ about in your belly.
Then when
you’d eventually make it up til the apple of your eye, you’d stop in front of
her and sorta grunt at her. But then
when she’d turn her back on yee, the lovely sweet rosy apple of your eye would
suddenly become an owl green bitter crab apple.
So with a
big red face on yee, you’d turn for to make the long trek back down the hall
and the only thing you’d be fit to see was the smirks on your chums’
faces. And when you’d reach them, you’d
duke in behind them out of sight, as quick as you could go. But you’d have larnt your lesson and it’d be
a quare long time, till you’d ask any other woman out to dance.
THUMBIN’ LIFTS
Now when I
was a young lad, the only way for the most of us to get about was by thumbin’
for lifts and generally spaykin’, this always went ok. However, there was the odd time when you’d
wish you hadn’t bothered your arse.
For example,
one night I was thumbin’ and this buck on a motorbike came roarin’ along. Well when he offered me a lift, I hopped on
the back, even though I’d never been on a motorbike before.
Now he took
off that quick, he nearly left me on me arse on the road. But despite that, I managed to stay on and it
wasn’t too bad, until he started goin’ round corners. Well do you know, it was the first and last
time in me life, that I ever threw me arms around a man and held on til him
passionately. And I’ve never been on a
motorbike since.
Then there
was Logan. He picked me up about two
miles from the village in his car one day and I thought that I’d have time for
a leisurely feg. But my goodness, he put
his foot down til the boord and he drove leck a mad man. It was a terra! He went in a straight line around the bends
and in a bendy line along the straights and sure he went that quick, I never
got the time to light the feg in me gob. Even when I got outta the car, sure I
still wasn’t fit to light me feg, for I was shakin’ that much from fear. My goodness, but I really thought I was for
the white sheet that day!
But the
worst lift of all was with Lenny. Now he
had a wee van and he used to transport calves around in the back of it. Well one day, he stopped to give me a lift
and I got in. Now everythin’ went ok, until we started goin’ down a hill and I
suddenly realised me feet was gettin’ desperate wet. So I looked down and saw this owl yella
liquid swishin’ round me ankles. It was
then that it dawned on me that it was calves’ piddle. Well do you know from then on, whenever I was
out thumbin’ and I saw him comin’, sure I used to clear the ditch with a buck
lepp, for to get clayne out of sight.
INNOCENT QUESTION
There are times when I get really weary of the world and all the crabbid
whoers that’s in it. But then, it’s been
the same all me life, with whoers gettin’ mad with me for no raison at
all. For example, there was that time,
when I was only a young cub and I'd agreed to look after Herby's big Alsatian
dog for a lough of days. Well on the
first day I had it, I let it run all around the whole back garden of our house,
so that it could get acquainted with the place and all that. But the next day, after I got home from
school, I noticed me neighbour was in his back garden. So I went outside and
layned over the fence for to have a wee chat with him.
“How's your cat gettin’ on with my dog?” I asked him all friendly-leck
Well Jaysus, this here buck went clayne mad and he clipped me on the
ear. But then how was I to know that
he'd just spent the past five hours tryin’ to coax his damned pussy back down
from the top of a big tree at the bottom of the garden!
ME MA’S PUSSY
I mind one Sunday many moons ago that didn’t
turn out to be too good a day for neither me nor Marmeduke, me ma’s beloved
pussy. It all started when me owl
sourpuss of a ma came bustin’ intil me bedroom on the hinges of 11 o’clock in
the worst of bad humour.
“Quit lyin’ there stinkin’ and get up out of
your bed, you slovenly quilt,” she snarled, “I’ve a job for you to do when you
come down.” And with that she stormed
out, bangin’ the dooer behind her. I
screwed up me face.
“Och, damn you,” I thought, “I sleep for 12
hours and get nawthin’ but dog’s abuse and that curse-ed cat downstairs sleeps
all round the clock and it gets its arse licked.” Aye, if there was one thing that I didn’t
leck, it was yon cat. I mane, if it’d
been any damned use and caught a few mice or somethin’ leck that, well that
would have been different. But sure it
did nawthin’ the whole day except ate and sleep.
Well when I got downstairs, me
owl ma and da was in the front room, so I went intil the kitchen for to get a
bit of pace and have me breakfast. But
then I found there was no milk left for me cornflakes, cos that damned cat was
lappin’ up the last of it. Bejaysus, I
went clayne mad. That greedy, selfish,
self-centred brat of a cat never thought of nobody but himself!
Now I was just about to slip
out the back dooer, when me owl ma suddenly appeared intil the kitchen with a
hammer in her hand.
“Now
about that job I’ve got for you,” she growled, “I want you to get up on that
there stool and hammer a nail for a picture intil the wall.” Well I didn’t feel leck hammerin’ no nails,
but I could see from the cut of her that I didn’t have no choice So I nodded reluctantly and with that she
went out the back dooer intil the garden.
Well when
I got up on the stool with the hammer and the nail I was ragin’, cos I couldn’t
understand why I had to do this job and why that useless whoer of a da of mine
couldn’t have done it instead. Bejaysus,
but the divil was well and truly in me and I was that mad, I was in the humour
for smashin’ the whole damned wall down, cos I felt that maybe if I did
demolish it, me ma wouldn’t be in such a hurry again to ask me to do any other
wee jobs around the house.
But then I decided that as I
was already in enough bother one way and another, it’d maybe be wiser for me to
cool down and do as I’d been tolt. So I
got on with the job and hammered the nail intil the wall, before jumpin’ down
from the stool.
“Yowwwwwl!!!” went the cat ..... and said no
more. It just lay there in a crazy
haype, stone dead. Now as much as I
dislecked that cat, I’d never have dreamt of touchin’ a hair on its head, let
alone kill it. Bejaysus, was I not in a
right owl pickle now! I immediately
looked around anxiously for me ma. But
thanks be til God she was still outside, laynin’ over the garden fence, yappin’
away til that owl Mrs Crow next dooer about what someone down the road had said
or done.
However, I was still faced
with the pressin’ problem of what I was gonna do next to somehow get meself out
of this real hank. But after a few anxious minutes of scratchin’ me head, I
suddenly had a bright idea and I stuffed the cat up me jumper. Now it was me intention to hide it somewhere
until dark and then put it under the back wheel of someone’s parked car, so
that when they next took off, it’d look leck the cat had been run over by
accident. But unfortunately, although
the cat was under me jumper, I didn’t notice that its tail was hangin’ out for
all to see, includin’ me owl ma, who happened to be comin’ round the side of
the house with a waterin’ can in her hand, just as I came flyin’ out the
frontdooer.
Needless to say, when she saw Marmeduke’s tail
hangin’ out of me jumper, she was just a wee bit curious as til what the hell I
was up til and as she was interrogatin’ me about this here situation, I could
tell from the snout on her, that there wasn’t gonna be no aisy way out of this
hank and that I was up til me neck in shite, let there be no doubt about that
at all, at all. So I decided that the
best policy would be to come clayne and tell the truth. And that’s when I discovered that waterin’
cans can be used for other things than just sprinklin’ water over a few wee
plants.
Well while me owl ma was
demonstratin’ on me head til all those who was watchin’, what a great weapon a
waterin’ can be, it crossed me mind, that maybe it’d be an appropriate time for
to bate a hasty retreat and give her time for to cool down. So I dropped the cat at her feet and
disappeared down the road in a cloud of dust.
FROM BEFORE I GOT HITCHED
HAIR PROBLEMS
Now when I
was in me early 20s, I had a fierce head of long hair and while I never washed
nor combed it, I was desperate proud of it.
However, one day I happened to glance intil the mirror in the pub and I
noticed somethin’ absolutely desperate.
“I doubt I have a recedin’ hairline,” I
whispered anxiously til me pal Jimmy.
“Recedin’ hairline,” he chortled, “let’s not
bate about the bush, Mickle ..... you’re goin’ bald!” Well that remark filled me full of
dread. So I tried every potion goin’ to
try and stop the rot. But it was all til
no avail and sure it was no time at all until I had a Bobby Charlton hairstyle
and man, I was never done combin’ the remainin’ wisps of me hair across the top
of me bald crown.
But boys did I not hate the
wind, for it always made such a mess of all me good combin’ work. Aye, I’d be standin’ chattin’ up some woman
and tryin’ to be a real cool dude and then bejaysus, there’d be a gust of wind
that’d destroy the whole effect and layve me lookin’ leck an absolute clem.
But then I had the bright
idea of usin’ weemen’s hair lacquer on it.
But that didn’t help much neither, for when the wind caught it, me
lacquered hair would lift leck a kite and then hang down the side of me face
leck a half-dooer.
And as for the rain, I
hated that too, for it only made the wisps all straggly. Of coorse I coulda used an umbrella, but I
was always too scarred of me mates seein’ me, cos real men didn’t use umbrellas
them days.
P.S. Aye, me hair used to
bother me no end. But now I’m past
carin’. Anyway, do youse ever see a
bald dunkey do yee? But not only that, sure
grass doesn’t never grow on a busy road neither, now does it?
A DOUBLE WHAMMY
One time I got a lift with that owl ballocks
Abraham. My goodness, but he was that
small a wee man, that he had to look through the spokes of the steerin’ wheel,
for to see the road ahead.
Now although Abraham drove
desperate slow, it wasn’t much of a consolation til me, because the most of the
time he was on the wrong side of the road, or headin’ for a tree, or somethin’
leck that.
Then bejaysus, but if he
didn’t go and crash intil some owl doll's car.
However, because he'd only been doin’ about three mile an hour, there
wasn’t much damage done til either vehicle.
But this didn’t stop the owl doll goin’ clayne mad and bejaysus, she
called Abraham for all the useless whoers that ever was and threatened to call
the cops. My goodness, but did poor wee
Abraham not wilt under that ferocious attack!!
Well do you know, although
he'd been drivin’ for over 40 years, Abraham had apparently never heard about
car insurance before. But to cut a long
story and a whole pile of bad language short, the owl doll eventually simmered
down, after Abraham agreed to pay for the damage. Then we got back intil the
car and Abraham started up. Well my
goodness, but if he didn't go and drive straight back intil the other car
again, full tilt. Bejaysus, it was a
terra!
Now although I felt akinda
sorry for owl Abraham, sure the truth of the matter was that the wee man wasnee
fit to drive and me nerves was that bad, I wasnee fit to drive with him. So I left the two of them to sort it out and
the last thing I saw as I went round the corner, was the owl doll effin’ and
damnin’, with her hands tight round wee Abraham's wee throat and man, his wee
eyes was bulgin’ right out of his wee head!
TAYCHIN’ HOSPITAL
When the
quack told me many moons ago, that I had to go intil a taychin’ hospital for an
operation, I was akinda confused, because I couldn’t understand what the hell
they’d want to be taychin’ me.
However, it wasn’t long until I realised
that it wasn’t the patients that got taught, but the young student doctors that
was there. But havin’ said that, I did
larn one lesson quare and quick. Man,
every time I’d spy a consultant comin’ towards the ward with a pile of
students, I’d make a beeline for me bed, lie down and close me eyes firmly
shut. Aye, I didn’t want no students gawkin’
at me, or pokin’ and proddin’ at me, or stickin’ needles intil me arm for to
practise their blood extractin’ skills.
Now while I
was there, there was this yank and he larned the quare lesson too. He was an odd sort of a buck and often walked
about with nawthin’ on but a ten gallon hat.
And sometimes, when I’d go intil the bathroom, I’d find him standin’ in
front of the mirror, lookin’ at himself and sayin’ “you’re not alone, you’re
not alone” over and over again.
Well anyway,
one day he was lyin’ in bed and he called this here pretty nurse over.
“How can I help you?” she asked all friendly
leck. With that, he whipped back his
bedclothes and pointed down til his Eiffel tower.
“Can you help me with that?” he asked, with a
wee smirk on his chops. Now they say
Billy the Kid was fast on the draw, but he’d have been no match for that
nurse. Man, she whipped a pen from out
of her top pocket and gave it the sharpest wee rap I’d ever seen in me whole
life. And that was the end of the Eiffel
Tower. Man, me eyes watered seein’ her
do it! Well anyway, he certainly larned
his lesson, for he never done it again.
ROAST OX
Many moons ago away back in the 60s, not much ever happened down in
Fermanagh. So when we all heard that
they was gonna hold a big jazz festival, we all got fierce excited, for such an
event had never been seen round those parts before.
Well needless to say, there was a desperate amount of organizin’ to be
done. Now as well as the organizers
havin’ to get bands to play (for example Chris Barber and Ottilie Patterson),
they also had to think about where people was gonna to park their vehicles and
where the caterers was gonna set up their marquees, so that people could get a
drink and a bite to ate.
Now with regard til the atin’ bit, some bright spark decided that it’d
be a real good idea for to roast an ox on a spit over a big open fire, so that
people could have hot roast beef sandwiches.
But that’s when they made their first big damned bad mistake, for they
employed none other than the bowel Jimmy from our wee town to do the job for
them.
Now, although we all knew Jimmy
was a good for nawthin’ eegit, we all thought that even he could handle this,
because the job only entailed lightin’ the fire under the big ox on a spit at
around midday and then turnin’ the ox at regular intervals durin’ the
afternoon, for to make sure that it was thoroughly cooked right through, by the
time the musicians started playin’ that night.
But on the mornin’ of the event, Jimmy went out til the pub for a cure
because he had such a fierce bad hangover.
However, when it got til the hinges of midday, when he really should
have been on his way til the festival site to light the fire and start roastin’
the ox, sure he sat on and to cut a long story short, he stayed in the pub
until he was as full as a shuck.
But despite everythin’, Jimmy did eventually get til the venue about
half-six that evenin’ and he soon had a roarin’ fire goin’. He then started turnin’ the ox on the spit
and by the time the jazz festival started proper at about 7.30, sure it looked
lovely, well roasted and very appetisin’.
Aye, the ox was a great sight and there was a fierce good smell waftin’
about the whole place. Man, it wasn’t
long till a whole pile of hungry farmers smelt this here lovely beef roastin’
and they came in their droves. Well as
full as he was, Jimmy did a grand job cuttin’ the mate and handin’ out juicy
lumps of it between big thick slices of bread.
Now those big rough farmers had paid plenty for them ox sandwiches, so
they wasn’t none too playsed when the red blood from the raw mate poured down
their shirts, when they started hanchin’ on them. Bejaysus, they got that rizz, that some of
them grabbed Jimmy and held him tight, while others fed the fire with more
fuel, until it was a ragin’ inferno. Then they went to tie Jimmy til the
spit. My goodness, but he would have
been well and truly roasted, if the peelers hadn’t come along and saved his
bacon (or should I say his beef).
Aye, Jimmy was quare and glad that those cops came when they did, for if
them farmer boys had started roastin’ him on yon spit, there was no doubt, but
that he'd have got to see what hell was leck, before his time.
TASTY SAUSAGES
I once knew a useless owl clift called Eddie,
who was always first intil the pub in the mornin’s and last one out at
nights. Now although he never did no
work and didn’t have no money, he was never short of drink, for he was that
skilled a mooch, there was always plenty of mugs around who was foolish enough
to buy it for him.
Well anyway, he lived on his lone in an owl
hovel of a cottage in the middle of our wee town and one night at closin’ time,
he invited me down til this here dump.
Now it wasn't so much that I wanted to drink with the useless whoer, but
I was desperate curious for to see what sort of a dive his home was. So I bought a dozen bottles of stout for the
two of us.
Well what a hole! Jaysus, there was dirt and dust everywhere
and I was almost afraid take a sayte, in case I'd sit down on a lump of shite,
or a dead rat or somethin’ worse.
But to cut a long story short,
when I opened two bottles of stout, he offered me some sausages. Well although I couldn’t see no sausages, I
was akinda ravenous and I accepted his offer.
So he put this owl saucepan on til the stove and I'd swear there was
over six inches of dirty, black, congealed fat in the bottom of it. But there was still no sign of the
sausages.
Well when I saw this owl fat beginnin’ to melt,
I began to have second thoughts about those sausages. But I made up me mind for sure, when I saw
them suddenly risin’ up from the depths of the fat til the surface and bobbin’
about leck mouldy owl turds on the top of that there evil black brew. And that was the end of me and the
sausages!
Well the owl whoer was as playsed as punch that
I didn’t want none and that he could get atin’ them all himself. But what made it even better for him, was
that he got drinkin’ all the rest of the stout too, on account of me pukin’ up
and goin’ home early.
THE COOLIN’ PROCESS
When I was a young man, I
used to run around with a buck called Willy and he was one wild man for the
weemen, let me tell yee. Aye, he had a
different one every weekend and man, did he not have a ball. So it was a real surprise when he told me one
night in the pub, that he was gettin’ married til a cuttie called Dolly from
the next-dooer village. However, after a wee bit of interrogation, I soon found
out that there was two raisons why.
Firstly, Dolly was up the duff and secondly, Dolly’s ma had a big
shotgun stuck up Willy’s arse.
But as if that wasn’t bad
enough, he then told me that after the weddin’, he’d be movin’ in with Dolly
and her ma, who was a widow woman. Now I
didn’t hardly know Dolly at all and I certainly didn't know nawthin’ about her
ma, or even what she looked leck. But me
instinct told me, that things was gonna change for the bowel Willy.
“I doubt you’ll have to change your ways and
stop all the runnin’ about leck an eegit after weemen,” I told him. He immediately started roarin’ with laughter.
“Umph!” he retorted contemptuously, “there’s
no woman alive who’ll ever cool me!!”
Well anyway, he asked me to
be his best man and one night he, Dolly and I headed over til the praycher’s
for to discuss things. But when we got
there, the praycher was out on a visit and so we was ushered intil the parlour
for to await his return. Now Willy was
one desperate boy for the fegs. Jaysus,
he was never without one in his gob and no matter what time, day or night it
was, he'd always have a feg danglin’ out of the corner of his mouth. So of coorse Willy lit up. But Dolly wasn’t none too playsed,
especially when she saw the ash goin’ everywhere.
“Jaysus Willy, there’s no
ashtrays for to stub it out,” she suddenly croaked, when he’d near finished it.
“Och, there’s plenty,” he replied. And he jumped til his feet and went over til
the fireplace, where there was three wee antique bone china dishes sittin’ on
the mantelpiece. He then proceeded to
stub his feg out in one of them.
Now on the mornin’ of the
weddin’, Willy came intil the pub where I was doin’ an early mornin’ shift and
as I was workin’ away, he sat up at the bar drinkin’ large brandies and smokin’
feg after feg. Needless to say, when it
came time to go, he was full as a shuck.
Bejaysus, I nearly had to carry him and as a result, we was very late by
the time I eventually managed to lug him up til the church. As for Dolly, she was waitin’ anxiously by the
church dooer, with tears runnin’ down her cheeks.
Man, Willy’s eyes was
rollin’ in his head and he was that drunk, he was swayin’ about in the breeze,
with a feg hangin’ out the corner of his mouth.
Well as he was staggerin’ over til the church dooer, I noticed this
massive brute of a woman lumberin’ over in our direction and I could tell from
the black look on her face and the cut of her, that she wasn’t in the best of
good humour. Now although I didn’t know
who the hell she was, I soon found out, for she drew out with a big thick rough
hand and slapped the feg right out of Willy’s gob. Man, the feg went in one direction and Willy
went reelin’ back in another, clutchin’ his jaw. I’ll never forget the look of absolute shock
on his face.
It was at this point that I
remembered his very confident statement in the pub, about there bein’ no woman
alive who’d ever be able to cool him and I sorta got the feelin’, that
maybe he was wrong. And I was right too,
for that was the end of Willy and his days of actin’ the eegit and runnin’
around wild after weemen. Aye, Dolly’s
ma was certainly some woman!!
NORAH’S MUTT
Now when I was still livin’ with me ma and da, we was neighbours til
this owl sourpuss spinster Norah, who had a wee bit of bad luck with a large lump
of roast beef, which she'd bought to feed visitors she was expectin’ the next
day. Now though it’d cost a fortune, it
was one lovely piece of mate, let me tell yee!
Well anyway, she stuck it intil the fridge, shut the fridge dooer and
got down til layin’ a brand new carpet in the parlour.
Well while she was layin’ the carpet, her hound somehow managed to open
the fridge dooer and get a holt of this here roast. My goodness, but if the brute didn’t go and
ate all the mate on the roast, layvin’ the bone as clayne as a whistle and all
the fat til one side.
Needless to say, when owl sourpuss Norah saw the damage, she went
absolutely bonkers and grabbed a big stick for to educate the mutt. But then as she was raisin’ the stick for to
batter the poor baste's brains out, she had second thoughts. So she dropped the stick and got rid of her
anger and frustration by cursin’ him up and down and tellin’ him in no
uncertain terms, that he was the most useless good for nawthin’ hound she’d
ever come across.
Now although the dog didn't really understand English too well, he sorta
got the drift from the snout on her, that she wasn't none too playsed with
him. So to make amends, he went intil
the parlour and spewed the whole roast back up, all over the brand new carpet.
My goodness, people said that they’d never heard such bad language from
a woman. Apparently it was a terra! And do you know, that dog became a vegetarian
after that - all of his own free will!
BIRTHDAY BLUES
I once knew
this farmer Wally and although him and the wife had a squad of chillder, they
was all cutties. However, Wally
desperately wanted a cub for to be heir til his farm and when he told us one
day that his wife was expectin’ yit again, we could see from the look on his
face, that he was sure he’d be lucky this time and that the ba would be a boy.
Well in
those days, there was none of this owl nonsense of men goin’ in to be
with their wives while they was givin’ birth and so when she was in the
hospital havin’ the ba, Wally was down in the bar with us. Now there was no owl mobiles nor nawthin’
leck that them days and so Wally had to trundle all the way down the street til
the phone box, for to ring up the hospital and find out the score.
But when he
eventually came back in, he looked so distraught and his face was so ashen,
that we all took it that somethin’ real bad had happened.
“Is there anythin’ wrong Wally?” someone asked
all concerned.
“It’s another daughter,” he replied, totally
dejected.
Now Cecil
was in the company and he was an awful droll, slow-spaykin’ sorta buck. Well after ponderin’ over this for a while,
he eventually turned til the very forlorn lookin’ Wally.
“You know Wally” he said, “I doubt your wife’s
gonna have to change the rooster.”
DRUTHY SAMMY
I once knew
a buck called Sammy, who always had a fierce druth on him. The only sneg was that he was always short of
money, so you had to watch him leck a hawk.
For example, if he was in your company, you always needed to keep a firm
holt of your glass the whole night, because if you didn’t and turned your head
away for a second, sure the whoer would have it drained on you in a flash.
Well one
cowl night when he had no entrance fee intil the pub, he suddenly had a bright
idea. Now it was the custom them days,
that if a man announced he was goin’ to get married, the whole bar would buy
the condemned man drink the whole night.
So although no woman in her right mind would ever have had him, Sammy came
intil the bar and told the whole company he was engaged til Margie
McSweedlepipes and that they’d all be invited til the weddin’.
Well after he’d made this
here announcement, Sammy beamed around the bar, lookin’ for people to step
forward to buy him a drink or three to celebrate his good news. However, the smile didn't stay on his face
too long, for one of the boys who stepped forward out from the shadows at the
far end of the bar, was none other than Margie’s da and from the look on his
face, he seemed mighty interested for to hear a few more details about this
here weddin, that he knew nawthin’ about.
And as he was comin down
the bar, for to have a wee word with his prospective son-in-law, Sammy decided
that he was fierce tired and maybe in need of an early night. So he was out the dooer and away quicker than
a cat'd lick its whisker.
SPIRIT LEVEL
When I was a single man, I
always seemed to be short of money and so when Artur asked me one day, if I’d
help him with a flooer layin’ job in the wee back room of the pub, I
immediately agreed, although I had to admit til him, that I didn’t know
nawthin’ about flooer layin’. Well when
I told him that, my goodness but did he not laugh.
“Och, neither do I,” he chortled, “but sure we
can larn as we go along.”
Well
although Artur got stuck intil the job, it wasn’t long til he stopped.
“Och, it's not that I'm lazy,” he explained,
“it's just that I'm full of wee rests.”
And with that, he went away off down intil the main bar for to get a
lough of drinks, which he told the barman to deduct from our wages. He then sat on a stool with a drink in his
hand and his tongue goin’ leck a handbell, layvin’ me to get on with it.
However, later on in the
day, I ran intil a wee bit of a sneg.
There was no bulb in this here wee back room and it was gettin’ that
dark, I couldn’t see the bubble in the spirit level. So I had to shout til Artur in the main bar
for advice.
“Och, use your heed,” he roared back, “just
pick the spirit level up and take it outside intil the light in the corridor
and then you'll be able to see the bubble all right.”
Well
although I wasn't quite sure how the hell I managed it, I eventually got the
job done, although by this time, Artur was as full as a shuck. However, when we went to get our money off
the bar owner, we got the quare gunk.
“Your money?” he exclaimed, “sure youse owe me
money!” My goodness, but if the bowel
King Artur hadn't drunk all the wages and more besides! So I’d worked the whole damned day for
nawthin’. But not only that, I had to
carry the useless whoer home as well!
There was a
time when the main bar in my favourite pub was for men only and if any weemen
wanted a drink, sure they had no choice but to duke in through the side
entry when the coast was clear and intil the wee back room, well away from us
boys.
Unfortunately however, me
mucker Geordie fell in with this Belfastian woman called Ruby, who insisted on
comin’ intil the main bar any time she wanted a gee and tee. Needless to say, none of us boys was too
playsed by this. I mane, how could we
talk freely with some damned woman stickin’ her neb in and listenin’ til our
every word!
Well anyway,
one day Geordie and Ruby reluctantly agreed to babysit his sister’s ba.
However, they soon got fed up with that and decided to go down til the pub for
a lough of drinks. But they didn’t want
to bring the ba intil the bar. So they left the brat outside and sat near the
windy, so that they could keep an eye on it in its pram outside.
Later on,
Ruby left for home for to put on the spuds, but instead of goin’ up the main
street past the pram, she went the back way and forgot all about the sprog.
Some time later, when it
was drawn til Geordie’s attention that the ba was still there, he ran out the
dooer and legged it all the way up til his home and ordered Ruby to come down
and collect the ba. Aye, there was no
way that he was gonna be seen wheelin’ no pram up the main street of our wee
town. But then, men was real men them
days.
FOOTY
Now although I don’t leck
football, I used to folly the locial football team, because there was always a
great session in the pub after a match.
Well one Saturday, I travelled
with them til an away match and when we arrived, the dumb clucks realised they
was a man short. So seein’ as I was the
only eegit who’d come along to ‘support’ them, they asked me to play. Now although I immediately said “naw”, I soon
changed me tune, when they tolt me there’d be a lough of Guinness in it for me
afterwards.
Now because I had neither boots nor togs, I had
no choice but to walk out on til the pitch fully dressed, with me big long coat
and cap on and a feg in me gob. But it
was then that I realised how thirsty me shoes was, for every puddle they came
across, they took a wee drink.
Well as we was linin’ up to
start, our captain came over til me.
“Do you
see their left winger?” he growled, “I want you to make sure you MARK him real
well.”
Now I took him at his word and
when this here winger made to go past me, I lunged out and got man, ball and
all. Well from the way he was hoppin’
about on one leg, while rubbin’ the big bruise on the other, I could see that I
had indeed marked him real well, just as I’d been tolt. The only sneg was, that when he stopped
hoppin’ about, he marked me real well too, for he took intil me ..... and left
me lookin’ leck a panda for two weeks after.
PLANTIN’
One day, them ones down in the dole office tolt
me that I’d have to start a job with the forestry people the next day. Well when I woke up early the follyin’
mornin’, I was none too playsed, because it was cowl, dark and rainin’ outside
and I’d far rather have stayed at home in me cosy wee bed. So by the time I arrived on site, I wasn’t in
the best of good humour, let me tell yee.
“Right
boys,” roared the foreman, while rubbin’ his hands together, “let’s get stuck
in and do a really good day’s work.”
Well this here rousin’ battlecry inspired me no end, until I saw the
whoer disappearin’ intil his wee warm shed, for a cup of tay and a read of his
newspaper.
Well anyway, his side-kick briefly told us that
our job was plantin’ these wee trees and after showin’ us what to do, he
retreated intil the shed as well, layvin’ us wet and shiverin’ eegits to get on
with it.
Now the trees was only wee sprigs of things and
at first glance, it seemed to be an aisy enough kinda job. However, within no time at all, me back was
damned near broke. On top of that, me
hangover was really beginnin’ to kick in, layvin’ me feelin’ as wicked as a bag
of buck weasels and fierce maggoty. So I
wasn’t best playsed when the foreman eventually came out of his cosy, warm shed
and roared at me:
“Och, are you a complete and utter eegit?
..... sure you're not puttin’ them trees in far enough.” Well, the divil was well and truly in me now
and instead of seein’ rain, I just saw red mist. So I glowered at him, before pickin’ up a
sledge hammer and stovin’ one of these wee trees more than a foot out of sight
intil the ground.
“Now is that in far enough for you?” I asked
him. Well he didn’t say nawthin’, but I
could tell from the black look on his face, that I’d be plantin’ no more trees
that day. And so it was back home for
me, til me cosy wee bed.
ONCE IN THE ARMY
The most
peculiar job ever I had was workin’ as a servant in the colonel’s mansion, on
his big estate outside our wee town. Now
accordin’ til the colonel, he’d more or less won World War 2 on his own. However, when the ungrateful wretches didn’t
give him the VC, he’d left the army all disgruntled and returned home, for to
spend the rest of his days drinkin’ gin and writin’ his memoirs.
But once in
the army, always in the army. My
goodness, all us staff had to stand til attention outside in the cowl and rain,
first thing each mornin’ and wait for him to inspect us, with his owl baton in
his hand. Then, whenever you met him
staggerin’ about, you always had to stand til attention and salute him. As for his missus, you had to curtsy til her
and address her as “ma’am”. And you
couldn’t just walk anywhere. Naw, you
had to march left right, left right, left right, with your head up, shoulders
back, chest out, stomach in and your arms goin’ leck pistons by your side. Also, if you was ever caught doin’ somethin’
wrong, sure you’d be up on a charge and courtmartialled quicker than a cat’d
lick its arse.
Well I put
up with all this owl nonsense until he ran intil two liquidity problems. First of all, he ran out of money and
secondly, he ran out of gin, which left him leck a bear. Well I’m one of those peculiar people who
lecks to get paid, so although I knew I’d be lettin’ the whole regiment down, I
went AWOL and never went back.
But you know, he had me
quare and well trained. One day some
time later, when I met him swayin’ about in the breeze, my goodness but if I
didn’t immediately stop, stand til attention and salute him. But then, once in the army, always in the
army.
PASSION WAGON
When I was a young man, there
wasn’t a dance that I didn’t go til and never once did I have to walk, for I
always had me coortin’ machine with me.
Needless to say, I never brought no woman with me, because not only did
I not want to have to spend money buyin' her any pre-dance drinks down in the
pub, but sure I didn’t want to pay her way intil the dance neither.
Well anyway, one night I met this doll at a
dance up the country and boys a dear, but she took such a quare shine til me,
that I could tell from the look in her eye, that I’d be all right that
night. So a wee bit later on, I asked
her if I could layve her home. Well she
asked me if I had any transport and when I told her that I had, man she
snuggled up til me even more.
However, when the dance was
over and we went outside, all the snugglin’ and cuddlin’ suddenly stopped. Man, she took one look at me passion wagon
and she turned on her heel and stalked away as quick as she could go. My goodness, but I was stunned. I mane, I thought she’d be happy enough with
me tractor and the owl trailer with a pile of hay in the back. So I can only assume she must have been a
snob!
Many moons
ago, I used to drive around in a van deliverin’ milk til customers all around
the country, hail, rain or snow. Well it
wasn’t a bad job, but it did have its frustrations.
Now one day,
there was a fierce storm ragin’. But it
didn’t bother me too much, because although the rain was comin’ down in
torrents, I was that quick in and out of the van each time I delivered milk,
that I hardly got wet at all.
However, it was a different
story when I arrived up at Lenny’s. Now
he was a crusty owl bachelor, who lived in a wee cottage away up the mountain
and to get til his place, I normally had to drive up a long bendy lane. But that day, the wind had blown down a big
tree, which blocked the lane. So I
decided I’d take a wee shortcut across the fields.
So over the
ditch I went, with the milk crate in me hand.
But the hill was that slippy, sure I was slidin’ all over the place. Not
only that, but I fell a lough of times and sure it wasn’t long til I was
covered from head til toe in muck and drenched til the skin. But even so, after about 10 minutes of
slitherin’ about, I eventually managed to make it up til his front dooer, where
I noticed there was an empty bottle with a note stickin’ out of it.
Well do you
what the cheeky whoer’d wrote on it: “No milk today”.
HOSPITAL ROMANCE
When I was a single man away back in the 60s, I
had to go intil hospital for three weeks for to get butchered. Things was a lot
different them days and it was just leck a holiday camp. Man, I loved it in there and it was great
fun.
I soon made friends and we used to sit round
Johnny’s bed, chattin’, laughin’, jokin’, smokin’ our fegs, takin’ the odd wee
drink of Guinness when nobody was lookin’ and watchin’ the hard-workin’ nurses,
busily doin’ their jobs. Man them nurses
was all such angels and a real tonic, let me tell yee. They was absolutely
great, always so kind, gentle, carin’ and cheerful and they looked after us all
so well.
Now it I don’t know what it is about the
hospital environment, but it seems to encourage us men to fall in love. Aye, after I’d run me eye over the nurses for
a lough of days, I started gettin’ a fierce notion of one called Darryl and she
was on me mind all the time. And
whenever she wasn’t workin’, I’d start pinin’ and couldn’t hardly wait to see
her again.
When it eventually came time for me to layve
hospital, I felt desperate sad, for I was so much in love with Darryl and I
knew that if I didn’t make a move, I’d never see her again. But sure I was that shy, I wasn’t fit to ask
her out. So I asked Johnny if he’d do it
for me and he said he would. Man, I
could hardly wait for the result.
“Well,
did you spayke til her?” I asked him excitedly when I saw him later.
“Aye.”
“And is
she free and single?”
“Aye, she
is now.”
“And is
she willin’ to go out on a date?”
“Aye
..... she’s dead keen.”
“When?”
“Tonight.”
“And
where am I to meet her?”
“You!” he
exclaimed. “Och, it’s not you she’s goin’ out with ..... it’s me!” And so that was the end of me romance and all
me wee dreams.
ANTIQUE CHAIR
Me owl da
didn’t have much til his name, apart from one beautiful antique oak chair with
a solid wooden back til it. Man, there
wasn’t a scrape nor a scratch on it. So
because it was in such pristine condition, I knew it’d be worth a whole pile of
Guinness.
Well anyway,
I told him one time that I wanted the chair after he’d gone and every time I
went to visit him afterwards, I always used to say til him: “have you done
anythin’ yit to make sure I get that chair when you’re gone?” And every time he’d shake his head and say
“naw”, but that he’d get round til it some time.
But it was when he suddenly
started to go downhill, that I began to get desperate anxious about this here
chair, because I knew me other brothers and sisters had their eye on it
too. So I knew I’d have to get him to do
somethin’ about the chair real quick, before he kicked the bucket.
However, I shouldn’t have
worried, for the next time I went to see him, I had no sooner got in through
the dooer, when he told me he’d had a wee idea, that’d sort out the problem
once and for all. And with that he led
me intil the parlour where the chair was.
Well I could see instantly why it was that the chair’d definitely come
til me after he was gone. Aye, the silly
owl whoer had gone and chiselled out me name in big block capitals all over the
front of it. But sure he shouldn’t have bothered his arse, for the bloody chair
was worth damn all now and therefore of no further interest til me at all, at
all!
HENRY THE HOP
Henry the Hop was born with a club foot and as a
result, he couldn’t find a job locally when he left school. So on his eighteenth birthday, he suddenly
took off and went away across the water til London, for to make his fame and
fortune. However, he was hardly gone
till he was back, and bejaysus, but if he didn't have a wife called Gloria in tow.
But my goodness, what a desperate sight Gloria
was! Bejaysus, her legs was all covered
with thick black hair and as for her moustache, sure it was leck a third
eyebrow and any sergeant-major would have been fierce proud of it. Well anyway, although she was as odd as the
divil, some of the locial weemen tried to befriend her and one day, one of them
asked Gloria if her and Henry was gonna have any chillder.
“Och, how
the hell could I have children!” she'd scrayked back, “sure I'm more than half
man!”
Well anyway, Henry was a real alcho-curio and
had therefore always been fierce fond of the booze. But when he got older, the drink started to
have asorta strange effect on the few brain cells he did have and bejaysus, he
became nawthin’ but a damned nuisance when he got full. So there was manys the time, when the barman
used to offer me and me mates a few free drinks, if we’d do him - and ourselves
as well - a big favour and drag Henry, club foot and all, back til his
house.
Now the first few times we managed to heave and
haul him home, bejaysus but if Gloria didn't always show her gratitude by
jumpin’ out the frontdooer and atin’ the faces of us, for “gettin’ poor Henry
intil such a state” - leck as if we'd forced the glass up til his lips and made
him drink!
But then one night, when she was in a wee bit
better humour and didn't ate the arses off us, she said in a right friendly
sorta way, that if we carried Henry indooers, she'd give us all a cup of tay.
Now although we wasn't interested in no tay, we accepted her invitation
nevertheless, cos we was desperate curious for to see how these funny whoers
lived. So we dragged Henry indooers and
intil the parlour and threw him intil a big armchair, where he lay groanin’,
slabberin’ and hashin’.
Well
anyway, just after Gloria went out til the kitchen for to make the tay, owl
Henry suddenly called out that he wanted a piss and so she came back intil the
parlour with a white jug, opened his flies, took out his lad, aimed it in the
general direction of the jug and when she gave him the word, bejaysus he pissed
away, right there in the front parlour in front of us boys.
Then when he was finished, Gloria put his lad
back intil his trousers, took the jug and went back out intil the kitchen for
to finish makin’ the tay, layvin’ us boyos near bustin’ ourselves with
laughter. However, it was when she came
back intil the parlour with the tay things on a tray, that we all suddenly
decided that naw, we wouldn’t have no milk in our tay. Aye, that white milk jug on the tray looked
just a wee bit too much leck the white jug owl Henry'd been pissin intil, not
five minutes before!
THE McCLATTYS’S
HORSE
When I heard that a new family called the
McClattys was movin’ intil a small terrace house down a dingy back street in
our wee town, I was that curious, I couldn’t hardly wait for to get a look at
them, for to see what sort of craturs they was.
But my
goodness, were they not one nest of ignorant, hateful hallions, the lecks of
which I’d never seen before in the whole of me life. Apparently they’d lived in a shack up the
mountain and bejaysus, they was one rough mob, let me tell yee. Aye, and on top of that, they was all
ragamuffins, who was just about as elegant as pigs in hobnail boots! And the stink of them too! Sure even hogs would have held their snouts
when they was about!
Now with all their carryin-ons and this, that
and the other, the police was never done comin’ til their dooer. Not only that, but whatever money they made
by hook or by crook - or should I just say by bein’ crooks - they used to drink
it all and so there was never a penny piece left for to pay intil the
house.
But when winter came, it was
an awful cowl one and although they always had plenty of drinkin’ money, they
never had no other money for to buy coal.
However, because they didn't want to frayze, they ripped out the
banisters and burnt them in the grate. Then they took off all the inside dooers
and burnt them too. Then it was the
chairs, tables, cupboords, chests of drawers, flooer boords and this and that
and the other. But if that wasn't bad
enough, sure they ripped off all the wooden claddin’ on the front of the house
and burnt that as well.
But the cowl winter went on
and on and they was all still frayzin’.
So they ripped out the stairs and burnt them too, which meant they had
to use an owl metal ladder for to get til the rooms up above. Sure the only wood left in the whole house –
apart from their own thick heads - was the front and back dooers and many's the
time, I believe these dooers was seriously considered as well. Well anyway, spring eventually came and the
cowl weather went away without none of them havin’ froze til death, which was
an awful shame for the rest of us.
Now
they had this owl horse Ned and a cart for collectin’ owl scrap metal and one
day, this here nag fell ill. To be quite
honest, nobody was a bit surprised, cos they didn’t have no shed nor field for
it and as a result, they used to have to tether it up til the lamp post outside
their house at night.
Well anyway, they decided that
one way or another, they'd have to cure this here horse. So they brought it in the front dooer,
through the house and out the back dooer intil the yard at the rear. But sure they didn't know their arses from
their elbows and had no clue whatsoever how to cure it. And they sure wasn't gonna spend no good
drinkin’ money on a good for nawthin’ vit neither. So the poor owl nag swelled up til nearly
twice its original size and died.
Well
it’d been a desperate tough job gettin’ that there horse intil the back yard,
but with it bein’ deed, bloated and swollen til such an awful size, sure they
couldn't get it back out through the house.
So they covered it with a lough of owl rags and let it rot there. But they was such a bunch of desperate
whoers, that people was fierce surprised, that the clifts didn't cut it up and
try to sell it til the locial butchers as beef - or at least ate it themselves,
with a pile of chips, vinegar and a few ladles of mushy pays!
I once knew a buck called Solly and bejaysus, he
was some rare boy, let me tell yee. Now
I mind the time, when these two owl spinsters was lookin’ for someone to come
and work for them on their farm and although they was a terra rich, they was
such hateful owl crones and so fierce fond of bossin’ people around, that the
majority of the boyos from around our wee town thought they’d be damned near
impossible to work for. But the bowel
Solly thought different and he applied for the job and because he seemed such a
nice dacent fella, they employed him as farm manager, for to look after their
animals.
Now as far as they was
concerned, he did a damned good job. In
fact, one of these owl witches was heard gushin’ til a neighbour what a great
hard-workin’ fella he was and how he was that good and kind, that he was just
leck a son til them, although between you and me, he was a good for nawthin'
shite, who’d sicken your arse, let there be no doubt about that at all, at all.
Or to put it more politely, he was just far too sweet to be wholesome.
Well anyway, those weemen's
bastes must all have been of damned poor stock or summat, for Solly was never
done comin til them, with tears runnin’ down his big fat rosy cheeks, for to
report the death of yet another sheep or cow or pig or whatever. And then, when they’d see him weepin’ and
wailin’ with grief, sure the two owl dolls'd start roarin’ and bawlin’ with
him.
But sure the clift was only laughin’ at them the
whole time, for none of those bastes was dyin’ at all. Aye, the whoer was sellin’ them all on the QT
at the locial livestock market and makin’ the quare fortune on them!
BROKEN ANKLES
One time a
long time ago when I was in hospital, this here plumber buck called Willie was
brought in. Apparently, he’d been seein’
til this woman’s pipes when her husband had returned home unexpectedly and
Willie’d decided to take flight – from an upper windy! The only sneg was that he didn’t have no
wings and as a result, he’d dropped leck a stone and shattered both his ankles
when he hit the ground.
Well anyway, after they’d
set his ankles and put them in plaster, he was assigned til a wee side room
away from the rest of us. Now this surprised us, cos he was only an ordinary
country bumpkin leck the rest of us. But
then it transpired that they’d only moved him in there, cos there was no spare
beds on the main ward.
Now because
it was gettin’ so fierce near Christmas, the hospital was quare and keen to get
rid of as many of us as possible. Well
with regard til this Willie buck, not only did he really hate hospital, but he
was fierce anxious to get home for Christmas and because he made such great
progress over the next lough of days, it seemed leck his wish was gonna be
fulfilled. But then one evenin’, his
mate came in and unbeknown til the nursin’ staff, Willie and this buck got
stuck intil the bottle of whisky, what his mate had smuggled in.
However, some time later we
heard a big crash and a blood curdlin’ scrayme from Willie’s room. Bejaysus, but if Willie had fallen drunk off
the bed and gone and broken both ankles again!
And the poor eegit never got home for Christmas after all!
ARRANGED MARRIAGE
Many moons ago, there was
this crusty owl bachelor called Tommy, who lived on his own in a wee cottage
away up the mountain and because he had no radio nor TV, he used to entertain
himself by playin’ an owl set of bagpies while roamin’ the surroundin’ hills,
although sadly, it sounded more leck the wailin’s of a banshee than music.
He also used to go and
visit his owl chum Johnny, who lived in a wee hovel a lough of fields
away. Now Johnny had a black face. But
this wasn’t down til him bein’ an African.
Naw, it was on account of him havin’ no chimlay in his cottage and it
was therefore a wee bit smoky inside when he had the fire lit. The other sneg about him was that he wasn’t
the best of company, as he was as deaf as a post.
Well Tommy was desperate lonely, so one day he
took it intil his head for to get married and when he spied this here owl widow
woman at the market, he decided she was the one for him, even though they’d
never spoke and he didn’t even know her name.
So as was the custom them days in such circumstances, he got himself
this go-between to put out some feelers, for to see if she’d be interested in
marryin’ and the reply came back that she was.
Now although they still
hadn’t even met each other, the next thing the go-between had to do as a part
of the intermediary process, was to establish how much each of them was
worth. But whereas she had cows, pigs,
sheep and even a donkey, Tommy only had a lough of owl scrawny chickens. So it
was clearly a mismatch and sadly for Tommy, the dayle was off.
Poor owl Tommy was
desperate sad for a while. But he got
over it and it wasn’t long till he went back til playin’ his bagpipes and the
eerie wails of them echoed all around the hills, for the rest of his days.
A long time ago, there used to be an owl buck called Bobbie Bunion, who
lived on his own in an owl hovel on a wee island up Lough Erne and he had no
company at all, except for the wild phaysans that roamed about the wee wood on
the island. Now he bought an awful lot
of the best of good grain and he told all and sundry that was gullible enough
to believe him, that he fed it til these here phaysans, because he was so fond
of them. But I knew for a fact that that
was only a ruse and that he actually used if for somethin’ else. Aye, he made poteen from it on the QT.
Now whenever he had a few bottles to sell and was in need of a lough of
bobs, he used to go round the locial pubs and announce that he had turkeys to
sell. But although most people didn’t
know what the hell he was hashin’ on about, those that were in the know
realised from this chat about turkeys, that he had poteen for sale and they’d folly
him out til the gents, for to do a dayle.
And when they’d agreed a price and the money’d been paid, he’d pull a
'turkey' out from one of the many deep pockets in his big long coat and hand it
over. Aye, and it was always the best of good stuff, let me tell yee. Sure he supplied half the country round there
with it.
Mind you, he did get caught one time and had to appear in court. Bejaysus, it was the best of good crack at
the time and the court was packed with all his customers, for to see how the
owl rogue'd fare. Aye and bejaysus, when
a bottle of this here poteen was produced for the jury to examine, sure
everyone could see that it was real good stuff, cos when it was held up til the
light, man, it was as clear as crystal.
Well anyway, if he'd been a younger man, he'd have done time, cos makin’
poteen’s a fierce serious offence. But
because he was so owl, the judge just levied a big fine on him instead. But do you know, he didn't pay one penny
piece of that there fine ..... cos all his customers round the whole country
chipped in and paid it for him ..... and from what I heard, that included the
judge ..... and some members of the jury as well!
But anyway, I decided one time that I’d leck to get a wee drop of
poteen. So I went over in a wee rowin’
boat to see Bobbie on the island, cos somebody'd given me the nod that he had
some poteen goin’. However, the boy
who'd tolt me this, warned me not to ask him for it straight out, on account of
him bein’ as odd as the divil. Aye,
accordin’ til me pal, if you was to as much as to mention the word ‘poteen’, he
wouldn't give you one damned drop of it.
Well anyway, when I got over on til the island, it was absolutely
bucketin’ down with rain. Now I wasn't
all that hopeful when I rapped on his dooer, but bejaysus, didn't he immediately
invite me in and give me a cup of tay, even though he didn't know me from
Adam. And then bejaysus, he hashed away
for ages about this, that and the other and half the time, I didn't have a clue
what he was goin’ on about.
Well anyway, I was just beginnin’ to wonder what the hell I was doin’
there at all, when he suddenly got up and suggested we go for a wee stroll
round the island, for to see the phaysans.
Now I thought this was a very strange thing to suggest, cos it was still
pishin’ down outside. But I decided to go along with him and out we went intil
the teemin’ rain.
Bejaysus, we began to walk round this here island and every now and
again, owl Bobbie'd stop and kick at a clump of grass. Well after about half an hour or so, I
started gettin’ that fed up with all this arsin’ about and gettin’ drownded,
that I was almost on the verge of sayin’ cheerio til him. But then suddenly, he kicked at yet another
clump of grass and bejaysus, his foot hit somethin’. And that’s when he put his
hand down and pulled out a bottle of the craytur. My goodness, but if he hadn’t it hid all
around the island. And begod, he sold me
five bottles of the best poteen I’ve ever had!
A BASIN
FULL
Two of me neighbours was Aida and Tilty and one
day, I decided I'd pay them a wee visit, for to catch up on all the locial
gossip. Now I knew there’d be plenty of
that, cos Aida had a nose on her as long as a snake’s arse, which meant that
there wasn’t much that went on locally, that she didn’t know about.
However, when I got up there, I found them
fierce preoccupied, because they had some builders in puttin’ up an extension
at the back of their cottage. Even so,
Aida and Tilty was very playsed to see me and they invited me in.
Now their toilet was right beside the back dooer
and I asorta gathered from Tilty quite early on, that because they was so shy
about goin’ there for to do their business, what with the builders bein’ about,
they’d had to do it elsewhere, although he didn’t say where exactly.
Well anyway, they asked me if I’d leck a spot of
dinner and I didn’t say “naw”, cos I was feelin’ desperate peckish. So I went til the table and sat down. Next thing Aida set this big plate of sausages,
mash and gravy down in front of me and although her and Tilty chattered away, I
didn’t pay too much attention til all
their hashin’, cos I was too busy gettin’ stuck intil this here big feed.
But then
me foot suddenly hit somethin’ under the table.
So I looked down to see it what
was and spied this basin. Well bejaysus,
it was full of yellowy lookin’ liquid and there was big brown turds leck
sausages, floatin’ around on top! My
God, but it looked desperate leck the sausages and gravy on me plate.
Man, me hunger disappeared in a
flash and I left tout suite, before I puked up all over them!
GETTIN’ EVEN
Man, it’s quare and hateful when someone sells
you somethin’, that turns out to be no damned use. Well it’s often happened til me, cos I’m such
an eegit. So it’s great when you can get
your own back.
Now once
such time was that day a long time ago, when I had a wee bit of a run-in with
Slammy the cobbler. Aye, I met him by
chance on the street and my goodness, he was all smiles and smarm. Of coorse, I knew instantly what he was after
and that he was only bein’ sweet til me, cos I owed him a few quid for a pair
of owl boots he’d sold me a long time before, which had turned out to be
nawthin’ but a load of owl cobblers.
Well anyway, he didn't fool me
with all this sickly slabbery owl shite, so I just looked real cowl at him, cos
I was gettin’ fierce sick of him always tappin’ me for that money every time
we’d meet.
“Any
chance of you lettin’ me have that cash you owe me?” he asked me all
syrupy-leck. Well I shook me head.
“Naw, I'm
afraid not,” I replied, “I'm still savin’ up to pay you off.”
“Well how
about payin’ a wee bit of it now then?” he went on. I shook me head again.
“Naw,” I
replied, “I don't operate that way ..... it's either the whole duck or no
dinner, as far as I’m concerned.”
Well at this point he got
desperate sad lookin’. But then he
obviously had this great idea, for he suddenly brightened up.
“Look,”
he said, “I'll tell you what I'll do ..... seein’ as you're such a dacent
fella, I'll knock off half of what you owe me.”
My goodness, I had to smile.
“Och
Slammy, that's wild generous of you,” said I til him. “So I'll tell you what
I'll do in return ..... seein’ as YOU’RE such a dacent fella yourself, I'll
knock the other half off.”
UP THE JUNCTION
In the
maelstrom and turmoil of life, we all need our own wee refuge where we can go
til from time til time, to escape from all the stresses and strains in our
lives, for a wee while at least. Now
before I got married and was livin’ up the country, my sanctuary was me wee back
garden. It was me haven of peace and tranquillity and a place where
I would always go, when all me trials and tribulations was gettin’ on top of
me.
Well anyway,
there was that time when I endured one hell of a desperate bad day at
work. It seemed leck all the most
irritatin’ and contrary people in the whole wide world had conspired to
converge on me, for to aggravate and hound me the whole day long. My goodness, they came at me from all angles
and by home-time, I felt absolutely frazzled.
So it was
quare and nice later, when I stretched out on me sun bed in me garden of peace
and tranquillity, with a cool refreshin’ drink in me hand. It was such a lovely sunny evenin’ and it was
heavenly lyin’ there, with the warm evenin’ sun caressin’ me tortured brow and
the gentle breeze ripplin’ through me hair.
In fact, it was so relaxin’ and peaceful, that all me stress and woes
quickly began to ebb away.
When I first
became aware of it, it was almost inaudible and in fact initially, it was quite
calmin’ and relaxin’. However, it began
to get louder and louder and more and more intrusive, until it eventually
reached such a crescendo, that it was totally deafenin’ and it completely took
over me mind, so that I could think about nawthin’ else. Me nerves was in shreds and I could feel me
blood beginnin’ to boil with rage. This
racket had completely destroyed my oasis of peace and tranquillity.
Then,
through all the tumult, I heard a shout and when I looked round, I spied me
next-dooer neighbour smilin’ at me.
“Hello,” he called cheerily, “I hope you’re
enjoyin’ them.”
Well what
happened next is a wee bit of a blur, but I do remember two vehicles
arrivin’. The first one took me away til
the locial loony bin. As for the other,
it was an ambulance and it took me neighbour away til the hospital for an
operation ..... to extract his new wind chimes, which was about a mile and a
half up his junction.
CHILLDER AND BABYSITTIN’
Now where I was rared, they
have this funny thing about how they pronounce some names beginnin’ with the
letter ‘H’. For example, Hubert is pronounced Qbert and Hughie is pronounced
QE, just leck in the QE2 liner.
Well anyway, here’s a wee tale
about a QE I once knew. QE was fierce
tall and tin and in fact, if he’d been any taller and tinner, sure one eye
woulda done him. Now although QE’d been
happily married with a few chillder, his wife had unfortunately died. However, he’d met and married this widow
woman Gertie and she and her chillder had moved intil his house up the
mountain, where they’d had more chillder.
Well one day many moons ago, I was up visitin’
at QE’s, when suddenly there was this terrible commotion outside. So QE leapt up from his chair and when he
went outside to investigate, he found the whole chillder all fightin’. So he roared intil his wife:
“Hey,
Gertie, get out here quick and sort these ones out ..... your chillder and my
chillder are knockin’ hell out of our chillder!”
Then another day, QE asked me if I’d babysit for
him, because him and Gertie wanted to go out for the evenin’. Well although I agreed, I wasn’t all that
keen, cos QE and Gertie had an awful squad of chillder and my goodness, but
they was never done fightin’ with each other
Now before they went out, QE and Gertie tolt me
that I wasn’t to put up with any owl nonsense from them, even if it meant
givin’ them the odd skite or two about their lugs for to cool them down. They also told me, that when it came til nine
o’clock, I was to put them
Well when QE and his missus Gertie got home
later on, I told them proudly, that I'd shut me ears til all the chillder’s
whingin’ and whinin’ and got all
thirteen of them off til bed before half nine, even though I’d had a wee bit of
bother with two of them.
Well when I mentioned the figure thirteen, they
gave me the quare funny look. And that's
when Gertie went off on a tour of inspection of the house. A few minutes later she returned with a big
grin on her face.
“My goodness, you did a grand job there Mickle .....
however, there's just one wee sneg ..... two of the chillder up there in bed,
sure they belong til our neighbours!”
One
desperate wet day many moons ago, I was on me way til work in the big city,
when I felt me feet gettin’ desperate wet and when I looked down, I
noticed me shoes was fallin’ apart. So I
popped intil a cobbler’s that did repairs while you waited. However, when the boy had the job done, he
gave me the quare gunk when he asked me for more money than I had on me. So I said til him:
“I’ll tell you what ..... you give me the
shoes and when I get the money, I’ll come back and pay you.” Bejaysus, he gave me the quare look.
“Well, I’ll tell YOU what,” he said coldly,
“no money, no shoes!” And with that, he
put the shoes down behind the counter.
Now them days, there was no cash machines,
so I had to walk through the pourin’ rain in me sock soles for about 2 miles
til a bank. But though there was hordes
of people along the way, nobody really seemed to notice me dilemma.
And even
when I squelched me way intil the packed bank, layvin’ a whole set of
footprints behind me on the marbly flooer, still nobody seemed to notice. However, when I joined this long queue
behind a woman with a wee cub, guess who did notice.
“Mammy, mammy!” cried the wee cub, while
tuggin’ at his ma’s skirt, “why’s that man not wearin’ any shoes!” Well of coorse, that was the cue for everyone
in the whole place to have a damned good look at this peculiar buck with the
big red face, who was standin’ there in his sock soles. It was akinda embarrassin’, let me tell
yee. But what made it even worse, was
the fact that me soakin’ socks was all full of holes.
ADMISSIBLE EVIDENCE
Let me tell yee about somethin’ really peculiar
that happened a lough of years ago til a very wealthy relative of mine called
Clive, who lives over in England.
Despite massive efforts over a very lengthy
period of time, the English police had not been able to resolve a particularly
bafflin’ crime and it was beginnin’ to look leck they was never goin’ to get a
result. However, because the victim of
the crime was a very important establishment figure, they was under unrelentin’
pressure from on high for to get a conviction and as a result, they was willin’
to consider anythin’. So when a
clairvoyant suddenly stepped forward and managed to convince them that he knew
who the culprit was, they was very happy to listen til him.
However, their joy was short-lived, because
despite everythin’ he told them, the
Well the unfortunate judge who was appointed to
preside over this special court was in a right owl quandary, because he had
never had to dayle with such a question before and as a result, he scratched
his head and prevaricated for a long time.
But he eventually ended up sayin’ that if the clairvoyant could prove
beyond all doubt that his abilities was foolproof, then he would rule that his
evidence would be admissible.
Now the clairvoyant was a chap called Bill
Moses, who by chance was actually a very good friend of Clive’s and he was
brought intil the special court and asked to demonstrate his skills on a
selection of court officials. Well he
soon had them all agog, for he told them very personal things about themselves,
that only they or their close relatives could possibly have known.
But although this was all very entertainin’,
everyone present could see that the judge was still not convinced. So Bill Moses was asked to turn his attention
til the judge. Well Bill started to tell
the judge what he'd had for breakfast and what colour his underpants was and so
on and the judge was obviously very impressed.
But it was when Bill started sayin’ somethin’ about some young bit of
stuff called Penny down in a Mayfair flat, who was very much intil whips and
bondage, that the judge went a wee bit pink, immediately interrupted Bill and
said that his rulin’ was that Bill's evidence would be admissible in a court of
law.
Well Clive got one hell of a surprise after this
rulin’ was given. There he was sittin’ in his huge Hampstead mansion, drinkin’
his whisky and soda and avidly watchin’ 'Teletubbies' on TV, when the dooer
bell suddenly rang. He was, needless to
say, more than a wee bit annoyed, because he didn't want to miss any of
'Teletubbies' and so when he answered the dooer, he was a wee bit sharp with
the caller and none too friendly.
However, he soon changed his tune, when he realised that it was the
police and that he was bein’ arrested for a serious crime.
Needless to say, he was as innocent as a new
born babe and therefore extremely puzzled as til how such a charge could
possibly have been laid at his dooer.
However, when he saw his owl pal Bill Moses comin’ up intil the witness
box to give evidence at the subsequent court case in the Old Bailey, he was
greatly relieved, for if there was anyone alive who knew for sure that he
wasn’t capable of such a vile deed, it was Bill. So you can imagine Clive’s astonishment, when
Bill pointed his finger at Clive and said in a loud clear voice: “That's him,
m’lud .... he’s the one that done it!”
Well you know, gettin’ a life sentence for
somethin’ he didn't do was one thing.
But what really gets his goat, is that while he’s locked up behind bars
in a desperate grim prison, that blaggard Bill Moses is livin’ the high life in
Clive’s palatial mansion, sleepin’ with his wife and drivin’ his Rolls Royce!
DRAUGHTS MATCH
One day many moons ago, me and me pal Herby was
havin’ a few quiet drinks in a pub up the country, when this big ignorant
lookin’ hallion called Mack started bummin’ and blowin’ about what a great
draughts player he was and how he was the undefeated locial champion. Now Herby was a right good player himself and
because he was sure that he could bate this ignorant lookin’ clift and make
himself a few aisy quid, he chirped up and bet Mack £50 that he could bate him.
Well Mack took up the challenge and after a wee
bit of negotiatin’, it was agreed that they’d play a ‘best of five games’ match
that very afternoon up in Mack's cottage.
However, the only sneg was that Herby didn't have the 50 quid stake
money on him. We therefore had to zoom
off home til our wee town, so that Herby could ‘borrow’ the house keepin’ and
rent money from Rita's wee jar, when she wasn't lookin’ of coorse.
Now Mack's tumbledown shack
was at the end of a long guttery lane, which was full of pot holes and covered
in cowshite and when we arrived up there, Herby was beginnin’ to feel a wee bit
nervous, in case he'd underestimated this here buck Mack. However, when we saw him again, he looked
even more stupid than he'd looked in the pub.
So Herby’s confidence soared sky-high again and we was sure that he'd
win, on account of Mack's obvious dumb thickwittedness.
But jaysus, what a kip it was
inside! Man, it was all dark and cowl,
with puddles of water (or maybe it could have been piss) on the flooer and the
stench of the place near made us puke.
Well Mack and his witness was that cowl and unfriendly, they didn't even
say “hello” til us. But not only that,
there was a terrible malignant evil air about him and his eyes never quit
glintin’ at us in the gloom.
“Now no chaytin’!” he growled at Herby, “or
I'll break your back with a shovel!!”
And to demonstrate his point, he smashed a shovel down on til the table
with such force, that he broke the shaft of it intil skittereen. And that sorta left us in no doubt, that
whereas Mack might only have had the brains of a mouse, he certainly had the
strength of an ox.
Now Herby was about to tell
Mack, that he didn't want to see no chaytin’ from him neither, but then he had
second thoughts and wisely he said nawthin’.
But despite everythin’, I still felt very confident that Herby'd
annihilate him and sure enough, he won the first two games so aisy, that we
couldn't hardly stop ourselves from laughin’ in Mack's big stupid face. Jaysus, I started havin’ day dreams about how
great it was gonna be back home in the pub, bummin’ and blowin’ about this here
match and how Herby'd brought that ignorant whoer Mack down til size and
humiliated him. And bejaysus, the
booze'd be flowin’ and things'd be absolutely marvellous.
“So you've won the first two games,” big Mack
growled quietly. He then stood up and
went intil the next room. Herby smiled
round at me and quietly rubbed his hands, for he was sure victory was
nigh. But then big Mack came back intil
the room and he sorta spoiled things by layin’ a shotgun down on the table and
glarin’ malevolently at Herby. Now it
wasn't that Mack actually said nawthin’, but the look on his face said
enough. And so needless to say, Mack won
the match 3-2.
Now although big Mack gave
Herby an awful baytin’ at the draughts in those last three games, it was
nawthin’ leck the baytin’ he got when he arrived home. Bejaysus, when Rita discovered the
housekeepin’ and rent money all gone, she went clayne mad and decided it'd be a
good time for to change Herby's features - with a saucepan!
ANOTHER CAR ACCIDENT
Now Bert was
a mountain of a man with a paunch that big, that if he was in a pub, he could
rest his pint glass on his belly, just leck it was a wee table.
Well anyway,
one day a lough of years ago, he asked me if I’d leck to go til the market with
him and I agreed. However, I wished I
hadn’t bothered, for I soon realised that he was, without doubt, the worst
driver in the whole of Northern Ireland.
Man as we
raced along, Bert kept lookin’ at me, as he mumbled and muttered away about this, that and
the other. Well although I did plenty of
noddin’, I didn’t actually hear one word what Bert said, because I was that
scarred. And the odd time that he
actually let me get a word in edgeways, I immediately took the opportunity to
talk about the road and the cars ahead, in the vague forlorn hope that maybe
he’d take the odd look at them, rather than me.
Well anyway, the inevitable
eventually happened and Bert didn’t notice the bend up ahead and over the ditch
we went. Man, there was fierce a bangin’
and crashin’ and I was sure I was for the white sheet. But then the car eventually came til a halt
on its side. But the amazin’ thing was
that neither of us had a single scratch on us.
However, Bert suddenly
panicked and in his mad rush to get out, he stampled all over me. Bejaysus, but his feet was goin’
everywhere. Well HE got out okay, with
not one single mark on him ..... but sure the eegit left me with cracked ribs,
a smashed arm and a broken jaw!
POOR NORMAN
Now I once knew a man called Norman and although
he'd been the only cub amongst a whole squad of cutties and even though times
had been desperate hard for his whole family, he'd been relatively happy durin’
the early years of his life. This was mainly because his da Joe had given him
so much love and attention and some of Norman’s fondest memories was of the
many times he'd sat on his da’s knee, listenin’ til all Joe’s interestin’ and
fascinatin’ tales, about where he’d been and what he’d done.
But then one day, Joe went out for to get a
packet of Woodbines and that was the last they'd seen or heard of him for manys
the long year. Poor Norman'd been so
absolutely heartbroken by his da’s unexpected departure, that he suddenly
developed a fierce bad stutter, which stayed with him for the rest of his days.
Well shortly after Norman's da disappeared, his
ma went all bitter. Man, she turned all
peculiar and in next til no time, Norman started havin’ a real hard time, what
with her constantly naggin’ away at him and his sisters forever gernin’ at him
and mockin’ his stutter. But then, when he got up a bit, the Second World
War started up and bejaysus, it gave him a real good excuse for to get
away. So he left home and joined up for
to do his bit for King and Country.
Now the first thing that happened til him when
he joined the army, was that he was sent over til Glasgow for trainin’ and one
day, while he was havin’ a drink in a pub in Glasgow city centre, who did he
meet by an extraordinary coincidence, but his da Joe - for the first time in
nearly 15 long years!
Bejaysus, when Joe realised who he was, he
immediately threw his arms around him, burst intil tears and started gushin’
and slabberin’ so much over Norman, that he started bawlin’ too. And bejaysus, this went on for about 10
minutes, until Joe drew back and told Norman that he was bustin’ and that he
just had to go til the gents, but that he'd be back in a tick, let there be no
doubt about that at all, at all. But the
useless whoer never came back and sure poor Norman never ever saw him again, no
never no more.
But sadly for Norman, his luck didn’t improve
none and the next unfortunate thing was that he married a desperate owl targer
called Maggie. Bejaysus, things quickly
got so bad, that there was hardly a day went by, that she didn't launch some
sort of an attack on him and it was durin’ one of these vicious assaults one
night, that she stuck a fork intil Norman's left eye. And so it was a glass eye
from then on for poor Norman.
However, it was often said that Norman's glass
eye was not actually a new one, but had in fact belonged til some other buck,
who’d also had a glass eye. Now from
what I’ve heard, when this here other boyo'd died, they'd apparently took the
glass eye out of his head, gave it a wee bit of a wipe and then popped it intil
Norman's empty eye socket, which probably explains why Norman’s glass eye was
brown, whereas his real eye was blue.
But then one day, Maggie fell ill with pneumonia
and despite all the bad things she'd ever done til him, Norman was worried sick
about her. Now although he had to
continue goin’ til his job, he wasn't really fit to do much good work for
frettin’ about her. So he
eventually went til his boss to explain the whole situation til him, in
the hope that he'd let him go home and nurse her. But his boss was a hard, cowl sort of a
whoer.
“Look Norman,” he said, “many people get ill,
but work must go on.”
Well anyway, Maggie's pneumonia got worse and
she became so bad, it seemed leck she was on the hinges of death. So Norman went and explained the whole
situation til his boss and then asked him for a day off work.
His boss immediately shook his head.
“Naw, you can't have any time off,” he
growled. But then he had second thoughts
and decided that because Norman was such a damned good reliable worker, he
shouldn't be too hard on him and that he should instead show him wee bit of
leeway.
“But I tell you what Norman,” he said, “if she
does die, you can have half a day off to bury her.”
WEDDIN’ PRESENTS
I’ll never forget Herby's weddin' til Rita all
those years ago. Man on the mornin’ of
the big day, I mind wakin’ up with a huge grin on me chops. Then, after jumpin’
out of bed with a buck lepp, I decided that since it was gonna be such a big do
and I was gonna be Herby's best man, I'd better take a wee bit of a wash, as
cowl as the water was and maybe have a wee bit of a shave as well.
Later as I was havin’ me breakfast, I couldn't
help but smile when I thought about Herby.
Bejaysus, what sort of a header was he anyway. I mane, Rita wasn't even expectin’ and yet
there he was marryin’ her! But what made
it even worse, was that she hadn't got no money and no man in his right mind
would ever marry a woman, unless she had a good figure - a good figure in the
bank that is. Aye, Herby should have had
a wee bit more wit. But then again, one
night when he was full of porter and doin’ a whole pile of slabberin’ and
hashin’, he'd tolt me that he loved Rita, which was a real peculiar thing for
him to say, because them days, real men leck us didn’t ‘fall in love’ and say
soppy things leck that!
But what really made me smile, was the prospect
of seein’ him kissin’ his future mother-in-law owl fat Fanny after the
weddin'. Aye, that was gonna be a sight
worth seein’ all right, for Herby'd once tolt me, he'd rather kiss a sow's arse
than that miserable owl battleaxe. As
for Rita, although Herby wasn't a bad fella, I just couldn't understand what
she saw in him. I mane he wasn't really
good for nawthin’ but drinkin’, smokin’ and generally arsin’ about, which
good-livin’ religious people leck her and her family normally looked down on.
Well anyway, later on when I arrived at Herby's,
he was in fierce bad form and his face was so white, that it looked leck a
vampire bat must have been at him durin’ the night. Now I was more than akinda worried, for I was
afeared that if he wasn't fit to go through with the weddin’ ceremony, then
they'd call the whole show off and there'd be no weddin’ reception and
therefore no free booze nor eegitin’ about.
So I decided there and then, that no matter what, I was gonna get Herby
up til the church and so I went out of me way to cheer him up and reassure him
and do all that other owl nonsense that a best man best does.
Now after a brave bit of footerin’ and faffin’
about, we was eventually ready to layve the house. But that's when Herby's damned nuisance of a
ma suddenly decided she wanted to show me all the weddin’ presents. Now because I was tryin’ to be asorta civil
on Herby's big day, I didn't tell her that she could go stick them up her arse
for all I cared. And so I gritted me
teeth and follyed her intil the parlour.
But bejaysus, I couldn't hardly believe me eyes! There was stacks and stacks of things that
must have cost a fortune and broken the hearts of a lot of the whoers, who'd
had to stump up to buy them.
“They're very nice,” I said, tryin’ me best to
sound enthusiastic. But really I was
thinkin' “what a desperate waste of good drinkin’ money!” However, this whole display did give me an
idea and I decided there and then, that if any girl I was goin’ out with ever
became a baker and got a bun in the oven, I'd sicken a few arses, let there be
no doubt about that at all, at all. I'd
invite 1000 guests and get 1000 weddin’ presents, which I'd immediately sell
secretly. Then I'd give all the guests
tay and buns at the reception, which'd only last 10 minutes, cos I'd have to be
on me way for to catch a plane til the Caribbean - all on me lone of coorse, with me pockets
full of loot from the sale of the weddin’ presents. Aye, they'd all laugh plenty when they'd hear
about the bun in the oven. But,
bejaysus, I'd get the last laugh.
Needless to say, I never got carryin’ out me
plans, for the bowel Mildred scuppered them all!
PAINFUL MEMORIES
When I was a young man, I
used to know a cub called Freddy. Now he
was an only child and he lived with his da, his ma and his granny in a wee
cottage away up the mountain and from what he tolt me, it was a rough sort of
arearin’. But what made matters worse,
was that if he ever got up til any badness, he didn’t get just one baytin’,
leck what any other cub would have got off his da. Naw, he always got three baytin’s – a bad one
from his da, a worser one from his ma and an absolutely odejious one from his
granny, who always had an owl knobbly blackthorn stick in her hand and who was
nearly as big a brute as his da, who was a real mountain of a man, let me tell
yee.
Aye, bejaysus his da was
one desperate strong buck and apparently one time, when he was ploughin’ a
field with his horse, my goodness, but if the owl nag didn't go and die on
him. Now accordin’ til what I’ve been tolt,
Freddy’s da was totally undeterred by this and my goodness, but if he didn't
just pull the deed horse til one side, put the reins over his own shoulders and
pull the owl plough up and down the field himself, till the job was done!
Well anyway, one of the
things that Freddy’s parents taught him was that he should always be
honest. However, he sometimes got
desperate confused. For example, there
was that time when he found a ten bob note on the road and instead of spendin’
it on sweets leck any other normal cub would have done, he took it home for to
proudly demonstrate his honesty til his parents. However, when he went to give it til his ma,
bejaysus she near bust his head with a skite, before rippin’ the money out of
his hand and callin’ him all sorts of bad names.
Then there was that other
time he went til the dentist with a damned bad toothache. Well anyway, he was sittin’ on his own in the
waitin’ room, when he noticed there was a quid lyin’ in a wee dish on the
table. The next thing that happened was
that this other cub came in and sat down for to wait his turn to be
tortured. Now Freddy didn't pass no
remarks on this cub and instead, he closed his eyes and began to day-dream and
after disappearin’ intil his own wee world, he became totally oblivious til
whatever activity and any other comin’s and goin’s that occurred in the waitin’
room. However, it was just after he'd
scored the winnin’ goal in the cup final at Wembley and become a real hero,
that he heard the sound of the drill from the surgery next dooer, follyed by
someone scraymin’ out in agony. Ohhhh bejaysus, that certainly brought him back
til reality real quick.
Well anyway, the next thing
that happened, was that the other young cub jumped up from his sayte and rushed
fierce fast towards the dooer, lookin’ desperate scarred.
“Jaysus, I'm not stayin’
here to get kilt!” he cried before fleein’ out.
Well although Freddy would have lecked to have done the very same thing,
he praised himself for stayin’ and not bein’ a cowardly wee whoer leck that
other cub. But that's when he noticed
that the quid was gone from the wee dish on the table, obviously nicked by that
other wee skitter who'd just fled.
Bejaysus, Freddy went bright red, even though there was nobody else in
the room. He knew he was in a desperate
pickle, for he realised that they'd be bound to think it was him that had stole
the money, especially when they’d search him and find the quid in his pocket,
that his ma had given him that mornin’ for messages.
My goodness, but did he not
feel sick with fear. But then he
suddenly got a great idea for gettin’ himself out of this hank and avoid bein’
accused of bein’ a thief. So he took out
the quid that was in his pocket and he put it in the wee dish on the
table. But then when the nurse came in
to call him intil the surgery, she noticed the quid.
“I must be goin’ mad,” she
exclaimed, “I could have sworn I lifted that not ten minutes ago.”
Well the dentist, he took
out two of Freddy’s teeth that mornin’ ...... and when he got home in the afternoon,
his ma knocked out three more!
PUB WITH NO BEER
One mornin’ many moons ago, when I arrived down
in Joey’s pub, I found him lookin’ desperate despondent.
“And
what’s the matter with you theday?” I asked him.
“Och, me
owl whoer of a da’s got that fed up with me actin’ the eegit the whole time,
that he wont sign no more cheques,” he replied, “so I can't get no more stock
in.”
“What! A
pub with no beer! What a nightmare!!” I
exclaimed.
“Aye, I
know,” he said, “it’s terrible depressin’.”
“Och, but
maybe there’s no need to be worryin’ too much,” I went on, “he’s probably only
bein’ awkward ..... but his love of makin’ money’s that great, sure he’ll
relent in no time at all ..... wait till you see.”
“Bejaysus, I hope you’re right,” said Joey
mournfully. And with that, we had a
couple of stiff drinks for to comfort us.
Well I was wrong and his owl da didn’t relent
and it wasn’t too long until the pub began to run desperate low on various
types of drink. But things really came til a head a couple of days later. Aye, it was a memorable mornin’ that! When I got intil the pub just after Joey had
opened the back dooer, man did I not have a damned bad hangover and was I not
dyin’ for a cure! However, I could see
there was no beer left.
“A
whisky,” I said when I got up til the bar. But Joey looked at me sadly and
shook his head.
“There is
none.”
“Well a
vodkey then.” Joey shook his head again. I frowned and went on to ask for
various other types of drink - but in vain. Then with a weary tone, I asked for
a gin. Joey’s eyes lit up. Aye, there was a drop of that left. So he set up a half'un til me. Then he took a
look at the gin bottle and noticed there was just enough left for one more
half'un.
“Well,” he said, “I might as well join you.” And he put a glass up til the optic and
poured out the half'un. And bejaysus, he swallyed it with one gulp.
Well just as I was finishin’ me half’un of gin,
all the other boys came in and rolled up til the counter. But sure there wasn't
a damned drop of anythin’ left in the whole place and the shelves was all bare.
Now although they stayed on for a lough more minutes, there somehow didn't seem
to be much point in hangin’ around. And
after we all left, Joey shut the dooers of the pub ..... for the very last
time.
THE CUP
FINAL
Bejaysus, I mind the time many moons ago, when
our wee town’s football team got through til the football cup final. But then how could I forget! Aye, on the day
of the match, the whole place was buzzin’ with activity. Bejaysus, everyone was
desperate excited and there was a whole load of cheerin’ and shoutin’ and
laughter reverberatin’ up and down the streets and the pubs was all packed full
of people, chattin’ excitedly and boozin’. Aye, everyone was on high doe, cos they
was all sure that this was gonna be one of the biggest days of their lives. And
why not too! After all, what our wee town's football team had achieved was
absolutely marvellous and never before in all their whole history, had they
ever got so close til achievin’ such glory as this.
Well it soon became clear that nearly everyone
was goin’ til the match and that our wee town was soon gonna become leck a
ghost town. As for our star player
Robbie and the boys, they got together in the backroom of Billy's pub for to
discuss tactics and bejaysus, the butterflies was flyin’ all round the whole
place, as the players began to ate their nails and get desperate nervous.
But at long last, the big moment eventually
arrived and they and nearly the whole rest of our wee town got intil their cars
and buses and whatever else and headed off in a big toot-tootin’ cavalcade and
my goodness, but everyone was really enjoyin’ the whole carnival atmosphere.
Now there was however, one slight disappointment
regardin’ the cup final. Because of work bein’ carried, the final couldn’t be
played at the usual county stadium with its stand and all its facilities and
instead, it was bein’ played on a field out in the middle of nowhere. Well, although the playin’ surface on this
here field was actually extremely good, there was absolutely no facilities and
all the players and match officials had to change in their cars. Even so, nobody from our wee town gave a
fiddler's damn where the match was bein’ played, just as long as our boys did well
and won the cup.
But when the match started, the supporters from
our wee town got the quare gunk. Bejaysus, within no time at all, our boys was
3 goals down and it looked leck there was no chance of the fairy tale comin’
true at all. However, Robbie and his teammates was all big hearted boyos and
gradually they fought their way back intil the game and early in the second
half, Robbie scored a fine goal from thirty-five yards. Then bejaysus, but if
he didn't go and score another superb goal about twenty minutes later, makin’
it 2-3.
My goodness, but the spirits of our supporters
really began to rise, cos not only was our boys beginnin’ to play really well,
but the other side was wiltin’ noticeably. Then their goalkeeper didn't look
where the hell he was goin’ and bejaysus, he collided with the goal post. Now them days, there was no such thing as
substitutes and after he was carried off, he was replaced by one of his team
mates on the pitch and he was obviously no goalkeeper. Man, he couldn't have caught a cowl let alone
the ball. Then bejaysus, the other side's best player lost the bap completely
and kicked one of our boys up the arse and my goodness, he got his marchin’
orders straight away. So it really did
look leck it was only a matter of time until our boys equalised.
But bejaysus, despite the fact that our boys was
so much on top, they was that anxious that they kept makin’ desperate blunders.
Even Robbie made a complete footer of things and bejaysus, even when he had an
open goal in front of him, my goodness, but if he didn't loss his head and kick
it over the bar (the ball I mane, not his head!).
What also wasn't really helpin’ matters was the
referee. Now at the start of the match,
he'd been sharp enough and had kept up with all the play. However, as the match progressed, he slowed
up so much that he was hardly movin’. I in fact wondered if he was injured or
somethin’, cos he had this funny pained sorta look on his face and it seemed
leck as if his mind was elsewhere. Well
anyway, this here eegit turned down two really strong penalty appeals from our
boys and bejaysus, some of our lads was beginnin’ to wonder if the whoer hadn't
been bribed or somethin’.
Well anyway, things was gettin’ really desperate
and it looked leck, that despite all their pressure, our boys was just not
gonna be able to make it count. But then, with less than a minute to go, Robbie
got the ball in his own 18 yard box and he bate 5 tackles as he raced towards
the other team's goal. And then bejaysus, but if he didn't go and hit the ball
leck a rocket past their goalman, nearly bustin’ the net. Jaysus, our wee
town's players and supporters went clayne mad, for they was all sure that
Robbie had hit the equalizer to make it 3-3.
And my goodness, everyone started jumpin’ up and down and throwin’ their
caps in the air and whoopin’ and cheerin’ with excitement.
Well extra time now seemed inevitable and there
was no doubt in anyone's mind, but that our wee town would go on to win the
match, because our lads was all so fit and so much on top and the opposition
had only 9 players. However, while all these here celebrations was goin’ on,
the referee sorta spoiled it all by disallowin’ the goal, because Robbie'd been
“offside”. He then blew the final whistle and before anyone could do a hate, he
set off leck a greyhound for the far corner of the pitch where his car was
parked and bejaysus, he was intil it and off before anyone could get the chance
to take him by the throat. And that was the end of our wee town's dream and
bejaysus, everybody was absolutely devastated.
Needless to say, when everyone got back til our
wee town, they was all totally distraught and although there was a great dayle
of discussion and postmortemin’ in Billy's, nobody could make it out at all,
how the referee could have possibly disallowed such a perfectly good goal and
to be quite honest, bejaysus but he was one damned lucky man, to have escaped
with his ballocks at all!
But then later on that night, the truth
eventually came out, when word filtered back til our wee town as til why that
useless clift of a referee had disallowed Robbie's goal. Apparently the referee
had confided til a friend after the match, that although neither Robbie nor any
of our other bucks had been offside, there was absolutely no way he could
possibly have allowed the goal and therefore extra time. You see, the trouble
the referee had was that he was absolutely bustin’ for to go for a number 2 at
the time and because there was no toilet in sight, nor no bushes for him to go
behind, he'd had no choice but to blow the final whistle and flee before he did
it in his shorts.
Well needless to say, when this was revealed,
there was total uproar and a whole pile of effin’ and damnin’. But I went one step further and I rang up a
locial newspaper reporter, for to tell him what had really happened at the
match. And while I was spaykin’ til him, I suddenly had this vision of what the
headlines on the back page of the follyin’ week's edition of the newspaper
would proclaim: “Referee's dire need of a shite denies locial football team
chance of an historic victory in the cup final!”
BROKEN GLASS
I mind somethin’ that happened til me many moons ago, when I was but a
young man, still livin’ with me ma and da.
Aye, it all happened in the very early hours one mornin’, while I was
lyin’ in the dark havin’ a feg in bed. Next thing, I heard this noise from
outside. So I got up out the bed and
went over til the windy for to look out and see what was what. Well Jaysus, I couldn't hardly believe me
eyes, for down there in the gloom outside, I saw this shadowy figure creepin’
out of the backdooer of our house and as he duked across the back yard, I could
see that he had our TV in his arms.
Well bejayasus, I was just about to hurl up the windy, stick me head out
and start bawlin’ at the top of me voice: “Oy you, you feckin’ bastard, where
the hell do you think you're goin’ with our TV!”. But then I suddenly remembered where I was
and that really, there was damn the much I could do at all. I mane, what could I do! You see, I was in the bedroom of me next
dooer neighbour Duggie!
Now if you’re wonderin’ why I was there, it was because when I larned
that Duggie’d be away on an all-night fishin’ expedition, I’d decided to take
the opportunity to slip intil his house after midnight, for a wee bit of a
liaison with his wife Emily (an owl flame), without Duggie nor nobody else
knowin’ damn all about it. So I couldn't
very well start shoutin’ and roarin’ and drawin’ attention til meself, now
could I! So there was damn all I could
do, except watch as this here buck disappeared down the back alley with our
TV.
But what sorta really vexed me was that the whoer hadn't even had to
break in. Unfortunately I'd left the
backdooer unlocked, on account of it never havin’ crossed me mind, that there
might be some useless whoer hangin’ around, waitin’ for the opportunity for to
rob us and as a result, the rogue had literally just walked intil our house,
through the backdooer I'd left unlocked.
Well I knew right away that this might take a wee bit of explainin’ til
me owl ma Maud and also til the cops, when they came along. So I crept home, with me heart goin’ leck the
clappers. Then, with the aid of a
cushion to muffle the noise, I broke a small pane of glass near the lock in the
backdooer as quiet as I could, before creepin’ up til me bedroom, desperate
thankful that I'd woke nobody up.
But unfortunately, I larned the next mornin’ that I hadn't been half as
cute as I thought I'd been, for the thievin’ whoer had made a few return trips
durin’ the rest of night and almost clayned us out! Needless to say, owl sourpuss Maud was
absolutely ragin’ and went on and on about how times had changed and about
there not bein’ any half-dacent people left round our wee town and all that owl
shite!
As for me, I was mighty relieved that just for once, owl Maud's venom
wasn't all bein’ directed at me.
However, when Sergeant Carrothers came up for to investigate this here
crime, I began to feel fierce unaisy, on account of the Sergeant repeatin’ over
and over again how odd it was, that the broken glass from the backdooer was
outside the house rather than inside. So
I made me excuses and left, for I knew that as thick as she was, it'd only be a
matter of time until the penny'd drop with owl Maud and that’s when she'd start
askin’ some very, very awkward questions, about this here broken glass!
GOOD TURN
I mind one time in me late teens, when there was dance in the locial
hall, which I wanted to go til. Now
although I had enough money for to get intil this here dance, I didn’t have
nawthin’ for to buy a drink and the thought of goin’ til a dance sober was out
of the question. But then lady luck
smiled on me. Aye, some stupid eegit had
left a dozen bottles of Gold Label beer on the back sayte of his car, which was
unlocked. So I had them out in a flash
and was away with them behind the hedge quicker than a cat'd lick its
arse.
Now I didn't feel all that guilty about staylin’ the beer. On the contrary, I actually felt I was doin’
the boyo a good turn. You see, if I’d
let him drink all that Gold Label himself, sure his hangover the next day would
have been absolutely awful. So although
I knew he'd initially be a touch annoyed when he found the bottles gone, he'd
eventually end up bein’ thankful til me, for doin’ him this here kind favour of
sparin’ him from havin’ a desperate bad hangover the next mornin’.
And while I sat in the bushes drinkin’ all this boyo’s beer, I toasted
his good health with every bottle. Then, when I'd finished drinkin’ them all, I
decided that because I was feelin’ generous, I'd take the empty bottles back
til the car, so that the buck could get the deposit back on them the next
day. So there you are, I’m not really
such a bad whoer after all.
A CUT ABOVE
Now there's no bigger eegit than the whoer, who thinks he's a cut above
everyone else and Brian was one such hateful eegit. When he left school, he claahed about on a
neighbour's farm for a lough of months, but because he was so uppity and
thought he was a bigshot, he decided to go til an agricultural college across
the water in England. Well we was
surprised when we heard that they'd acepted him, on account of him bein’ such
an eegit, but we was glad at the same time, cos it meant we'd be shot of the
whoer for a couple of years, for none of us lecked him one wee bit.
But you should have seen him when he came back. Jaysus, not only would he not look at nobody
round our wee town, but he spoke with this here funny posh accent. However, he surprised us no end when he
quickly got himself a job as landsteward on JJ’s big farm. But sadly for him, things went akinda wrong
for him on his very first day at work.
Now instead of arrivin’ up at JJ’s farm in ordinary workin’ clothes,
leck what any other half-sensible man would have done, bejaysus but if he
didn't turn up wearin’ a suit, a tie and a trilby hat. Aye, and he was equipped with a clipboord and
pen besides! Sure it'd have made you
laugh to see him stridin’ about leck a rooster, ignorin’ the other farm workers
(cos they was beneath him leck) and writin’ a whole pile of notes on his
clipboord.
Well anyway, he came across this here cow lyin’ down in one of the
fields and bejaysus, he was real stuck as til what to do about it and although
he scratched his head plenty and mumbled a whole pile of owl medical drivel
about maladies that strayke cows down, the genius just couldn't come up with no
answer. So he had no choice but to call
the vit. Luckily for Brian however, the
vit was near til hand and soon appeared.
Well the bowel Brian filled his ear with a whole load of owl nonsense,
as til what he thought was wrong with this here cow and the vit waited
patiently until he'd quit his hashin’.
Then he took one quick look at the cow, before givin’ it a damned good
tight kick up the arse. My goodness, but
that was fierce good medicine, for the owl cow awoke with a start, jumped til
its feet and ran leck hell away. They
say you could have heard the other farm workers’ laughter for miles and
miles. However, one person who didn't
laugh too much was JJ ..... when he got the vit's hefty bill a wee while
later.
LIONESS’S DEN
Now when I was young and gallivantin’ wild about the country, one of me
best pals was a buck called Merv and although he often used to come avisitin’
til our house, I never ever went anywhere near his home. This was because
Merv’s mother-in-law Belle moved in with him and his wife Lucy shortly after
they got wed and bejaysus, she was far better than havin’ 10 hungry rottweilers
round the place for keepin’ folk away, let me tell yee. I mane, she had the most desperate ferocious
wicked temper that'd ever been seen in any livin’ baste and if anyone was ever
stupid enough to get her rizz, they'd immediately regret it, for man she was
the sort of woman, that if you annoyed her, she wouldn't hesitate for one
moment, from tearin’ intil you and batterin’ you all the whole way down the
road with a broom, or whatever else was near til hand. So that sorta deterred me or anyone else from
ever visitin’ Merv and ‘goin’ intil the lioness's den’ so to spayke.
CHURCHILL
One Sunday afternoon, I decided to go up and visit me owl mucker Sammy,
not so much because I really wanted to see him nor nawthin’ leck that, but
because I was feelin’ a wee bit druthy and in need of a cure and I sorta hoped
that Sammy'd either have a lough of bottles in the house, or some of that
homebrew stuff out in the garage. At the
same time, I didn't feel all that optimistic about gettin’ a sup, because I
knew from bitter experience, that if his ratbag of a wife Madge was at home,
there'd be absolutely no hope of gettin’ a lough of drinks. Aye, although she didn't mind the bowel Sammy
havin’ the odd bottle or two durin’ the week, she didn't allow no boozin’ at
all, at all on a Sunday, on account of her bein’ all good-livin’ and religious.
Now I’ve never had much time for Madge and it has never ceased to amaze
me, how she can keep someone leck the bowel Sammy under her thumb leck the way
she does. After all, he'd once been one
of the wildest men there'd ever been round our wee town and when he'd been
single and as free as a bird, me and him'd been the best of good drinkin’
partners and manys the rough session and evenin's great crack we'd had together
round the pubs.
Now them days, Sammy'd always been the best of good company, except that
is when I wanted to go out huntin’ weemen.
Aye, whenever I went out on the prowl, I always made sure I lost the
bowel Sammy first. This was because
Sammy’s that fat and ugly, that all the weemen always ran away off in the
opposite direction as fast as they could go, whenever they saw him comin’
towards them, with that funny look in his eye and his tongue hangin’ out.
Aye, the bowel Sammy was certainly no glamour boy and when it came til weemen,
he never had much luck at all, at all.
However, when he got til thirty, Sammy decided that he’d just have to
make a move in the marriage stakes before it was too late and one night, when
he had a fierce load of drink in him, he asked Madge to marry him. Well Madge wasn't no spring chicken neither
and on top of that, she’s as broad as she’s tall and only a wee bit better
lookin’ than one of them owl heifers you see atin’ grass out in the fields. She
wasn't therefore in no great demand by the boyos from around our wee town, so
not only did she immediately say "aye" til Sammy's proposal, but she
made damned sure that the weddin’ took place that quick, that Sammy didn't have
no chance to change his mind.
Well anyway, although everybody said that him and Madge wasn't suited
and that the marriage wouldn't last more than a lough of months and all that
sort of owl stuff, they actually settled down quite well together and to be
quite honest, there really wasn't that many pitched battles about the place at
all, at all.
However, things did start to go akinda wrong, when Madge got the notion
intil her head that she wanted a ba. The
first thing she did was put an end til Sammy's pubbin’ and midnight movies on
the TV etc and instead, it was early nights in bed and lights out. Man, she kept him at it ding dong night after
night, until the poor man was but a shadow of his former self and I'm not
coddin’ yee, he eventually ended up walkin’ about all the time with a kinda
permanent limp and his eyes half-closed.
But it was all no good, for he just couldn't do the business. (To be quite honest, nobody was really all
that surprised, because the both of them’s so fat, you'd wonder how it would be
physically possible for them to couple, connect or perform right at all, if you
see what I mane).
Well after a year or so of rollin’ about in bed without no joy, it
eventually began to dawn on Madge, that she wasn't never gonna kittle. And that's when she forgot all about havin’
chillder and got herself a little short-haired puppy dog. Now this here mutt was no bigger than a rat
and although she called him Churchill, it wasn't long til Sammy had another
name for him. Aye, when Madge wasn't
listenin’, he called the hound Sooner - cos he'd sooner shite in the house than
go outside.
Well anyway, Madge immediately took til traytin’ this here puppy dog
leck he was a wee ba, dressin’ him up in chillder's clothin’, puttin’ a wee
bonnet on his head and bootees on his feet and she was never done huggin’ him
and kissin’ him and wheelin’ him around in a pram and wipin’ his wee arse with
a tissue every time he did a wee job. On
top of that, she was never done sickenin’ everyone's arse by cooin’ and
cluckin’ and talkin’ til him leck he was a child. Bejaysus, Sammy absolutely hated this here
dog-child Churchill, because not only did he become number one in the house,
but Sammy ended up bein’ trayted leck some old mangy mutt himself.
Now as far as Madge was concerned, this here dog-child Churchill was
heaven sent and could do no wrong. However,
as far as the bowel Sammy was concerned, the damned hound wasn't no good for
nawthin’ but atin’, snorin’ and shitein’ round the house, which he always got
away with, without as much as a murmur from Madge. Aye, Madge loved that there hound, no matter
what he did and Sammy was the worst in the world, if he ever opened his mouth
agin him.
But what made it worser was that the mutt seemed to know that he was
tops and that Sammy was only number two, for if he ever came near Churchill,
the wee bastard'd growl at him in a strange mockin’ sorta way and stare at him
with a funny kinda smirk on his chops.
Aye, and as if that wasn't bad enough, sure Churchill also took over
Sammy's chair, slept in his bed, got fed before him and if he'd been fit to
read, sure he'd even have got the newspaper before Sammy as well. But last but not least, Madge wouldn't let
Sammy nowhere near her in bed when the dog was around, for fear of
"upsettin’ the poor wee thing".
But then one day, one of Madge's sisters came from afar for to visit her
for the first time in a long time and when she saw the way Madge was talkin’
and carryin’ on leck as if this here Churchill was a ba, she got fed up
(especially when Churchill nipped her on the ankle) and she whispered intil
Madge's ear, that if she wanted a real child, she'd be well advised for to have
another go at couplin’, but to "change the rooster this time”. But Madge
was so much in love with this here mutt Churchill, that she didn't seem to take
no notice of her sister's advice.
However some time later, when Sammy went away up the country for a lough
of days fishin’, this boyo Bronco was seen a few times creepin’ over Madge's
garden fence late at night and goin’ intil her house. Of coorse when he realised later that he'd
been spied, he put it around that he'd only been goin’ in for to see Churchill,
because, accordin’ til him, he was a dog lover too, just leck Madge. But who did the gonch think he was
coddin’! Sure we all knew rightly that
Bronco was no dog lover and that the only raison the whoer'd gone in there, was
for to sniff about Madge and to try and have his way with her, as fat and ugly
an owl sow as she was.
Well by a very strange coincidence, Madge announced that she was
pregnant a few weeks after Sammy arrived home from his fishin’ holiday. Sammy was real playsed at this here news, for
he was sure things'd get better now and that Churchill'd no longer be the king
of the castle in the home. But in fact
things only got worse and no matter what Sammy nor nobody else said or did,
Madge just didn't seem to be able to grasp the reality of the fact, that the
ever increasin’ girth of her belly meant that she was goin’ to be havin’ a real
child soon and that she should be givin’ all her attention til it, rather than
that useless hound. So Churchill
continued to remain number one.
Well the time eventually arrived for Madge to go intil the hospital for
to have the ba. Bejaysus, they almost
had to drag her there and of coorse, there was floods of tears when they tolt
her she couldn't bring the hound in with her and that he would have to stay at
home with Sammy. And when the doctors
came for to examine her, she wouldn't even look at them, let alone talk til
them, because she was pinin’ that much for her poor "child" Churchill
and frettin’ about the "poor wee baby" bein’ without its
"mammy" at home. And she rang
up Sammy at least ten times a day, for to ask how Churchill was gettin’ on and
if the poor wee mite was missin’ her and all that sort of sickly owl shite and
even though the dog was off its grub and sulkin’ and skulkin’ about the place,
Sammy reassured her as best he could, that he was lookin’ after her
"baby" real good and that he was fine.
Well despite her not co-operatin’ with the hospital nurses and doctors
and so on, Madge eventually popped out the ba. The hound somehow seemed to
sense this and that his ‘mammy’ would soon be comin’ back home, for he suddenly
dropped all his sulkin’ and skulkin’ and became very excited instead. He also
took til growlin’ at Sammy all the time again, because he seemed to know that
it wouldn't be long, until he'd be top dog again and that Sammy'd be back in
the ‘doghouse’.
Then a few days later, the big moment arrived and Madge arrived back in
the house with the new baby in her arms. The dog was so playsed to see her,
that he ran hither and thither and jumped up and down and barked and licked her
and wagged his tail. But he got the
quare gunk, for Madge clutched the new ba til her bosom and scraymed at Sammy,
for to "get that dirty flay-ridden bastard out of my house and away from
my baby!" Well Sammy didn't have to
be tolt twice and with the greatest of pleasure let me tell yee, he kicked that
there mutt up the arse and right out of the house.
The poor hound looked akinda stunned at this sudden reversal in his
fortunes and the totally unexpected loss of his ‘mammy’. Furthermore, things
didn't improve none neither, for the mutt was banished to spend the rest of his
days outside in the garage. As for Sammy, although he knew damned fine that the
child couldn't possibly have been his, he didn't give a damn - just as long as
he was shot of that bloody dog-child Churchill, once and for all!
Well anyway, to get back til the story, when I got up til Sammy's, I was
real playsed to find that bloody Madge was out somewhere bible-thumpin’ and
that Sammy was all on his own. But then
Sammy the whoer went and spoiled it all by tellin’ me that he hadn't one drop
of booze about the place and when he asked me if a cup of tay'd be all right
instead, I made me excuses and left. A
measly cup of tay indeed! What’s the
bloody world comin’ til at all!
FROM WHEN I WAS A POSTMAN
POSTY PHENOMENON
Now when I was a young man and first became a
postman round our wee town, I quickly became aware of a very peculiar
phenomenon. No matter how bad the
weather was - hail, rain or snow - and no matter how early or late I was, there
was always a few buckos waitin’ for me regular, outside their garden gates. At the same time, they didn’t never want to
let on that they was waitin’ for me and so whenever I approached them, they'd
always be fierce busy, tyin’ up their shoe laces, or examinin’ the tyres on
their car, or strokin’ a cat, or somethin’ leck that. Aye, and when I’d tap them on the shoulder
for to give them their letters, they’d always pretend to be fierce startled,
leck as if I’d taken them completely by surprise.
Now this all puzzled me a wee bit for a
while, cos I was akinda dumb at the start.
However, it soon dawned on me what it was all about. Aye, the fact of the matter was this, that
them bucks would have walked one million miles through all the thunder and
lightnin’ in hell for to get a holt of those there letters BEFORE their wives,
mothers, mothers-in-law or whoever else it was in the house that they was
afeared of. You see, the most of them
letters was real dynamite - leck final reminders about debts and loans - or
threats about revealin’ the truth about their other weemen - and things leck
that! And how did I know what was in
them letters? Because I opened and read
them all of coorse!
THE BOXER
Bein’ a postman is a great job, although it does
have one big sneg and that big sneg is the mutts. Aye, a lot of them are ferocious brutes and
when I first started deliverin’ letters, they used to come racin’ up til me,
growlin’ and barkin’ with their fangs all bared, all set to tear me til
pieces. But without goin’ intil any
detail, I soon got them educated, so whenever they'd see me comin’, they'd
cringe away out of sight, with their tails between their legs.
However, it wasn't always the
big mutts what caused the most trouble.
Aye, there was one house where they had this big boxer that was fierce
fond of sleepin’ and also this yappy little runt that was no bigger than a rat. Well, whenever I'd come up til this house,
the boxer'd never pass no remarks. But
that other wee whoer’d kick up such a racket, that the boxer'd feel obliged to
get up and have a go at me, just to get the wee runt to shut up its yappin’ and
layve him in pace so that he could get back til sleep again.
Well, it used to break me heart sortin’ that
boxer out, for although he was fierce ugly, there wasn't no harm in him. Naw, it was the other wee bastard that
nettled me. But unfortunately, I was
never able to get near enough til him, for to educate him.
POSTMAN POWER
The sneg about bein’ a postman on a country
round was that it meant me havin’ to ride an owl bike up and down hills in all
sorts of weather. But havin’ said that,
it was right up my street for there was no way the postmaster could keep tabs
on me and as a result, he never knew where I was, or what the hell I was up
til.
Now there wasn’t no first class mail them days
and more often than not, I wouldn't bother doin’ me full round at all. Instead I'd just do a wee bit of me round one
day and then another wee bit the next and so on. And if I was in a real bad way and in
desperate need of a cure, some days I'd do nearly nawthin’ at all. So if anyone was ever expectin’ a letter real
urgent and it didn't fit in with my scheme of things, then there was a damned
good chance, they'd have to wait an extra day or three for to get it. Aye, when I was out on the road, I could more
or less do whatever the hell I lecked and if I decided, after deliverin’ a
lough of letters, that I'd done enough for one day, I'd go ceilidhin’ until it
was time for to show me face back at the postoffice, throw in me bag and then
head off home.
Now although none of this was strictly legit, it
was, nevertheless, the only sensible way for me to operate, especially as the
most of me clients was farmers, who never got no mail worth talkin’ about
anyway. I mane, it was generally
nawthin’ but owl advertisements, or junk mail, or farmin’ journals or some owl
shite leck that, which the most of them whoers wasnee fit to read anyway and
which they only used for wipin’ their arses.
But bein’ a postman gave me a great deal of
power. Now I’m a desperate nosey sort of
a clift and I love gossip. So when
anyone ever gave me any gossip, I’d be all ears. I’d then pass it on til the next person I’d
meet, with a wee bit added on of coorse for to make it even more
interestin’. And whenever I felt leck
stirrin’ things up, I’d invent a wee story which of coorse’d spread leck
wildfire and cause all sorts of ructions.
Man, I had the whole country goin’ and it was the best of good crack,
let me tell yee!
Now although the most of me clients was dacent
enough souls, there was a few crabs I didn’t leck at all and some of them was
so mane, they didn’t give me nawthin’ at Christmas. Well that was a fierce foolish mistake for
them to make and I always got me own back, one way or another. For example, if any of them was sent a
Christmas parcel, I’d layve deliverin’ it til real early on a Saturday mornin’,
when I’d know the eegits’d still be lyin’ stinkin’ in their beds with a
desperate hangover and man, I’d go rat-tat-tattin’ at their dooers, until
they’d eventually come downstairs, all bleary-eyed. Man, you should have heard the grumblin’ of
them. But bejaysus, I never took any owl
nonsense off them! Aye, I was never slow
in educatin’ them and taychin’ them a few damned manners - the ignorant whoers!
THE McMUGGINS
I mind one time when I was a postman, there
was this family called the McMuggins, who lived off the beaten
track up a long bumpy lane in a derelict owl kip, which had a whole pile of the
slates missin’ off the roof and over half the windies broke. Well I hated goin’ anywhere near that
family with letters, for whenever I did, I never ever felt all that confident
that I was gonna come back alive, on account of them bein’ such a nest of
loonies.
They was supposed to be farmers, but sure
they couldn't even grow weeds let alone corn and in fact, there wasn’t much any
of them ever did as regards work, for they was always far too busy either
sittin’ around playin’ their owl flutes, or fightin’ and half-killin’ each
other. Aye, they was such a rough mob,
that on the night before their mother was buried, they got half-mad on poteen
and fought a pitched battle over her coffin in the house.
Now although they thought they was fierce good
musicians, they was actually no use at all. In fact, they was that bad, they’d have made
the wails of a banshee sound lovely. But
things sorta came til a head one time when a locial talent competition was
arranged and they was absolutely sure they'd win it. The bloody eegits!
Well on the night of the competition, they all
went except one brother Sludge, who wasn't the full shillin’, if you know what
I mane. He was a complete simpleton,
who, although about forty five, wasn’t hardly fit to dress himself, let alone
look after himself. Well anyway, the
others left him at home and went away til the contest, all dolled up as best
they could. But what a desperate
sight they was! The father, three sons
and two daughters, all stunted, ugly, hairy and smelly Frankenstein-leck
monsters.
Needless to say, when the results was announced
and they realised that they hadn't won, they went clayne mad and all hell broke
loose. They wrecked the whole place and
two of the judges ended up in hospital.
As for the McMuggins, they fled homewards. Mind you, the cops should have gone straight
after them. But seein’ as it was so dark
and knowin' what wild, unpredictable, fierce ruffians they was, the police
was terribly afeared of gettin’ done in and they decided not to move in
until dawn.
Well as soon as the McMuggins got home, a big
argument broke out and they was all shoutin’ and scraymin’ and blamin’ each
other for not winnin’. Man, there was
such a desperate racket, that the whole country could hear it and it was
obvious from all the commotion, that there was a fierce battle goin’ on. Meanwhile, while all this eegitry was
happenin’, Sludge the simpleton had apparently been sittin’ on his lone, quite
uninvolved, tryin’ to play his flute.
Now nobody's quite sure exactly how it all
happened, but it was said later, that the racket eventually so annoyed the
bowel Sludge, that he picked up the shotgun that was lyin’ in the corner and he
started blaychin’ off all round him, for to get a bit of pace to play his
flute. Well anyway, when the bobbies
came round the follyin’ mornin’, they found wounded bodies lyin’
everywhere.
Well it would appear from the reports goin’
round our wee town, that the McMuggins had apparently been so preoccupied with
fightin’ each other, that they'd been took completely by surprise and
seemin’ly, not one of them had seen who it was, that had blasted away at
them with their own shotgun. However, after
some real clever detective work, the cops eventually came til the conclusion,
that seein’ as Sludge was the only one of the family without a mark on him, he
must therefore be the guilty party. So
they arrested him and took him away.
Now the coort case was a real good show,
let me tell yee and everyone from about our wee town turned up for it. But sure Sludge didn't know what was
goin’ on, or where he was, or why he was bein’ dragged around the place in
handcuffs. Sure he was that confused,
that one day in the coortroom, he tried to play his flute when they took the
cuffs off him and he had to be restrained.
In fact, they had such difficulty in gettin’ the message through til
him, that the judge didn't want to hear ‘Danny Boy’, that they had to take the flute
off him. So he had no choice then but to
spend the rest of the case pickin’ his nose, belchin’ and smilin’ leck an ape
at the judge and jury.
Now because there was so many lies flyin’ around
and the whole thing so confusin’, the jury had no option but to eventually
acquit Sludge. This didn't displayse the
judge too much because, as he said later, it wouldn't have mattered whether
Sludge was guilty or not, because jail would have been no good for him and that
his own home was actually gonna be the best place for him. Mind you, although some people thought Sludge
had got off lightly, it was as clear as day til me and a lot of others,
that poor Sludge hadn't shot nobody and that really, if you'd handed Sludge a
shotgun, the first thing he'd have tried to do, was play it leck it was a big
flute.
Well anyway, I was always terribly afeared of
goin’ up round their place, especially when I had no bike with me for to
make a hasty retreat, if need be.
My view was, that if it really
was true that they didn't know who it was who'd shot them, then there'd be no
doubt but that they'd still be fierce curious as to find out who it was, so
that they could get revenge and if they suddenly took it intil their
heads, that maybe it was me who was the culprit, then that'd be the
end of me, let there be no doubt about that at all, at all.
Duke was the greatest blaggard ever I knew. Now although he lecked to have a real good
time, he never had the money to pay for it, so he relied on everyone else to
foot the bill. Man, there was hardly a
sinner he didn't owe money til, includin’ chillder and old age pensioners. My goodness, he'd even have borrowed money
off all the locial cats and dogs as well, if it'd been at all possible.
But you know, he was that sweet and plausible,
that you’d think he was the most respectable and honest man you’d ever met in
your whole life and boys a dear, was he not one slick operator. Aye, he'd come
up til you with a big sad face on him.
“I hate
to ask you,” he'd say in an urgent, pleadin’ tone of voice, “but I wonder could
you help me out.” Then he'd ask for money and if you looked in any way
reluctant, sure he’d turn on the tears, just as aisy as if he was turnin’ on a
water tap.
“It's not
for me,” he'd wail, “it's just that I've had to pay some bills and now I have
nawthin’ left to feed or clothe the chillder.”
Sure how could any dacent man refuse!
And you’d hand over the money.
“Ah God
love you,” he'd continue, “you've really saved my bacon ..... the kids'll ate
tonight and it'll all be down til you ..... God bless you.” Sure you'd nearly
be in tears yourself listenin’ til him. And when you’d watch him goin’ round
the corner clutchin’ your tenners and dryin’ his tears, you’d assume that he
was on his way til the nearest grocer's, for to buy grub for the kiddies. But sure the only place he was headin’ for
was the nearest pub. But to top it off, sure you never saw your money again.
But the worst thing he ever did was when he got
married. It was the biggest, flashiest
weddin’ that had ever been seen round our wee town. There was big cars hired
and a marquee, and a couple of bands and loads of fine grub, and the whisky and
champagne was overflowin’. Man, it was a
great day, a day never to be forgotten, especially by all those poor suckers,
who'd rented him the fancy suits and the big cars and the marquee and sold him
the booze and provided all the lovely grub and the two bands. Sure the cheques that Duke gave them all
bounced. And as for the cheque he gave
the smilin’ praycher, sure it bounced as well too.
Bejaysus, he was a terra. He must
have owed tens of thousands of pounds throughout the whole country and it used
to break me heart watchin’ him in action.
Them damned barmen'd refuse to give me even one bottle of cowl black
porter on tick and yet they'd lend that rogue £100 without even battin’ an
eyelid. Sure the man was no better than
a common thief.
Now although Duke'd been on the fiddle for manys the long year, neither
his wife nor his dreaded mother-in-law knew a hate about his shenanigans, which
was mainly because Duke intercepted all the letters that was on their way til
his house and as a result, they’d never got to see any of the countless bills
or poison pen letters and such leck.
However, that all changed when I decided one day, that the time had come
for the bowel Duke to get a wee bit of a come-uppance. Now because I was a postman at that time, I
had no difficulty at all in thinkin’ up a very simple plan, that I knew would
cook Duke's goose good and proper. So
when I met Duke in the mornin’s, I took til givin’ him only the junk letters
and keepin’ the dynamite ones til meself.
Then, when I'd got around 20 of these here ‘hot’ ones gathered up, I
waited one day until Duke'd driven off til work and then I pushed all these
letters (includin’ an anonymous one from meself) through Duke's rusty letter
box.
Well, when the bowel Duke drove back til his house that evenin’, he'd
hardly got out of the car, before his mother-in-law and the wife was out to
meet him. My goodness, it sure was a
great spectacle. That wicked witch of a
mother-in-law took intil smiggin’ Duke and blackenin’ both his eyes, while his
wife kicked his shins til bits. And man,
did they not ate the arse off him, as they battered him all the way down the
path intil the house! Jaysus, that night
the roof on that house never quit shakin’.
But that wasn’t all. Not only was Duke grounded, curfewed and put under
constant surveillance, but all his monthly pay had to go straight til his wife
at the end of each month. And there was
no pubbin’, nor arsin’ about neither. In
fact, his whole life changed completely and from then on, his routine entailed
him gettin’ himself off til work early each mornin’ and then gettin’ himself
back home early each evenin’, for excitin’ nights with the family and
mother-in-law in front of the TV. But as
far as I was concerned, it was damned good medicine for the whoer!
FROM WHEN I WAS A BARMAN
THE MOOCH
When I was a barman many moons
ago, one of me best customers was Bobby.
My goodness, but he was some boy and he always had a fierce druth on
him. The only sneg was that he never had
a bob in his pocket. But that didn’t
never stop him from bein’ the first in and the last out, every day in life.
Now if you’re wonderin’ how he
managed to drink the whole day without no money, well it was because he was the
flyest and most cunnin’ mooch you could ever possibly meet. Man, it wouldn’t matter who came in through the
dooer, he’d always greet them with this here big toothless smile and no matter
what they came out with, he’d agree with every word they said. And no matter how pathetic a joke they’d
make, sure he always laughed near fit to bust.
Aye, he had this great knack
of makin’ you feel you was the funniest and most inter-restin’ man in the whole
wide world and of coorse, this was why so many of his victims used to reward
him by buyin’ him drink. Sure he used to
drink that much free Guinness durin’ the day, that the buttons’d be near
burstin’ off his waistcoat by home time.
But bejaysus, he was some ungrateful wretch too,
let me tell yee. I mind one time, when
the days was gettin’ that short that the weeks was no length at all and winter
was creepin’ up on us real fast and Bobby’s owl mate Johnny began to feel
desperate sorry for him. So he collected
some of his owl jerseys to give til him, for to keep him warm through the
depths of winter. And when Johnny
brought them in til the pub all clayne and washed, man was Bobby not desperate
playsed to get them, although he was a bit leck a bear when Johnny left without
buyin’ him a lough of drinks as well.
But do you know, the whoer never wore none of them jerseys. Sure Johnny was hardly out the dooer, before
Bobby had them sold ..... and a couple of Guinness from the proceeds up on the
bar in front of him.
Well unfortunately, Bobby went
til bed one night and woke up deed the next mornin’. Now when it came til the day for puttin’ him
under the sod, there are those who swore blind, that when the hearse went by
the pub, they heard a knockin’ comin’ from the coffin, leck as if the owl whoer
was tryin’ to get out ..... to have one last one for the road.
AWKWARD CUSTOMER
On me first Saturday night as
a barman, I heard someone ringin’ the bell in the wee back room and when I went
to see who it was, I found owl Stan.
“Give us a bottle of stout,” he said. So I beetled off for to get this here bottle
of stout and when I returned, I thought that would be that.
“Give us a packet of 20 Senior Service,” he
said and off I went again.
“Give us a box of matches,” he said on me
return. Well I was gettin’ a kinda
frazzled by then, especially as all the druthy boys in the main bar was bayin’
for drink. But away I went wearily
again.
But bejaysus, that wasn’t the
end of it, for when I came back the whoer asked me for a bag of chayse and
onion cripps. My goodness, but was I not
gettin’ near the point of takin’ him by the throat.
“Now is that all?” I growled at him after I’d
got him the cripps. Well when he nodded,
I nearly dropped with surprise. But then
he went to pay and my God, what a palaver that was! He took out this owl purse and while I was
grindin’ me teeth near til powder out of frustration, he footered about in it
forever, until he eventually pulled out a dusty owl note. Now I had a lough of change in me pockets,
but bejaysus not near enough for the size of the note he handed me. So it was back intil the main bar yet again,
for to get him his change.
Now I soon larnt over the
follyin’ weeks, that Stan always came in every Saturday night at the same time
and that he ALWAYS asked for the same things.
So because I’d got that fed up runnin’ backwards and forwards for him, I
decided I’d introduce a new strategy for daylin’ with him.
So when I heard the bell from the wee back room
at his usual time the follyin’ Saturday night, I knew it was Stan and I put a
glass of stout on the tray, along with a box of matches, a packet of Senior
Service, a bag of cripps and a whole pile of change and out I went til the wee
back room, convinced I’d have him bate this time.
“Och, I think I’ll have a wee change tonight,”
he said. “Give us a bottle of Harp.” I
can’t repeat what I said next!
THE ROMANTIC PIGMAN
When I was a barman, I lecked the most of me
customers. But there was one I didn’t
leck at all and that was Smelly the pigman.
Jaysus, was he not one ignorant hallion!
He was more of a bullock than a man and if he'd been goin’ around on all
fours, sure it'd have suited him better.
And a mane, hungry whoer he was too, who’d have fought a ghost over a
halfpenny. But the worst feature about
him was the stink off him.
Aye, Smelly was an awful hard man to get near
til, on account of the smell of pigshite off him and if I was walkin’ down the
street and I saw him comin’ towards me, I’d turn on me heel and head off in the
opposite direction as quick as I could go, for the smell of pigshite off that
buck would have choked yee. But not only
that, whenever you’d meet him, the smell'd cling on til yee and no matter what
you did, you just couldn't shake it off.
Now although Smelly only ever came intil the pub
for a few minutes for a ginger cordial, the stink off him would remain for
manys the long hour after he'd gone out.
In fact, it was sometimes so bad that it'd hang round the place the
follyin’ day too.
But despite the stink off him, he somehow or
another managed to find a woman called Iris, who agreed to marry him. Of coorse none of us boys believed it at
first, because we didn't think it'd be possible for anyone to get within 3 foot
of him and survive. But it turned out to
be true enough. But not only that, the rumour was that the raison why she was
fit to be able get intil a clinch with the whoer and still survive, was because
the stink off her was even bigger than the stink off him, although nobody never
went close enough til the both of them for to find out for sure.
As for the weddin’, was that not a day and a
half! Nobody from about our wee town
knew a hate about it, because Smelly was desperate afeared of anyone comin’
along to watch the comedy act. So after
he picked up some relatives (probably from Belfast zoo), they all headed off
for Enniskillen, well away from the pryin’ eyes in our wee town. Then they duked intil the church leck rats
and the praycher got through the marriage service as quick as he could, before
disappearin’ intil the vestry to be sick (it was said later that the poor man
puked up at least three times and no matter what he did, the smell of pigshite
stuck til him for weeks after and not even ten baths was fit to clear it).
Although Smelly and his lot didn’t normally
drink, they got some booze after the weddin’ and then it was back til Smelly’s
hovel for the reception. Now because
they wasn’t used til drink, it didn't take too much to make them tipsy and it
was said afterwards, that some of them was actually heard to laugh and that
someone even got up and sang some owl traditional pigshite songs.
Well durin' the evenin’ Iris took huff and went
off til her bed. She was of coorse sorta
hopin’ the others'd soon layve and that Smelly'd join her on her weddin’
night. But the whole company all hung
on, drinkin’ and chattin’ about pigshite and things leck that and by Jaysus,
before they was finished, they was all as drunk as bags.
As for the bowel Smelly, at the end of the night
he was totally gone til the world and sure they had to carry him up the stairs
and heel him in alongside his new wife Iris, where he snored better than any of
his hogs. As for Iris, she lay beside
him, weepin’ and wailin’ and wonderin’ what she'd let herself in for. Aye bejaysus, it was all desperate romantic!
FISHERMAN
Many moons ago durin’ me days as a barman, this
here English fisherman came in. Well me
customers was all friendly sorta bucks and they turned to chat til him.
“Well,”
one asked, “did you ketch anythin’?” The
big Englishman turned round, lookin’ as black as thunder.
“I got
nothing but six bites ..... and five of those were from midges,” he exclaimed.
And then he ordered a stiff whisky.
“Umph,”
he went on, “I thought this was supposed to be fishing country ..... you know,
what with my air fare, hotel, hiring a boat and all that, I’ve spent over
£1,800 ..... and in all the time I’ve been here, I’ve caught only one measly
little fish ..... yes, that one tiny fish has cost me well over £1,800!”
Well one of me customers Cecil was a slow, droll
sort of a boyo and after thinkin’ about this for a wee while as he puffed on
his pipe, he turned til the Englishman.
“My
goodness,” he eventually said with a desperate solemn expression on his face,
“that one wee fish cost you over £1,800! ..... bejaysus, aren’t you quare and
lucky you didn’t ketch any more then!!”
RECRUITIN’ SERGEANT
When I was a barman, I heard manys the wee tale
and here’s one what tickled me fancy. Durin’ the last world war, this army
recruitin’ sergeant came lookin’ for volunteers round our wee town. Well he came intil the pub and when he saw a
bunch of the locial lads sittin’ round the table in the main bar, he bought
them all a lough of whiskies for to soften them up and after they'd had a brave
few, he got them all to sign enlistment forms there and then, before settin’
them up even more half'uns of whisky.
From what I was tolt, it was a great
session. But then things started to go a
wee bit wrong for the recruitin’ sergeant.
For a start, Dickie had a club foot and it was only when he was clumpin’
his way over til the dooer til the gents, that the sergeant noticed it. And then when he had a closer look at all the
other bucks that was sittin’ around him, he began to notice other wee things
what he hadn't spotted before - leck for example, Johnny's deformed hand and
Willy's wooden leg and Jimmy's glass eye and so on. My goodness, the sergeant jumped til his
feet.
“My God,
what am I doin!” he roared, “I'm signin’ up a battalion of cripples!” Well that was the end of their army careers.
Aye they’d served their country as soldiers for exactly 2 hours ..... and nine
half'uns!
One night
when I was a barman, this boyo came intil the pub and the first thing I noticed
about him, was that he had hardly any fingers on his hands. However, I didn’t pass no further remarks on
him until he asked me, if he could have a wee play on the piano in the
corner. Well his request intrigued me no
end. I mane, how does a man with no
fingers play a piano!
Well anyway, he amazed us
all by playin’ the piano very well and while we was chattin’ til him
afterwards, he began to tell us the whole story about his missin’ fingers.
“I lost them all down at the saw mill,” he
said. And with that, he held up his
right hand, that had only two fingers on it.
“Now do
youse see this hand ..... well one day I was cuttin’ this here lump of wood
with the electric saw and suddenly there was a swish and a swoosh and one of me
fingers landed in the sawdust on the flooer ..... well I'd been on the owl
gargle that mornin’ and I was that flootered with drink, sure I felt nawthin’
and instead of gettin’ all excited, I just looked at it all casual-leck and
didn't pass no remarks ..... however, the foreman came runnin’ up and my
goodness, was he not desperate agitated.
“How the
hell did you manage that?” he roared. So
I lifted me hand for to show him how it had happened.
‘Well I
just put me hand over here,’ I said til him ..... and my goodness, but if there
wasn't another swish and a swoosh ..... and oops there was another one gone.”
So I suppose the moral of the story is this:
never shake hands with a saw.
MONTY
Now when I was a barman, one of the pubs in our
wee town was owned by an owl buck called Monty, whom I wasn’t too fond of, on
account of him bein’ such a miserable, mane owl whoer, who had a hump on his
back that was full of nawthin’ but badness and no matter what drink you’d buy
off him, sure it always had a kinda bitter taste til it, leck as if the poison
that was in him, had dripped off intil your glass.
Now Monty had a son called Sonny, who'd left our
wee town many years before to join the merchant navy, but who then gave up the
navyin’ after a lough of years to come back home to help his owl da run the
pub. Now I don’t know where Sonny got his nickname from, but a more apt name
you couldn’t have found, for he had the sunniest disposition and the most
beautiful warm smile you’d ever see in your whole life. Aye, he was the total opposite of his
miserable owl da. Not only was he a smiley, cheery sort of a buck, but he
turned out to be a wild dacent man as well.
However, the strange thing was, that whenever
owl Monty was about, Sonny used to change personality completely. Aye, when he was on his own, Sonny'd be on
top form, laughin’ and jokin’, but whenever that owl gern Monty'd appear, with
that hump full of misery and badness on his back, sure poor Sonny'd go all
silent and tense. It was desperate
strange, for although Sonny was a fully grown man in his early forties, he was,
for some peculiar raison or another, desperate afeared of his owl 75 year old
da.
Now owl Monty was a real stickler for
cleanliness and all that owl nonsense and he was never done givin’ Sonny hell
and gernin’ on and complainin’ about the state of the shitehouse and how the
flooers in the bar needed sweepin’ and moppin’ and how grubby the glasses was
and other borin’ dreary things, that none of us customers gave two damns
about. Sure he had poor Sonny's arse
well and truly sickened.
But there was however the odd time that Sonny'd
stand his ground. Man, there was one
night when Sonny and me was in the bar enjoyin’ a wee chat, when suddenly that
owl crab Monty appeared. Well he hurpled
over til the freshly clayned glasses and in his usual sickenin’ way, he picked
out the only one that had a slight smudge on it. Jaysus, he held the glass up til the light,
scowled and then started mutterin’ about what a useless whoer Sonny was and all
that sort of owl shite. My goodness,
Sonny went clayne mad and he sent the whole glasses flyin’ with one swipe of
his arm. And they smashed intil
skittereen all over the flooer.
“Now see if you can find another dirty one!!!”
he roared. And I roared too - with
laughter.
COUNCIL WORKERS
Now one of me bar customers was a useless buck called Terry and before
he ended up on the dole, he'd managed, somehow or another, to get himself a job
with the council for a short while, despite the fact that he was one lazy
whoer, let me tell yee. Aye, people used
to say that Terry was the laziest man who'd ever wore black leather boots and that
you'd have seen more work in an aspro, than what was in him. Mind you, he was the steadiest worker the
council'd ever had. Aye, he was the steadiest, cos he never moved!
But then again, he wasn't much worse than the rest of them council
workers. Aye, there was that time, when
this here tourist from Amerikay was standin’ on the top of a hill surveyin’ the
scenery down below and he asked one of the locials what the black specks in the
distance was. Now although the locial
stared at them black specks for a brave long time, he couldn't see nawthin’
much, cos he hadn't got his specs on. So
he said til the tourist: “Look, if they're movin’, they're probably black crows
..... but if they're not movin’, they'll be council workers.”
But Terry was one of these wild dacent boyos who'd never see you stuck -
that's cos he'd always close his eyes first.
Aye, and was he not one crafty bugger.
Bejaysus, he'd let you buy him drinks all day, but if he had any money
on him, he'd never ask you if you had a mouth on yee.
Now although I know for a fact that he usually had a lough of bobs on
him, he nearly always let on he had nawthin’.
But on those rare occasions, when he actually definitely didn't have no
money at all, at all, he was fierce aisy talked til, let me tell yee! Aye, there's nawthin’ quietens a drunkard
down as quick as havin’ no money.
But with regard til further examples of his craftiness, owl Terry always
used to carry two packets of fegs around with him. Now one of these here feg packets never had
more than one feg in it and this was the packet he always produced when in
company, for to let on til the others that he had no fegs to offer round. With regard til the other packet, although it
always had plenty in it, sure it never saw the light of day when he was in
company. Aye, those that knew his
record, knew fine well that he had plenty of fegs on him, but that he was just
that fly, he didn't ever want to offer them around.
Well anyway, I’ve just heard that Terry’s retired from pickin’ up the
dole and changed til pickin’ up the old age pension instead.
DENTISTRY
One day when I was workin’ in the pub, the conversation changed from
slow horses and fast weemen til dentistry, after one of me customers came in
holdin’ his jaw.
“What's wrong with you Ernie ..... have you the toothache?” I asked him.
Ernie nodded.
“Well why don't you go til the dentist then?” I asked him. Ernie shook his head.
“Och, they're a waste of time.”
“Jaysus, you can say that again,” said Olly. “I mind one time when I was a wild young man,
I went til this here owl dentist with this ragin’ toothache ..... bejaysus, I
thought he was gonna solve me problem ..... but my goodness, he only made
matters worse ..... and talk about agony! ..... Jaysus, the whoer footered
about for ages, pokin’ and pullin’ and proddin’ and my God, but did I not
suffer.
“Well anyway, after a brave long time he eventually pulled a tooth out
at long last and I thought that that'd be that and it'd be all over ..... but
then when the whoer took a good long look at this here fang he'd just took out,
he had the bloody neck to say “oh-ho, but if I haven't gone and pulled the
wrong one out.” ..... well, I immediately saw red ..... and I leapt up from the
chair and I hit him such an odejious box in the mouth, that he landed on his
arse in the corner of the surgery, where he started spittin’ out teeth, all six
of them ..... “Now that's the way to take out teeth,” I tolt him, as I went out
the dooer.”
They say that it’s a good man
who sings at night, but a better man who sings in the mornin’. Well when I became a barman, although I did
plenty of singin’ at night, there was never a note out me in the mornin’. In fact, the only thought that was ever in me
head in the mornin’, was gettin’ a cure.
Sadly however, the cure often turned out to be worse than the disease.
Now although bein’ a barman
could be the best of good crack, it could be a desperate difficult job at times
too. Aye, there was many days, when
although I’d have the quare owl head on me, I had to be on me best behaviour
and no matter how bad I felt, I had to smile at everyone and agree with every
word they said, although there was manys the time, when I just felt leck takin’
them by the throat.
And then there was them boys, who told the same
owl borin’ story over and over again. Man, there was times when they’d be
relatin’ one of their favourite tales YET AGAIN and I’d often feel sorely
tempted to say:
“Och, for God’s sake! ..... would you give your
tongue a wee rest ..... sure I can finish the story for you!”
But I
didn’t stick at the barman job too long and it was all down til a wee chat the
bar owner had with me one day.
“Do you know,” he said til me, “I’m quare and
glad to have you workin’ for me ..... not only are you a brave good barman, but
you’re me best customer as well.”
Well this remark sorta started me athinkin’ and
when I did a few wee sums on me owl abacus, it dawned on me that I was spendin’
more money behind the bar than I was earnin’.
So I packed it in and went on me way.
I mane, would any of youse ones work all week and then hand all your
wages back til your boss!
CHARLIE’S WAR STORIES
WAR HOG
When I was down in the pub theday enjoyin’ a
lough of drinks with me mates, Charlie told us yet another one of his wartime
tales. A short time after he and his
mates landed in France, they got detached from the rest of their regiment and
bejaysus, but they went nine whole days without any grub at all. Man, they was leck foxes. But even so, their eegit of an NCO wouldn't
let them stayle nawthin’ to ate, for fear of upsettin’ the locials.
Well when this here NCO got hot lead for
breakfast one mornin’, that was the end of him and Charlie and his mates was
free. So because they was all so
ravenous, the first thing they did was hunt about for somethin’ to ate and
that’s when they spotted this here pig.
But sure they had to chase the grunter all round the whole place, over
fields, through ditches, streams and round every sort of obstacle you could
imagine, before they eventually managed to get a holt of the whoer.
However, that’s when the owner suddenly turned
up and bejaysus, did he not start croakin’!
So because he wouldn't see their point of view, they had to tie him up
til a tree and then they lit a big fire and put the pig in a pot on this here
fire. Bejaysus, the smell of him cookin’
was the most beautiful aroma that Charlie'd ever smelt in his whole life. But unfortunately they didn't never get atin’
the grunter, for this here shell came whizzin’ over and blew the pot and pig
about a mile up in the air.
D DAY
Charlie told us yet another one of his wartime
tales down in the pub theday. Now there were this private called Tommy who tolt
Charlie just before D Day, that because he was no hero, there was no way he was
gonna die for King and country and that he had this here plan, that'd ensure
him a oneway ticket back til blighty and safety.
Now his plan was this: as soon as the landin’ craft’d hit the beach and
they’d get out of it, he'd immediately drop down and pretend to be injured,
while all his comrades ran up the beach and later, when things'd cooled down a
bit and nobody was lookin’, he'd shoot himself in the arm and then be
repatriated as a wounded casualty, to sit out the rest of the war in safety at
home.
But things didn’t quite work out leck that. Aye, no sooner had the landin’ craft lowered
its front after hittin’ the beach, than a stray bullet came in and hit the
bowel Tommy right between the eyes. So that'd been the end of him and his
clever wee plan, before he even got one single foot ontil the beach.
BOG ROMANCE
When Charlie came intil the pub theday, he told
us yet another one of his wartime tales.
He was lyin’ in this here field
one day, when suddenly a shell came over and landed beside him and his
mate. Well the blast cut his mate in two
pieces, clayne as a whistle. But luckily
for Charlie, this poor mate of his must have taken most of the blast, for
Charlie was okay, except for his hands bein’ blown til pieces and as a result,
he eventually ended up in a hospital back in England.
Well things wasn't too bad, except that Charlie's hands was all bandaged
and tied up in a sling in front of him and although he didn't mind this too
much, it meant he couldn't wipe his backside after a number 2.
Now there was this lovely nurse called Libby there and Charlie took a
real fancy til her. However, he found it
near impossible to get chattin’ til her on her own. But then he got this idea and everytime he
felt leck a number 2, he'd wait until she was passin’ and then he'd call her
over and she'd take him til the toilet, where she'd untie his pyjama trousers
and let them drop and then when he'd finished heavin’ and hawlin’, she used to
wipe his bum. Aye, and as for the times
when she was off duty and he'd be bustin’ for to go til the loo, he'd hang on
somehow, till she came back on duty. It
sure was a novel way of coortin’ and very romantic. But his only regret was that he didn't have
no photies to remind him, of all those lovely moments they'd had together, in
the bog.
GRATITUDE
Here’s yet another one of Charlie’s wartime
tales, which follys on from the previous one.
Well after he’d recovered from his injury and left hospital, Charlie
spent a bit of layve in London and one night, these bombs started comin’
down. He of coorse knew that best thing
to do was hit the deck and that’s what he did.
But then he noticed this here woman who'd remained standin’ up, cos she
was paralysed with fear. So he ran over
til her and pulled her down til the ground.
Jaysus, the next moment a bomb landed nearby and the shrapnel flew right
over their heads and my goodness, but if it hadn't been for Charlie pullin’ her
down on til the ground, sure she'd have been shredded, let there be no doubt
about that at all, at all. Well she was
so desperate grateful til Charlie for savin’ her life, that she invited him
back til her place and when they got there, she made him some tay. Then
bejaysus, she suddenly threw her arms around him.
“I know how lonely and frustrated you soldiers must get these days,
bein’ so far away from home,” she said, “so I'd like to do you a favour .....
it's the best way I can show you my gratitude and repay you.” And with that,
she led him til the bedroom.
Well Charlie didn't argue, but judgin’ from the grunts, groans and sighs
of her, it soon began to dawn on him, that maybe it was him who was doin’ the
favour, rather than the other way round.
And afterwards, while they was havin’ a feg, she told him her husband was
away fightin’ in the war and Charlie couldn't help thinkin’ that while he was
there in bed with this woman, her poor husband was probably lyin’ out in some
wet trench somewhere, with shells landin’ all around him and with a photie of
her in his pocket.
REVENGE
When I was down the pub theday with me mates,
Charlie told us yet another one of his wartime tales. One time,
when he was back from the front and on a week’s layve in London, he took a
fancy til this here woman, who quickly made it obvious she fancied him too,
despite the fact that she was already engaged til this other buck, who really
loved her.
Unfortunately however, when Charlie started havin’ his wicked way with
this here doll, her lovestruck fiancé caught them at it and there was a fierce
fight. Sadly for the betrayed and heartbroken fiancé, Charlie was the stronger
man and he left the poor chap in hospital.
As for the woman, because Charlie'd had his way with her, he was no
longer interested in her and he just ditched her.
Now Charlie thought that would be that and the end of it all. However, when the fiancé eventually left the
hospital, he just couldn't get over the way the doll'd betrayed him and he made
it his ambition to catch up with Charlie some day and get even with him. So he spent all his time, energy and money
over the next 30 years or so travellin’ all around the UK, until at long last,
he eventually caught up with Charlie in Billy's pub in our wee town.
Bejaysus, he was frothin’ at the mouth, as he went on and on and on at
Charlie, about how he was goin’ to break every bone in his body and kick him
til pulp and this, that and the other. And when he eventually finished tellin’
Charlie just what he was gonna do til him, they both went outside and sure
bejaysus, Charlie bate the shite out of him all over again.
TALE FROM AMERIKAY
LAW OF THE JUNGLE
Now before
me cousin Wally went away til the United States of Amerikay, he was just as
wise and as sensible a man as meself.
But after livin’ there for 5 years, sure he’s now nawthin’ but a barmy
eegit, just leck the rest of the whoers over there.
Well anyway,
the last time I went over to stay with him for a holiday, bejaysus but if he
hadn’t got himself a whole pile of wild animals, which he kept out the
back. Now although things went well at
first, it wasn’t long until he started experiencin’ a whole pile of
problems. But it wasn’t the animals that
was givin’ him the bother. Naw, it was
the locial authorities who started givin’ him hell. Aye, apparently they was never off his back
for breakin’ this law or that law or the other law. In fact, it had got so bad and was gettin’
him down that much, that he was seriously considerin’ sellin’ up and movin’
himself, the wife and the whole wild animals elsewhere.
“But I just don’t know where to move til!” he
wailed. “No matter what State I think about goin’ til, it’s not too long until
I discover that it wouldn’t be no better there neither ..... for example, if we
moved til Atlanta, Georgia and I went out for a stroll on a Sunday with me
giraffe and I decided to pop intil a shop for to buy a newspaper, I’d have to
remember not to tie the baste up til a telephone pole or street lamp, because
that’s illegal there ..... on the other hand, if we moved til Milwaukee and I
was ever out with me elephant, I’d have to keep it on a leash at all times,
otherwise I'd be breakin’ the law there ..... as for Alderson, West Virginia,
it would be strictly agin’ the law to allow me lions to run wild in the streets
..... and do you know a monkey was once tried and convicted for smokin’ a
cigarette in South Bend, Indiana!”
“Well, would
it not be simpler,” said I “for you to get rid of all the wild animals and get
yourself an ordinary cat and dog instead?”
He shook his head disconsolately.
“Och Jaysus,” he groaned,
“sure there’s laws agin’ domestic animals as well that would sicken your arse
..... aye, in International Falls, Minnesota, did you know that it’s illegal
for a dog to chase a cat up a telegraph pole ..... then there’s that law in
Kirkland, Illinois that forbids bees from flyin’ over the town and if any bees
are caught breakin’ this here law, there’s stingin’ penalties ..... and in
Ohio, there’s a law that states that pets have to carry lights on their tails
at night ..... and a dog was once sentenced to life imprisonment for killin’ an
American governor's cat and ended up servin’ six years in jail.”
“Well maybe you should
consider layvin’ the US of A and settin’ up in some other country,” I said til
him. He shook his head again.
“Naw,” he gerned, “sure it’s no better in other countries ..... aye, a
cow was once sentenced til two days in prison in New Zealand for atin’ the
grass in front of the city courthouse ..... then there was that there French
lawyer Bartholomew Chassenée, who successfully defended a group of rats which
was charged with destroyin’ a barley crop in 1521 ..... when the rats failed to
appear in court to answer the charges, Chassenée claimed that his clients had
been intimidated by cats belongin’ til the prosecution and he demanded an
undertakin’ that the cats wouldn’t attack the rats on their way til court .....
however, when the prosecution refused to guarantee the rats' safety, the case
was dismissed ..... then in Basle, Switzerland, in 1471, a cockerel was found
guilty of layin’ an egg “in defiance of natural law” and was burnt at the stake
as “a devil in disguise” ..... and in 1670, the authorities of Munster banished
a plague of flays from the city, prohibitin’ them from returnin’ for 10 years
..... and in 1740, a cow in France was hanged after bein’ found guilty of
sorcery ..... and an Alsatian dog was arrested in the Spanish city of Seville
in 1983 for snatchin’ handbags from shoppers.”
Well anyway, that was some
time ago and the latest I’ve heard is that Wally’s got rid of all the wild
animals. This is because his missus lost
the head completely one day and tolt him that it was either her or all these
here wild animals. Well I don’t blame
her. I mane, how would you feel if a
herd of rhinoceros ran amok in your livin’ room!
THE LATEST
MILDRED’S GOOD NEWS
When Mildred didn’t bring me
ma breakfast in bed after she’d finished milkin’ all the cows, I started to get
fierce annoyed, because I had a busy day ahead of me studyin’ the horses in the
paper and I needed a damned good breakfast inside me. But then the thought suddenly entered me
mind, that maybe somethin’ was wrong.
You see, although I’d heard her come in earlier from the byre, there was
now complete silence from downstairs.
Had she suddenly dropped deed from a heart attack, or had all me recent
eegitin’ about frustrated her so much, that she’d blown a fuse and had a brain
haemorrhage. Man, I was sick with
worry. I mane, who’d look after me and
cook for me if she was gone!
Well anyway, I went downstairs
fearin’ the worst. But when I got intil
the kitchen, me fear immediately turned intil anger, for instead of lyin’ deed
on the flooer, she was just sittin’ there at the table, readin’ this here
letter the postman had delivered a while before. Now as far as I was concerned, this was
bloody scandalous, for instead of doin’ that, she should have been busy gettin’
me ma breakfast,
“I don’t mane to disturb you,” I said as
sarcastically as I could, “but if you happen to hear a loud rumblin’ sound,
don’t let it alarm you ..... it’s only me belly protestin’ about bein’ so
empty!”
Well instead of Mildred
jumpin’ til her feet and reachin’ for the fryin’ pan, she annoyed me even
further, by just continuin’ to sit there with a big smile on her face. Now because I could see me sarcasm wasn’t
gonna work, I changed me tack. I
clutched me head and gave a wee bit of a sway, before I clung on til the
kitchen table, for to hold meself upright.
“Bejaysus,” I said feebly, “I’m that wake from
hunger, I think I’m gonna faint.”
“Well make sure you don’t hit me on the way
down,” she retorted, quick as a flash.
Bejaysus, I hadn’t heard such
owl buck from her for manys the long year.
“Don’t you start gettin’ too funny with me,
Mildred,” I snarled.
“I’ll get as funny as I leck,” she cried,
holdin’ up a cheque. “You see this here
cheque! ..... well me uncle Lenny in Amerikay has died ..... and he’s left me
$350,000!”
“My goodness, that’s great,” I cried,
forgettin’ all about me hunger. “So when
are we gonna start spendin’ it?”
“WE!!!!!” she exclaimed. “He left the money
til me ..... not you!”
“Will I not see any of it then?” I asked
pitifully.
“Well,” she replied, “that all
depends on you and whether I think you deserve any of it ..... aye, you’re just
gonna have to behave yourself from now on and earn it.”
“Okay Mildred,” said I, all
excited at the prospects of gettin’ me mitts on a whole pile of this here loot,
“I’ll be good as good as gold and do whatever you say.”
“Now, I knew you’d say that,”
she said, “so while you’ve been lyin’ up there in bed stinkin’, I’ve been
compilin’ a list of all the things I want you to start doin’ round here .....
and if you promise me, that over the comin’ 12 months, you’ll do all what’s on
this here list, I promise I’ll write you out a cheque for half the amount this
very minute and give it til you right now.”
I couldn’t hardly believe me
ears. In all our years of marriage, I
never realised that Mildred could be such a gullible eegit.
“That’s fine by me,” I said eagerly
without any hesitation, “I promise that I will always do everythin’ on that
there list.”
“Okay,” she said, writin’ out
a cheque, “here’s your money.” And with
that she handed me the cheque. Man, was
I not over the moon ..... until I realised she’d post-dated it for 12 months!
Well anyway, I’ve got so much
to do, I’d better go now. Aye, I have to
do the milkin’, clear out the byres, feed all the bastes around the place, then
plough a lough of fields and so on. I
also have to do domestic chores, leck clayne and dust the whole house from top
til bottom, put on a wash, do a pile of ironin’ and then walk down til the
town, for to do the shoppin’ etc.
However, before I start on any of that, I have to prepare Mildred’s
breakfast and bring it up til her in bed.
But forgettin’ about all the hard work, there’s
one aspect til this whole caper which I’m findin’ particularly difficult. Aye, if you was as hateful an owl shite as
what I am, you’d understand exactly just how tough it is for me to be nice til
anyone, especially an owl dragon leck Mildred.
Bejaysus, the things you’ll do for money!
All the best.
Good luck and away with yee.
Mickle McPee