
To pique your memory of British history, in a field outside of Hastings a French king and his army took on a bunch of Anglo-Saxons and after some fracas, earned himself some land. It was the last time Britain was successfully invaded, and it all happened circa 1066AD.
Less medieval, but also significant, is that my grandma now lives there. A marvel of longevity, she’s battled through two world wars, and an emigration to Rhodesia. Gran is ninety-three, lives by herself in a one bedroom apartment, and refuses to be placed in a home. Vociferous, and Geordie by birth, she has more spirit than most I’ve met.
I took the train to Hastings, which I was advised by National Rail, would take about two hours. Evidently time must be relative, because by my reckoning, it took a tad longer. Allow me to demonstrate:
Kentish Town – St Leonards Warrior Square (Hastings)
Official time for journey:2.5 hours
Actual time:7 hours
To be fair, at one stage I boarded the wrong train (but it was on the right platform, at the right time!). I also had to sidetrack through the underground to Charing Cross on a Saturday lunchtime. But on the South Eastern to Hastings, it took us two hours just to get out of London. The convenience trolley was wheeled around the carriages, and the poor man was handing out free food and drink to keep punters happy. “I had a wedding to go to today,” one annoyed lady told the man. “It was two hours ago. They’re married now.”
I pitied the man, but when the trolley finally reached me, he’d ran dry. He trundled his empty trolley away as I burned holes into his back with my eyes.
The driver kept hailing the passengers on the intercom. First we were going to be half an hour late, then we were going to backtrack to find another way around some broken points. Next, he had organised a bus. Everyone got off the train at the prescribed station to board the bus, but were advised to re-board after some confusion and much groaning. We shuttled back and forth and back and forth. Finally the driver turned on the intercom: “Look. We’ve had a long day. I’ve been working since early this morning and frankly my shift should have finished hours ago. What I’m trying to say is that I understand your frustration.”
A few hours wasn’t going to change much. I made it to my gran’s flat, after a fifteen year absence. Time is a conjurer. She had shrunk, I had grown, and we both stared at each other in disbelief. “Ya durnt look enything like how I remember ya. Ya sure ya me grandson?”
We talk, which means she talks for the next two days. About the war; about moving to Rhodesia; and later, the trip back to England. She tells me about the friends they made in Africa and a holiday to Mozambique. She reaches to the past, recalling memories of yester-decades, but she struggles to remember the present. “I just need ta find me glasses. Have ya seen where I put me glasses?”
She continues, “I tell ya, the world’s going ta end. Everything’s bacome crazy. All people do is shop and drink, shop and drink.” I tell her that I hope the world will hold off for a few more decades, and she turns to me, “Don’t get married. Stay young and enjoy yourself.” I didn’t know whether to laugh, so I laughed.
She takes me on a walk along the beach, proving for all time that the only word to do justice to British beaches is ‘ugly’. Even in summer the beach is stony and a dull grey. A dull grey promenade runs along it, while the beach itself is made of is dull grey stones, separated by dull grey concrete walls, all washed by limp dull grey waves.
We take a cable car atop a hill where William of Normandy built his first staging post for his invasion. I’m relieved to find open fields and green grass, so we settle for a few hours. A ruin sits on the hill, but with a three-pound-something fee, I’m not encouraged to enter.
Gran stares out at the ocean. “I’d move here if there were shops around.” It is a world of chimneys, fields, and sky. Perhaps it’s more her world up here, before televisions and crowds.
Two days were never enough, but they pass quickly and soon I find myself walking with her to the train station. Gran is going to the dentist. “I’m having me teeth cleaned. They’ll be gone for four days!” I’m just happy that she didn’t whip them out for me to see.
A promise to return, and a hug, then she shoves a ten pound note into my hand. For the train journey. She looks embarrassed. “I don’t need the money - If I won the lottery I’d give it ewey, every penny.”
The journey back took two and a half hours.