Flagrance

By Ashleylister @ashleylister
I'm afraid I've been somewhat short of time in the last few days to do any serious preparation for the blog. That, coupled with the fact that the topic of fragrance has come up before, means that I'm going to show flagrant disregard for one of the basic rules of blogging - never recycle material - and I'm going to regale you all with a story that I've told before (back in January 2015 to be precise). In mitigation, most of you probably weren't reading my blogs back then and perhaps those who were have forgotten it anyway...
When I was a young man, newly arrived in the metropolis and teaching English and Drama at a north London comprehensive school, I met Madeleine (not her real name) at a party and was rather taken with her. She was very pretty, vivacious and carefree, a socialite of the Chelsea set in the decade before Sloane Ranger became a term of contempt.
Although she was a few years older than I, she still lived at home in SW10 with mommy and daddy in one of those leafy squares off the Brompton Road. Daddy was “big in meat in the city” and mommy was the embodiment of Mrs Dalloway. Madeleine (not her real name) was a fashion model who’d also appeared with very few clothes on in a couple of John Boorman movies, including ‘Zardoz’, I believe, with Sean Connery and Charlotte Rampling.
We became friends and lovers. She called me her “young man” and I arrived at the conclusion that Madeleine (not her real name) not only used Chanel No 5 – ‘that scent’, yes, we’re getting there – she probably bathed in the bloody stuff! I didn’t mind. To begin with, I quite liked the fragrance because I quite liked her.
However, during the course of our several-month liaison, it gradually became apparent to me that, while I might be her “young man”, I wasn’t her only man. There was the aspiring racing-driver who used to get her drunk on Moet and occasionally beat her up. There was also the old Etonian who was very adept at replicating Queen Anne furniture which he off-loaded to less than scrupulous cronies in the antiques game. I think he kept her in class A recreationals as well as Chanel.
But the alarm bells well and truly rang the night when Madeleine (not her real name) arrived at my house at 3 in the morning, barefoot and delivered by fire-engine. I just refused to let her in – I had to be up for school at 7 – let the firemen put the fire out.
I never saw her again but I have acquired a life-long aversion to Chanel No 5. The olfactory key is a potent instrument in any memory-picker's tool kit and it only takes the merest whiff of No 5 to unlock a sequence of evocative and not always pleasant Madeleine moments for me. All true, and very Proustian to boot.
I had a performance slot at Montague's open mic night on Thursday and it being 4th July, that was the theme of the event. I wrote and performed this new poem, one more from the imaginarium. It draws its inspiration from two sources. One is a fabulously succinct line in an Aimee Mann song about the 4th July being "a waste of gunpowder and sky"; the other is an article I was reading about sexism in 1950s American advertising which referenced an infamous campaign for the new Pontiac Star Chief showing a young lady climbing into the back seat above a strapline that read "Spread Your Legs!" Whatever were they thinking?

1957 Pontiac Star Chief

Anyway, I've tried to turn all of that, hinged on the evocative smell of cordite, into an impressionistic piece that intertwines the lasting power of love and the declining fortunes of the American motor industry. It's hard to believe that gasoline cost 30 cents a gallon back in 1957. It's not surprising to see that rampant capitalism has left ugly urban scars across the rust belt. Reet Petite is still a great song and one whose success precipitated the creation of Motown Records. The poem might get tweaked, refined a little somewhere down the road, but for now, revv it up... Pontiac Dreams
Another fourth of July, gunpowder and sky.
A thick pall of cordite drifts over Detroit
lights the touch-paper of memory
one more time
as the horizon burns bright
above the ghettoes
with incendiary flowers of the night,
recalling Reet Petite in your daddy's car,
'57 top-down Star Chief Pontiac dream
and heavy petting off Main Street,
you the finest girl
I could ever want to meet,
just like Jackie Wilson said
and neither of us wanting to stop
or go too far...
...but then our sticky-fingered stalemate
was resolved, transposed to a higher key
by a climactic showering in the heavens,
our stars, our stripes emblazoned,
the future ours to grasp, young hopefuls,
with brave new worldliness.
Things don't always work as one expects -
witness this rust-belt wreck of urban decay;
and I wonder still at the fact you're by my side,
fifty years and counting, my joy, my pride.
God bless apple pie, Motown records, the FBI
and twilight's last creaming.
That's it. Thanks for reading, have a fine week, S ;-) Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to Facebook

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