During the war honey was popular, because sugar was rationed. But Vere doesn't tell us if her sweet gift was made by a local beekeeper, or was a mass produced jar. |
So
says Vere Hodgson in her diary entry
for July 2nd, 1941 – and how luxurious that honey and the tomatoes must have
seemed - sugar was rationed, so honey was much in demand, and beekeeping became much more popular. Even
the cat was in luck that day, because Vere (I feel I know her, and really
cannot continue calling her Hodgson, even if it is the correct way to name an
author) managed to get some Kitcat, which was ‘wolfed down as if it were a
banquet’. It’s hardly surprising the poor creature fell on this unexpected feast
as if there were no tomorrow, because cats and dogs got no rations. At the
outbreak of hostilities, the pet food industry was still in its infancy, and animals
were usually fed on table scraps, unless owners cooked meat or fish for them.
During WW2 there was barely enough food to go round for people, so there can’t
have been much to spare for animals.
You
can see I am progressing with my slow read of Few Eggs and No Oranges, even
if I do have a tendency to get side-tracked along the way. I seem to have
become thoroughly immersed in the period, and now have a stack of other WW2 books
to read!
On a more serious note, in this first entry for
the second half of the year, Vere mentions
the war in Russia, but has little sympathy for people there since, she says,
they have had plenty of time to prepare for the fight, and ‘if they are not
ready, it is no one’s fault but their own’. Surprisingly, however, she is confident
that Stalin is more than a match for Hitler –because he looks ‘such an unpleasant
individual’!
Additionally,
she tells us about a book she’s read (a biography of Churchill), a radio programme she enjoyed (The Brains Trust) and the sweet-smelling honeysuckle and
syringa in her office. This particular entry is a good example of Vere’s range
of interest, and the way she jumps from the drama of the war to homely, seemingly
unimportant things which mean such a lot to ordinary people.
During
these last six months of year, undeterred by the worsening situation, she
visits friends and family in various parts of the country, and continues to
wander around London looking at the damage. Set against that are small joys,
like those flowers I mentioned earlier, a sparrow eating out of a friend’s
hand, a garden party, and eating tins of pineapple and prawns with her aunt.
There
are splendid, uplifting stories (Vere likes the word splendid, and I can’t
resist using it). In August there is news of the Home Guard catching a German
‘parashot’ who is promptly locked in the Tower. I think this is fascinating - I
had no idea they did this in WW2! I was under the impression it was something
that happened hundreds of years ago, which shows how much I know! Then, in
September, when British bombers arrive in Oslo, residents take to the rooftops
and cheer the ‘boys’ as the docks are bombed. In addition there is jubilation
when five Free French fighters escape to England in canoes, and Vere enjoys the
thought of them sharing champagne with Winston Churchill and his wife.
Were German prisoners really locked way in the Tower of London during WW2? |
In
October she’s delighted when she acquires a ‘flatlet’ of her own, and friends
and family rally round to help furnish it, which is not an easy task when
everything is in such short supply. But she’s less happy when a friend describes
life in the Isle of Man:
Full of
internees who are doing themselves well. No rationing. Ample supplies from
Ireland. His tales of tinned fruit and oceans of butter are galling to us
hard-living folk.
Early in December, like everyone else in Britain, she’s stunned by the news
from the Pacific (she gives few details but this is, of course, the Japanese
assault on Pearl Harbour). And, she reflects, there is an upside to the tragedy,
because it pushes America and Australia into the conflict. But things look
grim. The British are losing Hong Kong, and everyone is still waiting to learn
what is happening in Russia, where the Germans are being pushed back ‘into the
snow’.
One
of the surprising features of this period is the length of time it took for
news to get through, the lack of information when it did, and the way rumours
circulated and proliferated. With all our modern technology we are used to
‘instant’ news – we know about things as they happen, and there is such a
wealth of data available it is hard not to be aware of what is going on the
world. However, the situation was very different during the war. The immediacy
of today’s news gathering process and the way it is spread around the world was
simply not possible then, and I suppose some things were kept from the public on
the grounds of national security, and perhaps there was an effort to keep
people’s spirits up by not revealing every detail of what was happening.
The Christmas speech made by King George VI and broadcast on BBC Radio |
Anyway,
however bleak the future may look, Vere remains upbeat about Life, the Universe
and Everything, and she ends 1941 on a high, braving what she terms the ‘Ban on
Travel’ to spend Christmas with her family in Birmingham. Her journey is almost without adventure. Seven
family and friends gather for Christmas dinner (a goose), and visitors from
next door turn up (with the two airmen billeted on them) for the King’s Speech. More friends arrive during the afternoon and evening, and Vere tells us:
From the back of Elsie’s cupboard came plums and whipped cream. Then Neville poured some exciting looking liquid into glasses, and we did some toasts. Not until we were half-way through it did I discover that it was champagne… brought out specially. So kind.A good time was had by all, and they shared what food they had - anything nice which could be stored was brought out for special occasions, and their festive fare over the Christmas period includes a tin of butter, and dried apricots, both gifts sent by relatives in South Africa.
War Messages: Endpapers in Persephone's Few Eggs and No
Oranges
are from a design called London Wall, printed from a fragment of
rayon headscarf produced by Jacqmar Ltd c.1942. |
I really must make a start on this book - the teasers I've been seeing are marvellous. Re the animals, there was a (horrific) piece from the BBC recently about pets at the outbreak of WW2. I don't know if you saw it? Really heart-breaking: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24478532
ReplyDeleteI did see it, and I had no idea this happened, but the emphasis was very much on feeding people, and I think they felt it it would be hard to justify 'wasting' precious food on animals.I do know there was a similar situation on farms. Farmers were urged to grow crops, and many animals seen as 'non-productive' were killed, including chickens - that's why eggs were in such short supply.
DeleteI hate to be picky but George VI, please!
ReplyDeleteI've been following your progress with this book with interest, because I personally found the author Drear Vere and gave up on it. I do love the endpapers.
You're not picky, you're quite right. I type stuff up in Word first, then cut and paste it over, and it's definitely correct there (I just looked). I think I've hit something as I copied it in to the caption, and I didn't check the final version, which is sloppy. Thank you for pointing it out, and I am correcting it - I hate to get things wrong, and I do check stuff out, and I really do know he was George VI! Honest!
DeleteI believe you! I also write in Word first. I was disgusted to find at the weekend that ebay have completely changed the way items are listed. I had to revise every one of my items because ebay had introduced errors I certainly hadn't made, cutting out spaces between words and after punctuation marks. Grrr.
ReplyDeleteGrrr indeed! When I was subbing I could always spot errors in reporters' copy, but I'm not nearly as good at picking up my own mistakes!
Delete