Journey into the Unknown
I’m a big fan of travel writing. There’s nothing I like better than to curl up with an intrepid individual as they scale icy mountains, trek across uncharted wastes and battle with hostile tribes. If you’ve never read him, I’d encourage you to look into the works of Eric Newby (personal favourites of mine being Love and War in the Apennines and A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush).
I myself am not a great traveller. I don’t
like flying (lack of control, no leg room, hurtling through the air in a metal
tube. Why would you?) and I prefer to get to know several places really well
rather than going to lots of different destinations just once.
I do love travelling on trains and last Saturday, I made the two-hour journey from rural East Suffolk to the throbbing depths of the capital for the 50th Anniversary ACW Writers’ Day in Westminster. Dear readers, at no point did I whip out a set of crampons and scramble up an inhospitable slope. Nor did I have to don snowshoes and crunch my way over a snowy Arctic waste. However, I did get up shortly after 6 in the morning (too early by half), tart myself up and drive to our local station to catch the 7.05, first train out of the day.
The café at the station was closed which was fair enough. At Ipswich, I had a whole six minutes before the connecting train came in. Just as I was reaching for a banana and strawberry smoothie and croissant to refresh my exhausted self, in it came, early. I was heartened by the sight of a smiling lady with a coffee trolley on the train, however. I plugged in my laptop, started writing and waited for the reviving fragrance of fresh coffee to fill the carriage.
It never came. Neither did the lady. I
suspect she was hiding in the guard’s van, eating up her entire stock of Kit-Kats.
Hungry, thirsty and disappointed, I alighted at Colchester to board a bus to
Ingatestone. By the time I arrived at Liverpool Street, neither bite nor sup
had I had. Eric Newby would have dealt with this magnificently. I headed
straight for a well-known franchise and hoovered up a large cappuccino and a
flaccid croissant.
My day was excellent and it was over all too soon. Boarding a Circle Line train with Rosemary the ACW Webmaster, we were chatting when a young man with bare, dirty feet came walking down our carriage. He looked embarrassed as he explained that he had no money and no family and that he would really appreciate any help we could give him. Down the carriage, some youngsters were laughing and making fun of him. The two ladies opposite (Vicky and Karen) struck up conversation with us. We talked about generosity and open-handedness and that we are all only two pay cheques away from destitution. “Did you notice how once a few people smiled at him and gave him something, everyone else in the carriage did too?” Vicky said. “It was like a wave of generosity.”
The youngsters were looking abashed. We all make mistakes.
I’ve spent a lot of my professional life writing about generosity and philanthropy. Seeing it in action in 2021 on a crowded Tube makes me happy.
At Liverpool Street, crackly announcements alerted us that there were no Greater Anglia services for the foreseeable future.
I’m not a great one for hanging around, so I marched off in search of an alternative. I found it in a beleaguered station employee who had been shouted at fairly comprehensively by a succession of stressed people. He suggested I took the 17.28 to Cambridge and then went across country.
Plonking myself down on a seat on the train and plugging in my laptop (darn it, I had a property piece to finish), I looked up to see two cheerful-looking ladies opposite. We struck up conversation and pretty soon I’d forgotten about writing up the delightfully spacious five-bedroomed family home and was busy making friends with Charlotte and Natalie instead. They were great company.
OK, it wasn’t exactly the Trans-Siberian Express, but I was sliding across the darkening fens in the company of strangers with no idea of what time I would get home. At Cambridge, we realised we had an hour to wait, so we went to the pub. It felt rather kicky and louche, sitting outside drinking vodka and orange through a straw while young, beautiful people disported themselves around us.
Back on the train to the exotically named Harwich International, we sat beside a teenage boy who listened patiently as we rattled on about our favoured brand of hoover and friends with collections of shoes insured for a million pounds. Turned out he knows my son’s bandmate. Suffolk really is a small place.
I got home at ten, via Cambridge, Elsenham
and Newmarket. The search for the Northwest Passage it wasn’t, but I saw
generosity in action, had an unexpected burst of Cambridge nightlife and made a
couple of new friends. Lack of coffee notwithstanding, it was quite a journey.
Move over, Eric!
Images by Unsplash and Pixabay
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