Mrs
Slocombe, who has never done so much cooking and baking in such a short space
of time in her life, has been reading up about Yuletime traditions. And at
elevenses the next day, she calls an impromptu meeting. She bangs on the
kitchen table with a mince pie from a batch that has been left in the oven
slightly too long because she’d been preoccupied with stirring a pot of soup
on the hob and didn’t hear her timer ding.
‘I’ve been
reading about Yuletime traditions,’ she says. ‘And one of them specifically
states that it is customary to do no work during the Yuletime.’
‘That would
explain the raft of strikes that are going on,’ says Mrs Poo. ‘When I dropped
off the Festival tickets at the post office for Mrs Bobbinflaxenfluff to sell,
she told me that the last posting date before Christmas for second class
letters was actually 5th August! I suppose that means I shall be
delivering Christmas cards by hand this year.’
‘I tried to
book a train ticket to go and visit my cousin, Beau, and his family on Boxing
Day,’ says Ptolemy. ‘I’d get there quicker AND cheaper if I started walking
now.’
‘The thing
is,’ says Mrs Miggins, ‘if you want to make something happen, you’ve just got
to go ahead and do it. Have the courage of your own convictions. Have faith in
what you are doing. There’s no point in being a bunch of sheep and do what everyone else is doing just for the sake of it. Do you remember the National
Lemming Strike back in 1974? ‘Let’s make a point by all running towards that
cliff edge,’ they said. So they did. And did it get them anywhere? No, it did not. Only
squashed at the bottom of a cliff. I can’t even remember what they were
striking for, can you?’
‘I think it
was something to do with the use of their species name being appropriated for the branding of a fizzy
drink, or something like that,’ says Mrs Poo.
‘Lemmingade?’
says Mrs Miggins. ‘It that even a thing?’
They sit
and ponder the pointlessness of it all whilst crunching through the over-done
mince pies which are improved enormously by dunking in tea.
Jack Green
clears his throat.
‘Of course, Mrs Slocombe is right. One of the customs of Yule IS to forget work for a while, and
enjoy the fun and festivities. Put your feet up, eat well and be merry.
Watch endless repeats of terrible Christmas films on the telly and forget about
dusting and ironing for a while. But being Lord of Misrule means that I’ve
always worked through Yuletide. You see, though – it’s never felt like work.
All through the year I am part of the patterns and cycles that remind us of
this amazing world in which we live. I’m around as Springtime emerges, as the
crops grow and are harvested. I’m there at the mid-Summer celebrations, the
births, the deaths, the times of abundance and the times of poverty. And I’m
here now, to be that spark of light and fun that sees us through the short,
dark days. I’m the food, the warmth, the peace, the energy. But most of all I
am the love, faith and magic that binds us all together. And without love,
faith and magic, humans are nothing in this world.’
He looks
around the table and sees four hens, a pheasant and a cat all with tears
dripping from the ends of their noses, and not because of the parlous state of the mince pies. Mrs Pumphrey pulls a large handkerchief
from her pocket and indulges an enormously hooting beak blow.
‘Maybe,
then, things have to be turned upside down for better things to happen?’ says
Jack. ‘Maybe the rules of society and
the laws of living needs a shake up once a year so we can all have a fresh
chance in the year ahead? Maybe work you enjoy isn’t work at all?’
‘Anyway,’
he continues, ‘I shall carry on ‘working’ even though my team have decided to
go on strike this year. I’m going to keep on doing what I do because I love
this planet Earth. And that’s it really. But you must decide for yourselves
what you want to do. I won’t be upset if you decide that all this Festival
stuff is too much for you.’
He looks
expectantly at the increasingly soggy faces around him.
Mrs
Slocombe rises slowly to her feet. ‘Well,’ she says, a sense of determination
rising in her voice. ‘I can’t sit here being all sentimental. I have several
batches of worms-in-onesies to prepare. They won’t get ready by themselves,
will they?’ And she rolls up the sleeves of her chef’s tunic and heads for the
refrigerator.
‘Yes!’ says
Mrs Poo. ‘I have tickets to issue. They’re selling better than I expected and I
need to make sure the website doesn’t crash…’
‘And I have
sequins to sew on costumes and scenery to finish painting,’ says Mrs Pumphrey.
And then Bambino and Ptolemy join in the sudden bustle of activity that
overtakes the whole of Much Malarkey Manor.
Jack Green
sits back in his chair and lets out a quiet sigh of relief. Perhaps life will
be okay next year after all.
Comments
(Mrs Duck)