Tuesday, 14 July 2015

Back in the autumn of 2006  I was asked to write some lines for my brother-in-law's Civil Partnership with his Taiwanese partner Kuei-Lin to read at the celebration.  This was how it went. 

The Ballad of Nigel and Kuei-Lin.

Hunting amidst packets and bottles and tins,
(Soya beans Nigel’s quarry, chicken tikka Kuei-lin’s).
Nigel caught Kuei-lin’s eye, held his gaze for a while,
In Sainsbury's, The Angel - the ready-meals’ aisle.

What did Nige see in that lingering glance?
Did he know he could sing?  Did he know he could dance?
For Kuei-lin had once, in distant Taiwan
In an all-male Swan Lake, danced the part of a swan.

Nige stood in the queue, and the child in front stumbled
The time hurried by – the checkout girl fumbled
But Kuei-lin had gone through – would he wait?  Would he wait?
Or hurry off home to Nottinghill Gate,
Or Barnsbury, Kentish Town, Hampstead, or Cheam
Had Nige really seen him?  Or was he a dream?

He did not know yet, as his poor heart was thrumming
That Kuei-lin had once been an expert at drumming,
The drummer-in-chief to Taiwan’s combined forces
At their annual review of men, tanks and horses.

Nigel watched while his bachelor shopping was scanned,
His foot tapping tensely, his Switch-card in hand,
Would the hanging around just have taken too long?
Would he be on the pavement, or would he be gone?

Heading off, crossing continents as he’d done in the past
Overland from Taiwan he’d come, not travelling fast.
As he passed through Moscow they attempted a coup
But Yeltsin got back in and Kuei-lin got through.

He began to learn singing when studying in France
And progressed on to opera from modern dance,
And then headed for England  to continue his training
And quite liked the climate even when it was raining.

As the tired check-out girl swiped his card in slow motion
Nigel was struggling with powerful emotion -
“Perhaps he’s gone off to Heathrow to jump on a jet?
Oh he won’t have gone, can’t have gone – don’t be gone yet
For we’ve only just … hardly yet …. haven’t quite met!”
(Those that know Nigel will know he can fret)

But what Nigel did not know, or at least not that day
Was when Kue had reached London, he’d decided to stay
He had loved London, especially the Proms,
And swimming in Hampstead’s all-male swimming pond.

To Nigel, who’d followed a lifestyle of caution
(An accountant in London, amassing his portion)
And came from a family so British and normal,
Conventional, stable, perhaps a bit formal –

(A financial advisor in London – one brother
And a stick-in-mud dyed-in-wool farmer the other
To an Edinburgh lawyer is married his twin)
What could be more different from artistic Kue-lin?

Yes, Nigel, a Warner, had gone a safe way
But perhaps he was yearning for drama that day.
Had he glimpsed in that moment, oriental adventure?
And freedom from Shell’s enslaving indenture?

Did he know that quite soon he would set himself free
And become so much more of what he could be
And swim in that Hampstead pond, flexing his muscles
Director of ILGA, flying to Brussels -

Campaigning for gays, over here, oversea,
To have rights and freedom, and equality
That his campaigns would lead to the fact that today
You can register your partnership, if you’re gay.

Did he foresee that he’d change  his house for a palace
With a shrine dedicated to Maria Callas -
And Taiwanese cooking from a hot wok
And a garden of roses and night-scented stock.

Did he know what was coming, though maybe not yet
Because of the stranger he hadn’t quite met?
Would Islington’s Angel now intervene
With a miracle?  Wait, and all will be seen.

Nigel has hurriedly bagged up his stuff,
Will Kue-lin have waited?  Has he been fast enough?
He steps out on the pavement, his composure in rags
His heart thumping wildly, in his hands Sainsbury’s bags.

But Kue-lin has waited, so sure and so calm
The way Nigel’s heart leaps could do him some harm.
And what happens next? Well let’s leave it a mystery -
It’s better that way.  And what follows is history.


One for Adam's 30th Birthday.  Sorry Mr. Dylan for filleting your awesome song.

Rainbow Warrior
Oh where have you been
My blue eyed son
Oh where have you been
My darling young one?
You arrived in the world on the day of sheep shearing
A son to proud parents, a brother - a grandson
You came in a hurry, so eager and hungry -
You were one day old when they sank Rainbow Warrior
You drank in the outrage with milk from your mother
Grew hardy and lively - a fighter for justice
Defended the victims and punished the bullies
You were filled with regret at the destruction of nature
You choked on the smoke as they burnt up the planet
And it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard,
It's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.
Where have you been
my blue eyed son
Where have you been
my darling young one?
You walked in the depths of the deepest black forest
You stumbled on the side of ten misty mountains
You met an old man with a scarf like a rainbow
You met another man with a brain like a library
As the bombs were a falling and leaders were lying
You marched in the streets with your banners a flying
You spoke words of hope and you inspired affection
You won the most votes at the student election
And worked to make everything better and fairer
But it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard
It's a hard rain's gonna fall.
Oh what have you seen
My blue eyed son?
What have you seen
My darling young one?
You’ve seen a whole world that is steeped in injustice
You’ve seen that the poor are starving and homeless
You’ve seen that the wicked are twisting the message
The greed of the bankers, the oppression of leaders
The destruction of forests, the death of the oceans
You campaigned for the people - you fought for the planet
You were locked in a cell when you stood for tax justice
You wrote thousands of words of truth and of wisdom
But it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard
It's a hard rain's gonna fall.
And what'll you do now
My blue eyed son
And what'll you do now
My darling young one?
Though glaciers are melting and crops are a dying
And people migrating from war and from famines
And crossing the sea in boats that are sinking
And people are closing their doors on the desperate
It isn’t for lack of your efforts to change it.
You’ll write some more words and you’ll keep up the struggle
Won’t cease your campaigning until we are winning.
Now the time’s come to honour your thirtieth birthday
Let's drink to the future - it's no time to remember
That it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard
It's a hard rain’s a-gonna fall.