The gloomy misty evenings of Autumn remind me of those distant darkening nights before the start of Winter when I was a kid, that fuzzy foggy Autumnal month before Halloween and Bonfire Night,
Primary School was an austere sort of place back then as the days got colder and shorter, a huge glowering Victorian pile of red bricks bristling with towers and gables like the Adams Family mansion. The classroom windows were huge and it felt like being in a church, a feeling strengthened by the floating nuns who taught some of the classes.
There were no trees outside, just vast walled playgrounds made of tar, bricks and concrete, one at either end of the school for boys and girls. Yes, we were separated at break and dinner like toxic cells in a petri dish.
Home life was completely different to school. Gone were the walls and the gates. Instead there were flower beds, trees and hedges in our garden. Even in the Autumn it was always fun to be there as All Hallows Eve and November the Fifth grew nearer. Spirits were abroad and I loved it.
I get my childhood Halloweens and Bonfire Nights mixed up nowadays. Being just five days apart they have merged into one murky feast of fear and fire. Their popularity has reversed as well. Bonfire Night was far bigger than Halloween where I lived in Preston back in the Sixties.
I picture huge heaps of sticks and timbers appearing mysteriously allover the city; piles of of wooden chairs, crates and pallettes towering like jengas on wasteland everywhere. Mucky kids came along and chucked ever more armfuls of branches and planks onto them in the weeks leading up to early November, when at last on the night of the Fifth they would be finally lit.
In October floppy scarecrows called Guys popped up in prams and sat on dark street corners, all requiring a shiny penny to give to the shivering but hopeful urchins gathered round like pickets dreaming of buying more roman candles and snowstorms.
In my wispy recollections I also see red apples dunked in tubs of cold water for biting, a fun rite known as bobbing; I see bags of sticky bonfire toffee, the king of all treacles without doubt; I see plates of hot pork pie and steaming mushy peas crowned with pickled rings of raw onion: I see bowls of delicious Lancashire lamb hot-pot with its traditional roof of angled potato slices garnished with a generous dollop of chunky yellow piccalilli on the side.
To wash down this hearty Autumn fare were thick glass bottles of fizzy Dandelion and Burdock, Cream Soda and Sarsaparilla as well as the ubiquitous Tizer and Lemonade. Further back on the trestle table were regiments of Mackeson, Newcy Brown and Pale Ale for the adults running the proceedings.
Trick or Treating wasn't big back then I don't think in the UK, although I did enjoy a good mask or prop on Halloween. Perhaps a Werewolf mask or a severed rubber hand to scare my friends with or my favourite laughing rubber skull, which I still have!
Ghoulish entertainment came in the form of Warren's Creepy and Eerie comics as well as Skywald's Psycho and Nightmare. TV provided An Appointment with Fear, a run of classic monster films that appeared on late night television like Curse of the Werewolf, The Trollemberg Terror, Night Must Fall and The Gorgon.
Scary stories abounded at the time as well as is traditional during the fading days of October. My friends and I all believed that there was a vampire asleep in a coffin in the annex to an abandoned church near us. An intrepid expedition to prove it ended unsuccessfully as we bottled it before we even got through the annex door and ran screaming up the road!
This year I hope to repeat at least a few of these Autumnal customs from my youth as I have done each year since. Maybe some pie and peas, a bag of toffee and good monster flick would do the trick ... or treat! Oh yes, and babysitting for my Grandson on Halloween too!
Do you like the misty nights of Autumn readers? What were and are they like?
Autumn is definitely beautiful,visually and spiritually.I have memories of late afternoons,the sun already set and dusk creeping in before 5:00.Dinner would be warming, awaiting the arrival of my dad from work.For years,The Amazing Spider Man Cartoon was broadcast between 4:30 and 5:00, so that was usually on the TV at the time.In my early 20's I bought a Sega Genesis for my new apartment and have fond memories of playing Ghouls and Ghosts on crisp Fall evenings with friends.Trick or Treat used to be a really big deal in the 70's,but sadly has waned in popularity recently.People are insecure about childrens' safety,and rightly so,when you see the daily atrocities occurring on the news.My family, however, make an effort to keep the tradition alive and hand out treats in our well decorated front yards.We don't do Bonfire Night here, but be assured,November is a fine time to throw some oak logs in the fire pit and enjoy a cold starry night, and I definitely do.
ReplyDeletea beautiful picture you've drawn there Brian of an American idyll. I too loved the Amazing Spider Man cartoon. I can hear the theme tune now ... Spider Man, Spider Men, catches thieves just like flies .. fabulous! What will you be cooking this Halloween?
DeleteI usually skip the late afternoon meal on Halloween.Trick or Treat is between 6 and 8 o'clock and I like to visit my mother and brother and help them hand out treats.I have lived in my home for 15 years now and never had a Trick or Treater come because I'm too far out in the woods.My mom's house is in a more populous neighborhood so she gets a handful of Trick or Treaters.Afterwards perhaps a friend has a party or maybe I go to a nightclub.On the way home, I always pick up a pepperoni pizza, a bag of barbecue potato chips and a bottle of black cherry soda,and pig out with some old scary movies.
DeleteThankfully, there's not much trick or treating here in the UK. Most people don't answer the front door if they hear kids outside ; D
DeleteWe don't see it as an inconvenience.It's a chance to do something nice for the kids and build friendships in our community.Sadly, neighborhoods are not familiar as they used to be and people are more aloof of each other.I tend to champion this holiday because I want kids to have fun like I used to.The few people that interact with us truly enjoy themselves.I would like to encourage people to light bonfires on November 5 simply because it sounds like a great time.maybe I can get a Bommy Night movement going on here,why not?
DeleteNice sentiment, Brian, but we're a more reserved lot in Blighty, and Trick or Treating is something that wasn't around when we were kids, so older folk (like me ;)) for good or bad do treat it as a nuisance.
DeleteI'm not sure how a bommie night would take off in America,but why not indeed, and you'd probably have better weather for it, for sure. :D
Hi Brian, Scoop rightly mentions that Halloween is more popular now in the UK, than it was when we were kids. The younger generation buys in to it in a big way and commercialism has taken effect and made it a fun social event for many folk, although not everyone. I actually enjoy Halloween and I'm happy to see the colourful display of fancy dress and fun. I also enjoy the tat which finds its way onto the shelves. This tacky spookamania puts a smile on my face and reminds me of the cheap monster toys, masks and gimmicks, which were around when I was a kid; some of which is now quite collectible, such as AHI's once-cheap, bendy Universal Monsters... but that's only my subjective opinion. Halloween has become a annual event based on commercialized consumerism and the popularity of Halloween Night parties... and hopefully a few good monster movies as well. I don't know about elsewhere in the UK, but it is very popular where I live. Thankfully most kids and parents are responsible around here (although not everywhere). We have a caldron of sweets ready to feed the army of little horrors who will knock doors in the company of exhausted hollow-eyed parents... cometh the hour :)
DeletePoint taken,gentlemen.Halloween is definitely evolving, one way or another.Many younger parents frown on Halloween's scary nature as low-brow entertainment and don't want their kids to eat candy,yet giving out apples is a feaux pas.Excessive commercialism is not healthy for any holiday.At it's most basic,the waning of the year makes one shiver,contemplate the unknown, and desire a warm fire for comfort against the encroaching darkness.A little distraction in the form of fantasy is probably good for the soul:D
Delete'A little distraction in the form of fantasy is probably good for the soul.' I totally agree Brian, well said :)
Deletesounds like lyrics from a Prog Rock song,doesn't it?
DeleteVivid Autumnal thoughts which evoke the magical spirit childhood Halloween and Guy Fawkes night... so many sign posts to the past! I especially remember novelty horror movie masks which you mention and those pocket money priced horror props from a long gone local Joke Shop. A very enjoyable and reflective read, Woodsy :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Tone. Did you have any monster toys or horror comics back then?
DeleteI certainly did, Woodsy, I collected and swapped various monster/horror comics whenever I could get my hands on 'em as a lad. The most prized were Warren's Famous Monsters and The House of Hammer. All of which were regrettably traded off years ago. Mego and Azrak Hamway provided enough monster mayhem to keep the action going well into the witching hour :)
DeleteNice imagery, Woodsy. I must admit I find the thought of Bonfire Night much more nostalgic than Halloween, as that's what we celebrated when we were kids. Great memories of the huge roaring fire, eating Parkin Cake, treacle toffee getting stuck in your teeth, and watching loads of fireworks. When it was all over the night air was thick with ash, and had that lovely burnt wood smell.
ReplyDeleteThese days, there's more organised displays now, especially if it falls on a weekend, but still great fun, assuming the weather is kind. :)
I don't recall that many people celebrating Halloween when I was kid. I remember playing 'bobbing for apples' at a church party one time, but I think that was part of the church's bonfire night celebrations (I can't see my local Church in those days celebrating the Un-dead ;D
Sorry to sound cynical, but as has been said many times before, its more of an American thing that that supermarkets here in the UK have hi-jacked and encouraged, so they can sell tat to parents of younger kids. Sadly, It'll probably kill off the traditional English Bonfire Night eventually.
(I do like the new Asda Halloween advert, though :D)
ah yes, Parkin Scoop! Quite delicious! and treacle toffee was a killer on the old fillings! Your'e right, bommy night was much bigger than Halloween back then here in Blighty. All the family waited with baited breath for my Dad to bring home the fireworks before the Fifth! We always had our own small display in our garden with some food and then went off to find a big fire somewhere to stand round! Happy days .. or nights!
DeleteYeah, there was always a big fire usually on some nearby waste ground. You used to get rival gangs of kids trying to set fire to them prior to bommie night,generally on Mizzy night ; D
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ReplyDeleteWhere'dya comment go Kid?
DeleteIt was a bit lonely on its own for several days without a reply, Woodsy, so it came home.
DeleteSorry Kid. My bad.
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