Knickerbocker Glory 5 with prunes.

It’s Monday morning…….who invented that?  What a rubbish way to begin the week.  I much prefer Thursday afternoon at 4 o’ clock with a cup of tea and a bit of cake.  We will have to wait till the week wends its way onwards so let’s console ourselves with a bit of Knickerbocker Glory.  For the new readers who have found us I’ll just mention that these are extracts from a radio series I submitted to steam radio long ago when the world was young, which limped back home with a slight sprinkle of genuine BBC corridor dust.  So far we’ve had a couple of helpings of Uncle Reg’s niece, who is trying to run a phone service from a pig farm and a couple of dollops of a radio archaeology programme.  You can access the archive via the Knickerbocker Glory button to the right of this column.

How are you on the voices?  You’ll need three for Archaeology Now: a rural one for Very Devon, something neutral for Derek Here, who we suspect, does all the digging, and the most annoying voice you can get for the coracle man, who would like to be included and star in a radio programme.  He’s the equivalent of the grinning kid whose head you see sideways behind the reporter in TV breaking news broadcasts.  Except with radio there’s no way you can narrow the angle, if it’s on mike, it’s in.

If you’ve gargled and gone ‘me, me, me’ you’re on.

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                                       Archaeology Now
                                               Scrolls.

A quick burst of theme music, tambours and shawms.

Very Devon      ’Ello and welcome to Archaeology Now. I’m Very
                   Devon and this is my assistant, Derek Here. Today
                   we’re at a well known archaeological site.  It’s a temple
                   to Mithras first documented in the late Thirties but
                   covered up again during the war.  As you may have
                   read in the papers the site is going to be right 
                   underneath the new M700 extension, so it’s being
                   uncovered and photographed now before it’s entombed
                   in a concrete shell to preserve it for future generations.
                   What do we know about the temple, Derek?

Derek Here      Well Dev, the temple, which is down these steps, was
                    actually built as an under ground structure because
                    it was secret.

Very Devon       So ’oo would go in it then, Derek?

Derek Here       Probably just the priests, Dev.  They would go in and
                    do their rituals and then come out and prophesy.

Very Devon       And we know this because of the scrolls, don’t we
                    Derek?

Derek Here       Yes we do.  The first and second excavations were 
                    through the roof and they found the holes were full
                    of scrolls.

Very Devon        Rolls of scrolls down the ’oles.  My word.  But we’re 
                     luckier today because we can go though the door.

Derek Here       Indeed we can and here we are in the chamber, Dev.
                    The niches to our right and left were full of scrolls. On
                     either side are the stone benches you’d expect in this
                     type of temple and down at the end is what looks like
                     the shell of a giant tortoise, or the bottom of a round
                     boat.  I don’t remember seeing that at rehearsals.

Very Devon        Neither do I.  Perhaps if we was to turn it round…….

Coracle Man       Hello, it’s me!  I’m the oracle with the coracle.

Very Devon         ’Oo let you in?

Coracle Man       Nobody.  I just popped down a hole.  I’m the oracle
                     with a coracle.  I know all about it, I’ve been to the
                     library and asked.  I can prophesy.

Very Devon        I can prophesy you’re going to be in trouble.  You’re
                     not authentic.

Coracle Man       Yes I am.  I can read the prunes.

Very Devon        Read the prunes?

Coracle Man       Yes, I just put my hand in this bag of prunes and feel
                     the wrinkles, then I tell you all about it.

Very Devon        Reading prunes isn’t Roman.

Coracle Man       How about casting entrails?  Look?

Derek Here        Casting entrails is Roman, Dev.

Very Devon        Yes but not plaster casts.

Coracle Man       Do you want to pull a wishbone? Go on, close your
                     eyes and make a wish.

Very Devon        I wish you’d go away and take all this rubbish with
                     you.

Coracle Man       I could throw the dice.

Derek Here        We could throw you out.

Coracle Man       I could feel your bumps.

Very Devon        Get your ’ands off me, you little pervert in a punt and
                     get out before we give you some bumps of your own
                     to feel.

Derek Here        Yes, go away.

Coracle Man       I can feel the red mist.  I can see the future.  I could
                     read you next week’s horoscopes.  I’m not leaving
                     till I’ve told you tomorrow’s shipping forecast.

Derek Here        I think he’s gone completely barmy, Dev.

Very Devon        It’s being down this gloomy temple, Derek.  It gets
                    to you after a bit.

Derek Here       What shall we do?

Very Devon        Oh, pop a tarpaulin over him and go off to the pub.

Theme tune

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JaneLaverick.com – where we predict that starting the week with a laugh will make it a little less awful.  For three minutes.  After that you’re on your own.  Do you open the post and read the bills before you read this, or the other way on?  Or do you read this, read the bad news quickly and then read this again sloooowly?

 

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