Sodding time travel doesn’t sodding work.
Earlier today I posted this message as a blog:
“I shall be having coffee in the coffee shop on the harbour in Brixham. I will be the one with the notebook.
But you already know that. “
The reasons for this weren’t that I’d lost my mind. In fact, it’s quite simple. It was a message to the future, to future generations who might be looking at my various writings and journals and trying to decide on a good moment to go back in time and meet up with me.
Indeed, going to the coffee shop this morning might have been the start of something big. An experiment combing poetry and literature with physics and science, logistics, perhaps even religion. Time travelers from future generations would come in, in their tens, perhaps hundreds, and I’d buy them all a decaf cappuccino and chat about life in general. And then perhaps they’d let me pop back with them a bit further and go disco dancing with Dorothy Parker. How fun it would be! So when I left for the coffee shop this morning down to the harbour in this strange little fishing town, I took a bag with me and an extra pair of pants, just in case.
And do you know what happened? Absolutely nothing. Nobody turned up. I even ordered an extra flapjack in case at least one person arrived, but there was nobody. The only other people in the coffee shop were Welsh holiday makers, and nobody was wearing bright space clothes or futuristic fashions. Unless the Welsh holiday makers were from the future, in which case it looks like flat caps are making a come back in the year 2525.
Nothing.
The only thing I can deduce from this is that in the future I become so well known that people don’t want to meddle in my time line to ensure that I really do stand over the world with my arms folded, omnipotent, wise and celebratory.
If there are any time travelers reading this, you mucked it all up. I will be lingering in the car park at work tomorrow for five minutes but I’m not holding my breath. And if you want a flapjack when you arrive, well, you can just bring your own.
While I was at the coffee shop, I wrote a poem.
Poem
In a rocky cove,
With a bonfire,
The surfers have one of their
All night sex driven drug fueled raves.
Alright, lads?
Mind if I just
Squeeze myself in here.
No joint, thanks,
But I wouldn’t say no
To a nice cup of tea.
Orange quivering light
And silhouetted dancing
On rock formation outcrops.
Beach-bronzed, board-weary,
They fumble in the rucksacks
For PG Tips
And one of them confides to me
That he likes the way I think.
I retune their radio,
Blotting out their techno pump
And we listen to Bed At Bedtime.
He soft burr of Richard Wilson
Reading Graham Greene’s
Travels With My Aunt
Wisping out across the
Flat calm sea.
Reblogged this on ONEWORLD.
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