| A bow haulier who pulled upstream trows through summertime shallows of the River Severn remembered today in the play area of the Severn Country Park |
He climbed the steps onto the quayside.
The river always smelt cold at this time of year. As he stood amongst the barrels, bales and
boxes to fill his clay pipe, the river took on a new life. Its ripples and flow
now reflected the new lights from the many windows that clustered around the
bridge. He packed the bowl of the pipe from a full leather pouch. ‘There’s
never a need to buy this stuff’ he mused. A surreptitious cut into a
momentarily unwatched bale of tobacco on a quayside would always yield what he
needed. He set off on a meandering path through the stacked wares beside the
river. The damp air close to the river, was heavy with the smell of wet sacks,
rope, tar and coal smoke. He nodded to one of the pickett men who eyed him
suspiciously. ‘Good luck’ He thought. ironically. ‘You’ll need luck more than you
will your lantern and wooden belaying pin.‘
Any boatmen that hadn’t secured
their cargo into one of the warehouses overnight were asking for trouble. ‘Low
Town’. He smiled with affection. ‘Low by name, low by nature’. He had rarely
ventured up into Bridgnorth’s more genteel ‘High Town’.
He knew where he was going. He loved
the Cartway with all of its hustle and bustle. It had existed for centuries,
because of the river. It was the link between the trade of the river and the
marketplace nature of Hightown. As a street, it was a far cry from serenely
floating along on the river and the silence of its sedgy banks. The peace of
the Severn could be soporific. For hours, the quiet would only be punctuated by
the hoots of geese or moorhens. There
may be the odd lowing of cattle or bleating of sheep, but otherwise it was
idyllic. In the Cartway different rules applied. Mules would bray as they
pulled heavily laden carts packed with all manner of goods up the steep narrow
slope to Hightown and back again. Shouted conversations pervaded between the
tightly packed buildings. Other mules would pull carts across the bridge, in
the other direction. From there, goods would be consumed by the voracious
appetite of the Black Country and beyond.
The aptly named Cartway wasn’t
short of its share of loud, brash, colourful characters. It conducted its own
self-contained, often chaotic and outrageous life. It was in stark comparison
to the sane world which existed less than a quarter of a mile away in any
direction. There were scores of places to drink. Aside from the ale houses, nearly
every other place along Bridgnorth’s arterial route was either an eatery or a brothel.
Some establishments offered all three. He wondered if he could remember them
all.
‘The Red Lion. The Kouli
Khan’. He started to recall. He smiled at the ale house’s pretentious
connotations to the old King of Persia. Despite the fact that it was next to
Bishop Percy’s house and its exotic name, there was nothing refined, or exotic
about that place. Fights were inevitable there. Almost every night, tables
would overturn and fists would fly. Both ale and blood would spill as some
drunken oaf lost a week’s pay on a bad hand of cards or an unfortunate fall of
a dice. Afterwards, the same ne’er do well would only have black eyes and empty
pockets to show for his labours. Somewhere a wife would weep again at her
choice of husband and their children would go hungry.
‘The Woolpack. White Hart.
Ship and Anchor’. He continued to think.
He smiled to himself at the
memories he’d made within each. Somewhere dogs barked and an argument raged
behind the closed doors of a small house. Mules stood placidly at their mangers
of hay, sheltered under ram-shackled roofs put up in what few gaps there were
between buildings.
‘The Coopers. Horn &
Trumpet… Tumbling Sailors’. His smile widened. The ale house sign showed
three sailors, arm in arm. Despite the smiling faces on the sign, it was
probably second only to the Kouli, in notoriety. Men gravitated with
like-minds, to what was familiar. As the name suggested, the ale house was always
full of sailors. Whilst the fights were fewer, a sailor’s marlin spike could
often make them more serious.
‘The Railway. Saltbox. Forge
And Hammer’.
Droplets of drizzle settled on
his thick coat. They sparkled in the light of nearby windows with the
opaqueness of freshwater pearls. The cobbles of the Cartway shone orange and
black, slick and wet between the scattered hay and piles of mule dung. He’d
left the soft-soled shoes aboard the Star. The hobnails of his own
well-oiled and shining boots, crunched upon the smooth worn stones. Raucous
laughter came from each of the eateries and alehouses that he passed.
‘The Star. Mermaid. Britannia.
Cornucopia. Saracens Head’.
Ahead of him, a man was thrown
out of the Magpie. He lay sprawled on the street. With a clink,
some of the drunk’s coins fell from his pocket onto the cobbles. Like minnows
darting from the shallows, two small boys appeared from nowhere. They picked up
the coins and ran away as fast as they had appeared. The drunk picked himself
up and began to stagger way, cursing his own misfortune and the behaviour of
others.
He never usually carried more
coin than he needed. As with parts of many towns, an outwardly light,
pleasure-seeking appearance could also have a darker side. That said,
Bridgnorth was far safer than other places. ‘It’s also well known for having a
much better class of prostitute’, he grinned to himself. Never the less, a
robbery in the street for the unwary was not unheard of, particularly late at
night. This night however was different. He carried with him all of the wealth
he had accumulated in his lifetime. It was a pretty penny. He’d sold his labour
astutely and spent little, over the course of the last year on the river. The
drunken man ahead fell again. This time he remained prostrate. By morning he
would probably make up one of the small knots of men who gathered on the
quayside. His companions in the next day’s “Motley Crew”. He’d keep the company
of others who had missed their boats by slumbering too long in a whore’s bed or
had slept in the same drunken stupor into which they had fallen. Their accents
would be as varied as the river’s length. The Welsh in the north, to Bristol at
the Severn’s mouth and all places in between.
The Severn Trow. Compasses.
The Bush. ‘That’s all of them’ he thought.
All apart from one. He stood
outside the Black Boy. A portrait of King Charles II looked down at him.
This tavern was probably the best of them all. Light poured from its large,
intact windows. It was frequented by the merchants, bosuns and chargehands. Bow hauliers, deckhands and dockers would never think to
enter. “Wines, tonics and revivors”. He read out loud the words
painted on the wall. “Precisely what I need!” He said as he pushed the glazed
door. A wave of sound washed over him as he did so. The air was vibrant to the
sounds of conversation, the laughter of women and of song. “All of them.” He said to himself more loudly,
as he stepped inside.
He peered through the glowing
haze of steam and tobacco smoke. The nails in his boots slipped on the tiled
floor. Here and there, a bosun would nod in sceptical recognition. He’d built a
reputation for reliability, hard work and punctuality during his year on the
river. This night he would trade upon that. A worn copper coin bought him dark,
nutty ale served in a pewter mug from a buxom barmaid with a ruddy complexion.
Not for him, the “spit and sawdust” alehouses with their stone jars of cheap rough
liquor to even rougher men and women. Not for him, the cheap bowls of boiled eels,
cabbage and other fodder. Not for him, the dingy places lit only with a
small fire and a few tallow candles. Tonight there would be no need to look away
from the overly painted whores who smiled through low light and bad teeth.
He found a seat next to the coal
fire. His damp woollen coat gave off its familiar “wet dog” smell as it began
to dry at the bright fireside. Another couple of coins bought a large pewter
plate of hearty beef stew with thick slices of warm bread. Squawks of birds and
loud encouraging cheers of men came from the cock fight in the yard behind him.
A muscled bull terrier on the other side of the fireplace assumed a sitting
position from its previous spawl in front of the fire. It was held by the gnarled
hands of its owner, a thick leather collar and a large-linked chain. The dog
tilted its head to one side and blinked, as it calmly watched him eat. A tilted
head and a pleasant smile greeted him also, from the two seemingly unattached
ladies at the end of the long bar. He smiled back at each of them as he
finished his meal. ‘Like a double rainbow at the end of a dark day ’ he thought, as he used the last of the crusty
bread to mop up the rich, succulent gravy.
He sat back contentedly and more
ale appeared, this time in a tankard. ‘Getting better, all the time’ He thought
to himself. He stuffed his cap into his coat pocket and hung his drying coat on
the high-backed chair. As he settled again, he wiped the foam spill from the tankard,
exposing the word “Quart” engraved into the soft metal. The first ale had merely
served a purpose, but this one he would enjoy. He’d been looking forward to
this night for weeks. He would not spend any further nights under a wet
tarpaulin on an open deck in the rain. He’d done with the river. He’d pull no
more trows through the shallows of the river. He’d not pull them under bridges
on the end of a rope, along the riverbank. He’d no longer load, nor unload any more
cargoes. There were however, parts of the last year that he’d grown fond of.
The Severn trows were tough little ships. They were equally capable of sailing
the tempestuous tides of the Severn estuary as they were the way upriver to
Bridgnorth and beyond.
Never the less he was done with
it. This night would bring good ale and good food. Afterwards warm water in
which to wash away the dampness of the river. After that a warm bed, preferably
with a warm body beside him. Or, two. He mused roguishly, in light of his
current ‘double rainbow’ surroundings. In any case, tomorrow would bring a
hearty breakfast in a new light of day and in fresh clothes. He’d always gone
to where the opportunity appeared to shine the brightest. “A new light”.
He thought again. He liked that idea.
Tomorrow, he’d walk into Hightown. From there, his journey would continue.
1 comment:
I liked this story a lot Stuart, it felt very true to the times
Post a Comment