“Half memoir, half travel, A Yank Back to England...is an absolutely wonderful book, not only about going home again but also about love and family and tradition and the passage of the years.”
—Michael Dirda, Pulitzer Prize-winning literary critic (Washington
Post)
To see the entire quote, click here.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Under the Queen's wing

Kate and I walked down to a small gate that led onto the embankment. Feeding ducks or swans had become one of those things we did together when we were in England.
“They’re owned by the Queen, you know.”
A squat little girl with a suspicious look had sidled up close to us. Her red socks were rumpled and she wore a PVC rain mac over a print dress.
“Which ones are the Queen’s?” I asked, trying to be friendly.
“They are all owned by the Queen. Every one,” the girl said, darkly.
“Really?”
“If you kill one of them, the penalty is death!” The child pronounced “death” as in “deaf.”
Kate gazed anxiously at the girl. I told her to carry on feeding the swans.
“Well, we’ll be sure not kill any, just feed them, alright?”
“I suppose—” The sullen girl began kicking pebbles into the water.
“Do you want some bread?” asked Kate.
The child shook her head, then turned and walked away. Odd. Kate shrugged and carried on throwing brioche at the birds.

3 comments:

PurestGreen said...

It's not ALL the swans - just the mute swans, I believe. So you can eat the other ones! I think. Best not to - that whole pain of deaf things sounds traumatic.

ps - tablet being mailed on Saturday! :)

Carol Murdock said...

She seems like a future actor or perhaps a writer in the making!

~ Carol ~

smitten by britain said...

Cute story. For the last twenty years every time I see a family of ducks crossing a road I think of the sign we had on base warning that they were the Queen's ducks and we also had an official "Duck Crossing." Good memories.