WRITER BLOKE
Anyone who’s read Philip Larkin’s excellent poem, Mr Bleaney , will be acquainted with that eponymous elderly gent who ended his days, a lodger, in a tiny upstairs room of a stranger’s house. Sadly, there’s many a poor soul who’s finished up that way. Back in the early 19 9 0s my friend, the late Terry O’ Brien , was one such individual: a man in his early sixties who’d lost his home, savings and status as a consequence of a disastrous late marriage. While I was writing this poem, Terry's ghost lingered in my peripheral vision but my real focus was on G B Edwards , the enigmatic author of one of the Twentieth Century’s finest novels, The Book of Ebenezer Le Page. Gerald’s final years were spent as a lodger in a house just outside Weymouth in Dorset. Whilst the poem isn’t based upon G B Edwards’ actual circumstances*, it was certainly influenced by them. THE LODGER He could be short-tempered and cold. He’d say, Too dear at seven quid, and other times she would be told, I’m...