Thu 2 Jun 2011
When I Was a Kid…
Posted by anaglyph under Family Observations, Grumpy Old Man, Nostalgia, Philosophy, Words
[12] Comments
When I was a kid the most coveted material possession of school life was a set of Derwent Pencils. ((Yes, things were much simpler back then. Now, apparently, kids expect to have phones and computers and all manner of other expensive concessions and treat it all like it was simply their right. “All the other kids have [insert desired item].” It’s not an argument that ever held water when I was a child. Where on earth did this overbearing and irksome sense of entitlement come from?)) Derwents were the créme de la créme of primary school artistic tools – without Derwents, your chances of ever becoming a new Picasso or Rembrandt were vanishingly small. Derwents were, however, also quite expensive, and my family wasn’t well off, so for many years I had to make do with the much cheaper Faber Castells, and the fond hope that I could, if fate was on my side, aspire to the crazy heights of illustrating pamphlets for the ladies down at the Lilac City Festival offices.
Then, one sunny day – I don’t even think it was my birthday – my mum gave me a box of Derwents.
I was in Pencil Heaven. Just look at that chromatic spectacle of luscious luxurious pencilness! No more scratchy Fabers! Derwents spread their rich waxy hues across the paper like a rainbow rolling softly out over a coarse grey sky!
True, it was just a box of 12 Derwents – not even close to Charlie Peerbohm’s set of two million…
…but they were Derwents nonetheless, and they were mine. It goes without saying ((Just testing!)) that I took them to school the very next day, nonchalantly slipping them from my satchel and making sure I used them whenever an opportunity presented itself. I fancied that I caught envious stares from the kids still using Fabers, and I reveled in my new-found Pencil Czar status. Derwents of my very own! It was a happy day.
A short-lived happy day, as it turns out. I arrived home from school, still giddy from the day’s sheer brilliance, opened my bag… and with frightening suddenness an awful realisation closed in on me that somehow, somehow, I’d left my brand new box of Derwent pencils on the bus. Dammit! I even remembered taking them out of the bag and putting them on the bus seat. Why did I do that???! I was devastated. I ran to tell mum.
She looked at me with an expression that was completely inscrutable, and then did something that was unprecedented in my young life. My mother said:
“Oh well.”
And I knew instantly that I had irretrievably lost my Derwent pencils. That, as they say, was that. They weren’t coming back. I couldn’t blame my mum, she hadn’t lost them. And I knew it was completely unreasonable to expect her to get me another expensive set. I was angry. Not with her, but with myself. My pride was hurt and I felt cheated and powerless and stupid. And it was, indisputably, all my fault.
With the full understanding that I was very upset, my parents chose (wisely, I came to realise) not to simply buy me another box, nor to coddle me, but just to let me understand that sometimes life is shit and your only option is to deal with it.
And it set me on the road to discover that a man is a fool who takes anything for granted.
You forgot the part where Charlie Peerbohm showed up the next day with a set of two million and twelve.
It was a sucker’s game attempting to compete with Charlie Peerbohm (I think that later in his life he changed his name to Rupert Murdoch)
Oh what a sad but lovely story! I work for Derwent and would happily send you some if you’d like? Just a little pack to keep you going ;)
That is a very touching offer Rebecca, and it seems poetic somehow that I should take it up. If you would be so kind as to email me at [reverend(at)tetherdcow.com] I will send you my details. I assume you are in the US – I am in Australia. I would be happy to pay postage.
Oh that super pencil sharpness on Rebecca’s website is so delicious!!!
So very.
I was moved to ‘like’ them!
Have Viridian and Vermilion read this salutary tale? Hmmm…
Not going there at the moment…
By the way – this was my ‘school’ story that I started way back when. I do have good intentions, but sometimes it takes me a while to get them finished.
I can relate here. Growing up in Canada, you had nothing unless you had these: http://www.laurentien.com/sanford/consumer/laurentien/history.jhtml
I had the 1960 version. Thanks for the memories.
The Pencil Czar would be a good blog name
It’d have to be a blog about pencils though. Or penises.