Thursday 30 January 2020

WINTER REMEDIES

My uncle had a wonderful remedy for a heavy cold, which involved dark rum and a red-hot poker! Not that he ever demonstrated, sadly, but on his sound advice I have found the liberal addition of dark rum to hot milk at bedtime certainly assists sleep.

Uncle Douglas spent most of WWII in a prisoner-of-war camp in Germany. Perhaps it was before his capture, or after his release that this story came about, but at some point he encountered some Russians who were in possession of a bottle of dark rum… As he related it, they would pour rum into mugs/flagons/steins, then warm a poker in a roaring fire until it was red hot. The poker would then be plunged into the rum. I can only imagine the steaming, hissing and sizzling reaction, and the smell of hot rum must have been wonderful! I’m not sure if milk came into this story at all – it seems to me that the Russians simply drank down the hot rum neat to cure their colds!

I may have written before about the debilitating effect of colds, and this one has rounded off a wet and thoroughly miserable January in perfect character. I’m fighting the onset of a chest infection, but that’s another story, and I may be winning. Copious mugs of hot lemon and honey - to which rum may also be added - have undoubtedly helped.

My January reading was as indifferent as the weather, until I discovered a new (to me) author. Peter Grainger writes crime novels set on the Norfolk coast, and his writing is a cure in itself. I reviewed the first in a series ‘An Accidental Death’, giving it five stars:

‘Some books are written in such a way that you know you will come back to them when all else fails - and this is one of them.
Peter Grainger - a new author to me - gently and subtly takes the reader's hand and guides the way like an old friend, with beautifully crafted prose. Add to this some unusual and truly likeable characters, an excellent plot, and reading doesn't get much better. I loved this, and have immediately started to read the next one in the series.’

A good book is an essential part of recovering from winter ailments. I usually return to an old favourite, but this time I’ve been lucky find a substitute and I’m now racing through the series.

I can only view the garden from the window at the moment, and its bleak contours are lifted by the amusing ‘blackbird wars’ which never end in and around this part of their territory. Birds are at risk at this time of the year, especially when the temperature drops and food is scarce. As well as one of my blackbirds, I leave you with R's lovely photo of a little Goldcrest on a cold morning, and an extract from Thomas Hardy's poem 'The Darkling Thrush' which so wonderfully describes the month about to end...







'I leant upon a coppice gate
When Frost was spectre-gray,
And Winter’s dregs made desolate
The weakening eye of day.
The tangled bine-stems scored the sky
Like strings of broken lyres,
And all mankind that haunted nigh
Had sought their household fires.'





6 comments:

  1. Wonderful post! Working on taming a cold at it's beginning on this side of the pond.

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    1. Thanks so much Anita, but so sorry to hear it's arrived over there too... Take care! :)

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  2. Oh dear. Sadly, your post brought back some rather dodgy memories for me Prue - specifically involving dark rum. I did once decide that the best way to get over being chucked was to drink a bottle of dark rum. Suffice to say, it wasn't, the mental torment was only added to by an hour or two in the bathroom re-exploring the lamb dansak I'd had earlier and most of the Lambs Navy.
    Good news though, the next day I felt so ill all I could think about was myself, my stomach and my resolution to never touch rum again - and I haven't to this day. So, result - in a sense.
    I hope you feel better soon, I'd stay away from China if I were you for a few months if you can and concentrate on rum, betterness and Oxford commas.

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    1. So sorry this brought back sad memories for you, Hugo. Maybe you need to be Russian and to heat up the entire bottle you wanted to consume, lol!
      As for so-called Oxford Commas, I find the entire argument totally baffling. Needless to say, Philip Pullman is one of the authors whose books left me depressed and confused earlier this month... I won't be reading any more of his.
      Take care and stay off the rum! :)

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  3. Were I around your area I'd pay you a visit and try cupping therapy on you something I learned from my grandmother and it really does wonders with the cold. I very much liked The Darkling Thrush and the shots of that beautiful Goldcrest.
    Hope you feel better soon Prue :)

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    1. Thank you very much, I wish I could have tried that. So glad you enjoyed the poem and photo. Sending good wishes :)

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