One
memorable Christmas for me was the time my Aunties from Dunedin came to join in
our family celebration when I was aged about 8. To get the four Benson sisters
together in one place was a rare event and my parents pulled out all the stops
by preparing a meal with an unusual amount of exotic treats, the like I had
never seen before. The table was lit up with candles and set with highly
polished silver, glittering crystal and English china on my mother’s best lace
edged tablecloth.
My eccentric Aunties could have jumped right
out of a Charles Dickens novel. Aunty Gladys arrived stooping under her fox fur
coat and she reminded me of a tortoise with her large hooked nose, moist eyes
and wrinkly face. She told me that several of her fingers were missing because
she put them too close to the fire and they just melted away. “So let that be a
lesson to you!” she said as she waved the stumps at me. For many years I
believed her, but I sadly learnt later that she was the victim of a factory
accident.
Aunty Enid was bulging at the
seams with good humour and eating more of her delicious sponges and puddings
than was prudent. Her face was coated with powder, her mouth smeared with
bright red lipstick and she was fond of talking loudly with a hand rolled
cigarette bobbing up and down on her bottom lip. She had twinkly blue eyes that
never missed a thing and they bulged so much at times I thought they might fall
out when she coughed. She would
shake like a jelly and the ash from her cigarette would fall onto her ample
bust and accumulate there like snow on a Christmas tree.
The eldest of my mother’s sisters
was Aunty Vi; but you would not have guessed so, if all you had to go on was
her appearance. She had finely cut features and amazingly white skin and looked
like the porcelain figurines that my mother kept out of reach, high up the
mantelpiece. Another feature I remember well, was Aunty Vi’s dark hair that was
pulled back to a bun at the back of her head and seemed to push her face out
with a kind of obsessive energy. She had, as my mother put it, “A bit of a
nervous disposition Dear. Not surprising really, since she looked after Grandma
all those years and never married.”
The Christmas meal with my
Aunties was the best meal ever! My father presided over the occasion with
theatrical dignity and cracked jokes that I did not get, but nevertheless, had
most of us rolling laughter. Aunty Vi, her face now a rosey pink, said
something like “Oh George you are so wicked,” and popped another piece of
crystalized ginger into her mouth. I remember looking at her and wondering how
long her hair really was, when she suddenly sat bolt upright and left the
table. I could see her looking at herself in the hallway mirror and then she
started screaming.
What happened next is a bit hazy
because it happened so fast. However, I do recall her yelling as she was taken
to a bedroom “I’ve been poisoned… poisoned! You’ll never get the house do you
hear! Never!”
Aunty Vi returned later that night
and nothing was said about her antics – or about her being allergic to ginger.
Before she left, she gave me a pound note and said, “You won’t tell people
about your poor old aunty will you.” I am sure she would forgive me for
breaking my silence after all these years and be very pleased when I recommend
you to go easy on the ginger this Christmas.
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