And yet if motion pictures are anything to go by, no sooner has
the average train left the station than half the passengers scramble out of the
windows and onto the roof, there to engage in every conceivable form of martial
art – from Kung Fu to jujitsu, from kick-boxing to Sumo wrestling.
The archetypal
motion-picture railway-traveller comes bounding into the station, vaults over
the barrier, sprints along the platform, and hurls himself at the vanishing
door-handle of the final carriage. With
legs threshing wildly through the air and sparks flying from his steel-tipped
shoes, he hauls himself upwards and clambers aboard, to the dismay of his
fellow travellers. Pausing only to
deftly adjust his slouch hat, he hefts his suitcase onto the rack, divests
himself of his trench-coat and disappears out through the half-open window.
Even as our hero
attempts to hoist himself onto the already populous roof of the train, a
hobnailed oaf with Stonehenge dentures tries
to dislodge him by dancing the paso-doble on his splayed fingers. But the handsome daredevil grabs his
assailant’s ankle and tosses him dismissively into a group of startled
blackberry pickers in a nearby hedgerow.
As the train rattles
through each station, groups of demented passengers chase one another along the
narrow corridors. Another gymnastic
wretch clings precariously to the underside of a speeding carriage and, with
his endangered skull dangling inches above the clattering rails, struggles to
undo the couplings and disengage the final carriage.
In the course of each
suicidal train journey, some rooftop swingers are hurled down embankments; some
are swallowed up by tunnels; while others, having failed to duck in time, are
decapitated by unexpected bridges.
Each evening as the
railway barriers descend to interrupt our evening journey home and the long
line of lighted windows pass in the darkness, we can only guess at what
adventures are taking place on board the 17.25. All I ever see, however, are
silhouetted figures reading evening newspapers or coyly eyeing one another’s
reflections in the windows. As they
hurtle through the countryside and thunder down tunnels, are they really
unaware of the Olive Oyle look-alike tied to the line up ahead or the whooping
band of Apache braves galloping menacingly alongside and discharging arrows
tipped with flames?
All this frenetic
cinematic activity is a far cry from the idyllic train journeys of the poetry
books: from W.H. Auden’s, ‘This is the night
mail crossing the border, bringing the cheque and the postal order’; and from
Edward Thomas’s ‘Adlestrop’ where, ‘The
steam hissed. Someone cleared his
throat. No one left and no one came on
the bare platform,’ – where the scene is one of, ‘willow-herb, and grass, and meadowsweet, and
haycocks dry … blackbird song … and high cloudlets in the sky’.
It is far removed too from
the musical train journeys of, ‘The
Orange Blossom Special’ and the wailing harmonica blues trains of old. Yes, and even from the lonesome whistle of the
late lamented Box Car Willie whose every song, be it ‘Waltzing Matilda’ or ‘Frankie
and Johnny’, seemed to feature an incongruous locomotive whistling mournfully
in the background.
The real romance of
railways is all about pipe-smoking station masters tending colourful window-box
displays in sleepy little country stations; it is about charismatic signalmen
in dark uniforms and peak caps operating a thicket of levers in mysterious
signal boxes; it is about eccentric train spotters crouched low in summer
grasses entering names and numbers in well-thumbed pocket books; and it is
about a scurry of schoolboy placing disposable coins on shimmering summer
railway lines.
My own childhood
memories are of the thud, clank and screech of wheels; the deafening hiss and
blast of steam; the station guard’s ear-piercing whistle; and the chug and
grunt of the iron monster as it commenced its six mile journey from Newry to
Warrenpoint. I can almost see the eager
faces at the windows … the Sunday suits … the open-necked shirts and the Tony
Curtis hairstyles.
Minutes later, as the
train approached its seaside destination, impatient travellers would lean out
of the windows and inhale great gulps of thick smoke, unaware that the same
locomotive smoke was blackening their well-scrubbed faces. Consequently, many an aspiring teenage
Casanova wore an inadvertent grim-faced smile as he strutted around Warrenpoint
in search of a jukebox jive and a fish and chip romance.
On one occasion back
in the early sixties, we were travelling by train to support Down in the
All-Ireland GAA Final at Croke Park in Dublin.
One of our group produced a pack of cards and a kindergarten-style poker school
commenced.
Later, a pathetic
looking figure shuffled into our carriage and observed the young card players
for a few minutes. Clearing his throat
apologetically, he asked if he could join in. Like all well-trained hustlers, he lost the first few games before depriving
the poor red and black bedecked greenhorns of their collective savings.
‘All the best, lads,’ he grinned at the
penniless poker players as he retreated like a bank robber with the takings.
Talk about “Gullibles’
Travels”!
A train passenger would
be better off on the roof!