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2002 OLAV
DARGE - " A Prodigal Son of
Bo'ness Writes "
THERE is no use denying it -
anyway someone would tell on
me if I did - but there was
a time when I was weary of
The Bo'ness Fair. I was, in
short, a wayward child who
had strayed from the path of
righteousness. A
disgruntled adolescent ( and
a plooky one ) who at the
age of 15, was determined
not to enjoy anything that
young children or adults
celebrated; Christmas,
Easter, holidaying with my
parents in Arbroath, the
music of Mantovani but most
misguided of all, The
Bo'ness Children's Fair
Festival. As one of my
learned Livingstone
relatives intoned, "a man
who tired of the Fair is
tired of life itself." But
it was not always thus...
"
Tarara-rarara-rarara-ra-ra-rara-ra-ra-ra-ra-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-huge
breath . . ." to an
outsider, the above jumble
of letters and numbers would
be incomprehensible, a code
that even Bletchly Park
couldn't crack with their
Enigma machines; but to the
cultured Bo'nessian it is
Our Tune - sung in many
far-off climes, wherever two
or more of Bo'nessians
loiter; from Nigeria to
Norway, from France - to
even Fife. . . " See the
summer sun is gleaming. . ."
in my childhood, it always
did on The Fair Day in
June. Of course there are
those who will accuse us of
being sentimental romantics,
but then they won't have
felt the power of the
Bo'ness Fair Day and how it
transforms a town into a
community.
There is no doubt the Fair
Day is unique and special:
its influence extending far
beyond the big day in June.
For the first time last
summer, Bo'ness Academy had
a school Prom - a splendid
occasion where our town's
senior pupils, dressed in
their ball gowns and kilts,
marked the end of their
schooling, before heading
off to further education or
work, it was an excellent
example of all that is good
about the youth of Bo'ness.
But more than that, it also
revealed just how crucial
the Fair Day still is in
their lives. The last piece
of music of the night was,
not a smoochie number for
the ritualistic,
barnacle-dance whereby
couples cling like limpets
to one another, not even the
worthy Auld Lang Syne; but
that other song of
camaraderie unique to
Bo'ness. . . The Bo'ness
Fair Song. It was quite an
emotional moment - and I
hope the start of a new
tradition for the Academy.
But why did the whole room
burst into life and the
dance-floor fill with every
single Bo'ness boy and girl
- something that had not
been achieved by any other
piece of music that night?
Simply, because of what it
meant to these youngsters
who were about to embark on
a new life, many of them
outside our community; it
reminded them of what a
childhood in Bo'ness means -
the celebration of what it
is to be a child.
Those with this sense of
community are indeed lucky
to have experienced a
Bo'ness childhood. In exile
, I have brought my children
to the Fair. My daughter
marvels at the Queen of the
Fairies' fragile beauty; my
son looks and listens
longingly at the Champion's
sword and feisty words and
wishes they were his. And
when it is all over and we
are driving back to our
nice, new city Stirling,
they lambaste their fond
father for being so foolish
as to live outside of a
place that makes magic
happen once a year.
And I too was part of that
magic. As a young child at
Bo'ness Public School in Mrs
Turnbull's Primary One
Class, John Boyd and I had
greatness thrust upon us -
we were appointed page boys
to Queen Shirley. I
remember the frantic
preparations, a white satin
suit with a red bow tie with
white gloves. I remember
too a golden posterior -
nothing to do with nerves -
but a newly spray-painted
chair not quite dry at
rehearsals made sure nothing
was left to chance and of
course there was the arches.
In garages and workshops all
over Bo'ness, the sounds of
sawing and rasping,
hammering and frustration
can be heard, whilst worried
fathers, uncles, friends,
neighbours and anyone else
who is able bodied, plan,
and build modest and
gargantuan feats of genius
outside front doors, over
gates, or even across
roads. My arch ( or was it
a house frontage? I'll check
with Mr Pollock ) was modest
in construction but lovingly
put together and later
cherished in the back garden
until the damp wood
separated and the "earywigs"
became too numerous to bear.
I remember too a second Fair
Medal as a Tyrolean Dancer,
complete with lederhosen,
bells nad bruised thighs,
twirling Claire Jeffreys
round the town in the Fair
Procession, whilst Alistair
Moore Championed Jean
Dewar's honour. I'm almost
ashamed to say that I got a
third medal, when there were
those whose families were
sadly missed out of the
dressmaking and
arch-building ritual. As
undercover Public School
boys, Alistair Paterson and
I played on stage and
marched round the town with
Deanburn School Band under
the energetic leadership of
Jim Valance whilst secretly
singing along to "2, 4, 6,
8, who do we appreciate. . .
The Public!"
As an ex-Public Schoolboy,
no longer incognito, it is a
privilege to be writing this
article, when this year the
Public School will provide
the Royal Retinue for 2002.
It is also a delight to know
that one of the members of
staff of The Public School
and latterly the Academy,
will crown the Queen - Mrs
Cullen or Margaret Begg to
her elders. Like
Margaret's, my connections
with the public school run
back into the past. It was
the school my Father
attended as a young boy,
albeit briefly, the school
my Aunt Grace Livingstone
and my Mother, Karen Darge,
taught in - a job which she
loved.
Indeed, it was while still a
teacher, that my Mother was
bestowed with one of the
greatest honours a woman
could receive in Bo'ness -
she crowned Kirsty Lockwood
Queen. Being born and bred
in a small village in
Norway, I think she may have
been the first foreigner to
carry out this prestigious
task. Indeed Bo'ness Fair
is internationalist in its
outlook - it is not just
about our town as we have
welcomed school bands from
Norway for many. Some of
you may remember two
Norwegian Bo'nessians, Ruth
McIntosh and my Mother,
striding out in front of
them, proudly wearing their
national costumes. For the
past few years we have also
been host to a South African
School as well as the
incredible array of Pipe and
Brass Bands from all round
the globe - including
Linlithgow.
Sometimes to really find out
what a place is like, you
need to discover a different
perspective from outside the
picture. As a moody
teenager, my perspective was
distorted, skewed. But my
return to Bo'ness as a
teacher has changed my view
- I now see Bo'ness as I
once saw it as a child, as a
magical place. Having lived
in many other cities and
towns in Scotland, I know
Bo'ness is an
extraordinary town. It is a
place where magic does
happen; where for just one
day in the year, adult's
lives are of no importance
and children literally and
metaphorically take centre
stage. It is where a
community celebrates what,
after all, is our future,
our town's youth.
OLAV DARGE
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