…continued from Englischschlichacha (part one).
Eight thirty-eight. I wondered how soon they would cut the cake, and if there was anything I could do to accelerate the process. I briefly considered diving wildly into the cake then acting drunk, but although this compared favourably with the prospect of two hours hovering around the event horizon of the Ring, I demurred.
I stood alone for a moment, perfectly enunciating “English Literature, English Literature, English Literature,” under my breath and travelling through time and space, to a long, concrete room under the gymnasium of Aquinas College, Ringwood in 1989. Before me, on a bench that smelled of ammonia, lay an apron, a paper hat and a bowl, a bag of flour and two eggs.
I swept my long fringe out of my acne and tried to work out what had just happened. Ten minutes ago I had signed up for English Literature, at the head of a queue which snaked as far as six feet behind me. I and four other boys were promptly marched through the Boy’s School, past the laboratories and into No Man’s Land.
In the eighties, Aquinas College was divided into two main parts: the Boy’s School, which was a large, brick edifice last painted during the Reformation, and the Girl’s School, a newer structure which departed only from the Boy’s School design by the addition of comfort and the installation of teachers qualified in disciplines other than Physical Education. The two buildings were separated by an acre of barren asphalt overlooked by machine-gun turrets and fifteen feet of razor wire, known to those who spoke of it in hushed tones over the drink taps as the Co-Ed Area. It was into the Co-Ed Area that we were now marched. The English Literature class, we had been told, was to be co-educational. The Girl’s School loomed above us. We pulled our jumpers down as far as we could.
Inside smelled like hair spray and bubble gum, contrasting the Boy’s School’s traditional aroma of sawdust and sexual frustration. As we were lead through the corridors, female voices echoed from unknown sources. Giggles floated through the air like the most dirty promises (remember, I’m sixteen). We turned a final corner and walked numbly up to a red door, which the teacher threw open like Gene Wilder in the Chocolate Factory.
It was empty.
An animated conversation between the teacher and an admin assistant about mixed up schedules passed over our heads like distant air traffic. The five of us stared dumbly at each other, no one quite able to fit the No Girls situation into the quite promising universe we trusted the Almighty had prepared for us.
The conversation shifted to study of a big cardboard timetable on the wall, one square of which the adults now pointed to enthusiastically. The teacher lead us back out of the Girls’ School, which we couldn’t help but think was the wrong direction, but we elected not to say anything, especially when we were drawn towards the gym. Given that we were supposed to be sharing this class with girls, the possibility that we might be sharing it with them in the gym struck us a bit like simultaneously winning two lotteries.
We were taken to a room we had never noticed before, which had a row of windows looking onto the Girls’ School. At the door, we quivered. It was silent inside.
The door was thrown open, and the five nerdiest boys in the school walked in to find the twenty largest football players in the school dressed in aprons. They looked upset.
“There’s been a scheduling problem,” explained the teacher. “The girls are doing Lit when you’re doing Maths, so you can’t do it. Welcome to Home Economics,” he added. “See you in twelve weeks.” He scarpered.
The Home Economics teacher gave us all aprons and told us to pair up with one of the football players. “Right,” she said. “Lesson one: scone dough.”
We looked at the football players. They looked at us. One of them had a whisk. This is not a euphemism.
“What did you guys get kicked out of?” asked my new partner.
“Engleschlitchacha,” I twitched.
“Oh great,” he said. “Not just nerds. Retards, too.”
They never ran English Literature for Boys again. I spent the following twelve weeks perfecting Tuna Mornay and learning the importance of washing my hands after wiping my bottom in full view of hundreds of attractive girls, several of whom I knew were learning the meaning of words like ‘prosody’ and ‘iambic’ and swooning over the sexier bits of Ovid. I kneaded dough until it went through the bench top.
I never signed up for another English Literature course, and I have never pronounced the term properly again either, especially not in the kind of company in which I think there is the slightest possibility someone might suddenly grasp me by the lapels and demand to know what I think of George Eliot. I’m filled with doubt that a diversionary offer to whip up an excellent Devonshire Tea won’t suffice.
2 Comments
I know the feeling. As a student of history, I am completely incapable of remembering the word beginning with ‘E’, used for historians who believe that one can determine truth in history — what “really” happened. I cannot remember this word, no matter how I try — I cannot remember it right now. It is extremely frustrating.
Empiricism!
Now how long will that last?
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