Hello People,
A few weeks ago a woman I didn't know, but had once received
a letter from, violently assaulted me using a judo throw, or some similar
martial arts technique. The reason? I'd confronted her about the 2007 fire
attack on the Cutty Sark, which I believe that she, or someone she’s
protecting, may have been behind.
These last few weeks I’ve been trying to find out what she
knows about the Cutty Sark fire. To find out more about the mysterious man I'd
met in Lesnes Abbey, and why he warned me that I was in.
“Grave danger.”
Trouble is, if every time I confront her she body slams me,
it's going to play havoc with my back, and send my insurance premium through
the roof.
So I asked Rose for some advice, and she said:
"What actual proof do you have that the Cutty Sark fire
was started deliberately? It's a pretty serious allegation to make, and it
sounds to me like a conspiracy theory you invented one afternoon when you were
board. You don't have any evidence, you've just met some really bizarre people
who agree with you, and now it seems that some of these people are violent, and
unstable. Also, I think you should stop telling the police about your
investigation, or they'll probably arrest you for wasting their time. It’s up
to you; do whatever you think’s best."
So I asked my mum, who said:
"Who is this woman who threw you? Tell her if she hurts
you again I'm going to punch her in the face. I think you should stop writing
this blog immediately, it's far too dangerous. You can do Pilates on a Saturday
with me instead."
So I asked Dad who said:
"Hire a Segway, and disguise yourself as a Post Box.
That way you can follow her without her noticing. Then we'll get to find out what
she's really up too."
I sat waiting for her by the river in my post box costume
this morning, and at about 8 o'clock bold as brass, there she was. I let her
cycle past me a little distance before starting the Segway up, raising my post
box costume slightly off the floor, and riding after her. I followed her all
the way along the river, being careful to grind to a quick halt whenever she
looked over her shoulder. I followed her all the way to Wavelengths Leisure
Centre in Deptford without her noticing.
Once there, she chained up her bike up and went inside. I
waited on the opposite side of the road for a while, but got fed up with people
throwing letters at me. So I decided to go exploring around Deptford to kill
some time.
Deptford Market |
Deptford Market |
So I started the motor up again, and headed up Griffin Street towards Deptford Market. Once there, I spotted a blanket I liked the look of on one of the market stalls (it was red with yellow and green stripes), I asked the market trader how much it would cost me.
"Who said that?" He said his eyes scanning left to
right and a look of confusion across his face.
"I did." I responded from inside my letter box.
He peered through the letter slot.
"How did you get in there?"
I couldn't be bothered to explain.
"I'm the Post Box Security Guard; I stop people from
stealing Royal Mail letters."
"Do people steal letters out of post boxes?" He
asked.
"Not while I'm around" I replied.
He sold me the blanket, and asked if I'd deliver a Birthday
Card to his brother in Maidstone for him. I promised I would, and headed off on
my way.
Few people in Deptford paid any notice to me motoring around in my post box costume, and why should they? There's nothing new about the unusual around here.
Deptford Market |
Few people in Deptford paid any notice to me motoring around in my post box costume, and why should they? There's nothing new about the unusual around here.
The local Pizzeria – Big Red – used to be a number 30 double-decker bus.The pizzas were nice, but it’s really annoying that they didn’t let you pay with your Oyster card.
The local Job Centre has now been converted into a Job
Centre-themed bar. You still can’t find any good jobs, but you end up too drunk
to care.
The local police station has been converted into an Art
Studio, which has led to the local police becoming much tougher on local crime,
describing it as laboured, unoriginal, and totally uninspiring.
I raced around for a bit, took a few corners, did some cool jumps over a couple of sleeping policemen (they were furious), and ended up back near the river, at the old Deptford Dockyard. It was there that I switched off the Segway and took a few pictures.
I raced around for a bit, took a few corners, did some cool jumps over a couple of sleeping policemen (they were furious), and ended up back near the river, at the old Deptford Dockyard. It was there that I switched off the Segway and took a few pictures.
There are many interesting stories about the Deptford Dockyard, but the most interesting has to be 'The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African.'
It's an autobiography written by a man called Olaudah. It's an incredibly sad story, but one worth hearing. He begins by telling us he was born in 1745, in an area now known as Southern Nigeria, and that he and his sister were both kidknaped and sold to slave traders when he was just 11 years old. He was separated from his sister, and shipped across the Atlantic to Barbados, and then Virginia. His description of the conditions of the journey, are hard to read.
"So crowded that
each could scarcely had room to turn himself…"
"The shrieks of
the women, and the groans from the dying, rendered the whole scene of horror
almost inconceivable."
Once in Virginia he was sold to a Royal Navy officer called
Pascal for £40, who renamed him Gustavus Vassa, after a 16th century Swedish
King. Pascal then took the young boy to England, where he served on the British
ships during the seven year war with France as Pascal’s slave. During that time
Olaudah learned to speak English, read, write, and somehow, to survive.
The war ended and Pascal and Olaudah’s ship was ordered to
Deptford Dockyard to be decommissioned. Pascal had promised Olaudah his freedom
once the war was over, and as the ship sailed down the Thames, he allowed
himself to hope. But Pascal had lied, once in Deptford, Olaudah was seized
and carried by boat to Gravesend, where he was sold into slavery again.
“My heart was ready to
burst with sorrow and anguish.”
Yet still he did not give up. He spent the next 4 years working for a shipping merchant, during which time he raised money by trading anything from fruits to glass tumblers. He eventually earned the £40 he needed to buy his freedom.
Deptford |
Yet still he did not give up. He spent the next 4 years working for a shipping merchant, during which time he raised money by trading anything from fruits to glass tumblers. He eventually earned the £40 he needed to buy his freedom.
Once free he returned to Britain to support the abolition of
slavery movement and after some encouragement, and financial backing from his
new abolitionist friends, wrote and published his life story. His memoirs – 'The
Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, the African' – were hugely popular all over the world; they made him a rich man, and
helped promote the anti-slavery movement in Great Britain.
He settled in Britain, marring an English woman called Susan
Cullen in 1792, and they had two daughters, Anna Maria, and Joanna.
Olaudah's journey to the UK was cruel one, but he took all
his awful experiences, and turned them into a book, and that book helped make
our world a better place. He wasn’t born here, and he was brought here against
his will, but if he isn’t a Great Britton, then I’d like to know who is.
I headed back to Wavelengths, but by the time I got there, her bike had gone. The mysterious cyclists had gotten away again. Oh well, there’s always next time. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to deliver a letter to Market Trader's brother in Maidstone.
Olaudah Equiano |
I headed back to Wavelengths, but by the time I got there, her bike had gone. The mysterious cyclists had gotten away again. Oh well, there’s always next time. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to deliver a letter to Market Trader's brother in Maidstone.
http://spartacus-educational.com/Sequiano.htm
http://archive.museumoflondon.org.uk/LSS/Map/Resistance/People/41.htm
http://archive.museumoflondon.org.uk/LSS/Map/Resistance/People/40.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olaudah_Equiano
http://www.nlj.gov.jm/rai/CSEC/BookTheme2/The_Interesting_Narrative_of_the_Life_of.pdf
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