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Isle of Wight: Isle be back

We travelled back in time to find that the past is another country, even if the Isle of Wight is not

April 8, 2015 15:39
Shanklin seafront

ByKaren Glaser, Karen Glaser

3 min read

'Children are welcome" says the door sign of Romeo's Boutique. Underneath is another note, handwritten, advertising "assorted leggings and sweaters". Across the road, you can tuck into "French cakes, knickerbocker glory, sorbets and sundaes" at Pearly Boise. And two doors down, Not Just Travel has decorated its shop window with leaflets of its holidays to foreign parts.

It all reminded me of my childhood years spent here. My seven-year-old, Aaron, thought he already was in foreign parts. "You didn't say we were going abroad, Mummy!" he said excitedly in the car-queue to cross the Solent, the strait that separates mainland England from its largest island. "We are not, darling. It just feels like it because you need a ferry to get to the Isle of Wight."

Taking in the main street in Shanklin, a seaside resort on the east coast, the next morning, it dawns on me that it isn't just 20 miles of sea water that can make this island feel like a distant land. To quote LP Hartley's opening line of his novel The Go-Between: "The past is a foreign country." And I really did feel as if I had time-travelled back to my 1970s childhood. Had my dad's old Mark III Cortina pulled up outside Groovy Records (yes, really), my younger self might have jumped in. It all made me feel pleasantly omniscient. When I holiday with my kids, I am usually glued to a guide book so I can answer their constant questions about where we are and what such and such means. Here it was different. What is a crabbing bucket, Mum? A tea cosy? A Conservative club? I had all the answers about the shops and sights of Shanklin High Street in my memory bank. I felt surprisingly authoritative.

In truth, I should have been less surprised. Of course it was familiar: the soil of this scepter'd, green and pleasant land is soaked in English culture and history. Lord Tennyson, Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll all made the Isle of Wight their home. Winston Churchill and Charles Darwin lived here for extended periods, and Dickens, Thackeray and Keats penned works here. And "England in miniature", as it has been dubbed, was a favourite holiday destination for well-heeled Victorians. This island is about as foreign as a cup of tea (with the milk poured in first).