Conversation up the Albert on a Friday night turned to the
great question: the mystery of the chip machine in Bath Road. Could there
really have been such a thing? If so, how did it work? Who stocked it? When was
it? And so on and so on … we then heard from someone who remembered it … it
cost half a crown, he thinks … all else lost in the mists of time … I have
contacted Remembering Rodborough and Stroud Local History Society for further
information … but in the interim, I have written the below as an act of homage
to what might have been the only chip machine in the world … btw, my reference
to a picture at the end of the piece is about the need for a proper portrait,
not a Banksyesque creation …
Is it a phantom, or
is it a dream?
Could there really
have been a chip machine,
Down there in
Rodborough, on the Bath Road,
Not in the days of
warriors and woad,
But back in the
Sixties, in ‘Sixty Four,
When you paid in your
money, and out of the drawer
Came the hot manna, you
all licked your lips,
A bag all wrapped
warm, and all full of chips.
A half crown was
dear, we all know that’s true,
But where else in the
world could the dream come through?
Not just mere money
at a hole in the wall,
But a great bag of
chips – so let’s all heed the call,
And all gather around,
by Frome Hall Lane,
On Friday nights,
again and again,
Down by the Bath
Road’s old Language School,
Let’s pay the chips
homage, won’t that be cool?
And laud the person
who invented these chips,
By painting a picture
of head, nose and lips,
With a caption that
daintily flutters and trips:
‘The face that
launched a thousand chips.’
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