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It was a Saturday morning And you were 19 and you were racing along Victoria Street having just left Victoria Railway Station on your way to Dobell’s Jazz Record Shop moving quickly through the sea of humanity thinking of jazz and what record you were going to buy at the shop that day imaging yourself ********* through LP sleeves taking a mental note of which one you might buy a John Coltrane or Miles Davis an Art Blakey or maybe a Dizzy Gillespie a jazz record being played over the loudspeakers in the shop you mingling with others in the crowded place when this hobo stopped you taking hold of your jacket gently and said have you got some small change for a sandwich? no you replied I haven’t and rushed on through the crowd ********* in your pocket loose change silvery coins and his voice in your head as you raced along and your conscience nagging you maybe the voice of the believed in Christ so you stopped and turned around and made your journey back through the people passing by your fingers taking hold of the coins the silvery loose change and there he was the hobo asking others the same question and they too went by shaking their heads or saying no sorry no change and you took his hand and put in the loose silver into his open palm and said here go buy yourself a sandwich or whatever and you turned and left looking over your shoulder and he stood there staring at his palm and the coins shining in the morning sun and then you looked ahead thinking of the record shop and the LPs and the jazz music being played but deep down in some other part of you you knew you’d given to one who maybe was hungry and had unconsciously prayed.
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Jul 18, 2012
Jul 18, 2012 at 1:42 AM UTC
JAZZ AND THE HOBO.
It was a Saturday morning And you were 19 and you were racing along Victoria Street having just left Victoria Railway Station on your way to Dobell’s Jazz Record Shop moving quickly through the sea of humanity thinking of jazz and what record you were going to buy at the shop that day imaging yourself ********* through LP sleeves taking a mental note of which one you might buy a John Coltrane or Miles Davis an Art Blakey or maybe a Dizzy Gillespie a jazz record being played over the loudspeakers in the shop you mingling with others in the crowded place when this hobo stopped you taking hold of your jacket gently and said have you got some small change for a sandwich? no you replied I haven’t and rushed on through the crowd ********* in your pocket loose change silvery coins and his voice in your head as you raced along and your conscience nagging you maybe the voice of the believed in Christ so you stopped and turned around and made your journey back through the people passing by your fingers taking hold of the coins the silvery loose change and there he was the hobo asking others the same question and they too went by shaking their heads or saying no sorry no change and you took his hand and put in the loose silver into his open palm and said here go buy yourself a sandwich or whatever and you turned and left looking over your shoulder and he stood there staring at his palm and the coins shining in the morning sun and then you looked ahead thinking of the record shop and the LPs and the jazz music being played but deep down in some other part of you you knew you’d given to one who maybe was hungry and had unconsciously prayed.
terry-collett
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Jul 18, 2012
Jul 18, 2012 at 1:42 AM UTC
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