PUFFIN BOOKS
   Quick, Let’s Get Out of Here
   Michael Rosen was brought up in London. He originally tried to study medicine before starting to write poems and stories. His poems are about all kinds of things – but always important things – from chocolate cake to bathtime.
   michaelrosen.co.uk
   Quentin Blake is one of Britain’s most renowned illustrators. Born in the suburbs of London in 1932, he read English at Cambridge before becoming a full-time freelance illustrator. He began his career working for magazines such as The Spectator and Punch. For many years he taught at the Royal College of Art, where he was head of the Illustration Department from 1978 to 1986. He became the very first Children’s Laureate in 1999 and was made a CBE in 2005.
   Books by Michael Rosen
   CENTRALLY HEATED KNICKERS
   MICHAEL ROSEN’S BOOK OF VERY
   SILLY POEMS (Ed)
   QUICK, LET’S GET OUT OF HERE
   YOU WAIT TILL I’M OLDER THAN YOU
   NO BREATHING IN CLASS
   (with Korky Paul)
   Michael ROSEN
   Quick, Let’s Get Out of Here
   Illustrated by
   Quentin BLAKE
   PUFFIN
   For Brian, Harold and remembering Connie
   For Susanna, Joe and Eddie
   PUFFIN BOOKS
   Published by the Penguin Group
   Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA
   Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3 (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)
   Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd)
   Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell,Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)
   Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi – 110 017, India
   Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd)
   Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
   Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   penguin.com
   First published by Andre Deutsch Ltd 1983
   Published in Puffin Books 1985
   28
   Text copyright © Michael Rosen, 1983
   Illustrations copyright © Quentin Blake, 1983
   All rights reserved
   The moral right of the author and illustrator has been asserted
   Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
   British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
   A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
   ISBN: 978-0-14-195706-7
   Once I was round a friend’s place
   and just as we were going out
   he went over to the table
   and picked a hard lump of chewed-up
   chewing gum with teeth marks in it
   off the table top
   and stuffed it in his mouth.
   His gran was there and she said,
   ‘You’re not taking that filthy thing
   with you, are you?’
   And he said to me,
   ‘Quick – let’s get out of here.’
   TRICKS
   Nearly every morning
   my brother would lie in bed,
   lift his hands up in the air
   full stretch
   then close his hands around an invisible bar.
   ‘Ah, my magic bar,’ he’d say.
   Then he’d heave on the bar,
   pull himself up,
   until he was sitting up in bed.
   Then he’d get up.
   I said,
   ‘You haven’t got a magic bar above your bed.’
   ‘I have,’ he said.
   ‘You haven’t,’ I said.
   ‘Don’t believe me then,’ he said.
   ‘I won’t – don’t worry,’ I said.
   ‘It doesn’t make any difference to me
   if you do or you don’t,’ he said,
   and went out of the room.
   ‘Magic bar!’ I said.
   ‘Mad. He hasn’t got a magic bar.’
   I made sure he’d gone downstairs,
   then I walked over to his bed
   and waved my hand about in the air
   above his pillow.
   ‘I knew it,’ I said to myself.
   ‘Didn’t fool me for a moment.’
   WASHING UP
   On Sundays,
   my mum and dad said,
   ‘Right, we’ve cooked the dinner,
   you two can wash it up,’
   and then they went off to the front room.
   So then we began.
   First there was the row about who
   was to wash and who was to dry.
   My brother said, ‘You’re too slow at washing,
   I have to hang about waiting for you,’
   so I said,
   ‘You always wash, it’s not fair.’
   ‘Hard cheese,’ he says,
   ‘I’m doing it.’
   So that was that.
   ‘Whoever dries has to stack the dishes,’
   he says,
   so that’s me stacking the dishes
   while he’s getting the water ready.
   Now,
   quite often we used to have mustard
   with our Sunday dinner
   and we didn’t have it out of a tube,
   one of us used to make it with the powder
   in an eggcup
   and there was nearly always
   some left over.
   Anyway,
   my brother
   he’d be washing up by now
   and he’s standing there at the sink
   his hands in the water,
   I’m drying up,
   and suddenly he goes,
   ‘Quick, quick quick
   come over here
   quick, you’ll miss it
   quick, you’ll miss it.’
   ‘What?’ I say, ‘What?’
   ‘Quick, quick. In here,
   in the water.’
   I say,
   ‘What? What?’
   ‘Give us your hand,’ he says
   and he grabs my hand
   then my finger,
   ‘What?’ I say,
   ‘That,’ he says,
   and he pulls my finger under the water
   and stuffs it into the eggcup
   with left-over blobs of old mustard
   stuck to the bottom.
   It’s all slimey.
   ‘Oh Horrible.’
   I was an idiot to have believed him.
   So I go on drying up.
   Suddenly
   I feel a little speck of water on my neck.
   I look up at the ceiling.
   Where’d that come from?
   I look at my brother
   he’s grinning all over his big face.
   ‘Oy, cut that out,’
   He grins again
   sticks his finger under the water
   in the bowl and
   flicks.
   Plip.
 &nb
sp; ‘Oy, that got me right on my face.’
   ‘Did it? did it? did it?’
   He’s well pleased.
   So now it’s my turn
   I’ve got the drying up cloth, haven’t I?
   And I’ve been practising for ages
   on the kitchen door handle.
   Now he’s got his back to me
   washing up
   and
   out goes the cloth, like a whip, it goes
   right on the –
   ‘Ow – that hurt. I didn’t hurt you.’
   Now it’s me grinning.
   So he goes,
   ‘All right, let’s call it quits.’
   ‘OK,’ I say, ‘one-all. Fairy squarey.’
   So I go on drying up.
   What I don’t know is that
   he’s got the Fairy Liquid bottle under the
   water
   boop boop boop boop boop boop
   it’s filling up
   with dirty soapy water
   and next thing it’s out of the water
   and he’s gone sqeeeesh
   and squirted it right in my face.
   ‘Got you in the mush,’ he goes.
   ‘Right, that’s it,’ I say,
   ‘I’ve had enough.’
   And I go upstairs and get
   this old bicycle cape I’ve got,
   one of those capes you can wear
   when you ride a bicycle in the rain.
   So I come down in that
   and I say,
   ‘OK I’m ready for anything you’ve got now.
   You can’t get me now, can you?’
   So next thing he’s got the little
   washing-up brush
   and it’s got little bits of meat fat
   and squashed peas stuck in it
   and he’s come up to me
   and he’s in, up, under the cape with it
   working it round and round
   under my jumper, and under my chin.
   So that makes me really wild
   and I make a grab for anything that’ll
   hold water; dip it in the sink
   and fling it at him.
   What I don’t know is that
   while I went upstairs to get the cape
   he’s got a secret weapon ready.
   It’s his bicycle pump,
   he’s loaded it with the dirty washing-up water
   by sucking it all in.
   He picks it up,
   and it’s squirt again.
   All over my hair.
   Suddenly the door opens.
   ‘Have you finished the…?’
   It’s Mum AND Dad.
   ‘Just look at this.
   Look at the pair of them.’
   And there’s water all over the floor
   all over the table
   and all we’ve washed up is
   two plates and the mustard pot.
   My dad says,
   ‘You can’t be trusted to do anything you’re asked,
   can you.’
   He always says that.
   Mind you, the floor was pretty clean
   after we had mopped it all up.
   I WAKE UP
   I wake up
   I am not me
   I am bodyless
   I am weightless
   I am legless
   I am armless
   I am in the sea of my mind
   I am in the middle of my brain
   I am afloat in a sea of nothing
   It lasts for one flicker
   of one eyelash
   and then
   once again
   I am my full heaviness
   I am my full headedness
   I am my full bodyness
   Here.
   Hallo.
   CHOCOLATE CAKE
   I love chocolate cake.
   And when I was a boy
   I loved it even more.
   Sometimes we used to have it for tea
   and Mum used to say,
   ‘If there’s any left over
   you can have it to take to school
   tomorrow to have at playtime.’
   And the next day I would take it to school
   wrapped up in tin foil
   open it up at playtime and sit in the
   corner of the playground
   eating it,
   you know how the icing on top
   is all shiny and it cracks as you
   bite into it
   and there’s that other kind of icing in
   the middle
   and it sticks to your hands and you
   can lick your fingers
   and lick your lips
   oh it’s lovely.
   yeah.
   Anyway,
   once we had this chocolate cake for tea
   and later I went to bed
   but while I was in bed
   I found myself waking up
   licking my lips
   and smiling.
   I woke up proper.
   ‘The chocolate cake.’
   It was the first thing
   I thought of.
   I could almost see it
   so I thought,
   what if I go downstairs
   and have a little nibble, yeah?
   It was all dark
   everyone was in bed
   so it must have been really late
   but I got out of bed,
   crept out of the door
   there’s always a creaky floorboard, isn’t there?
   Past Mum and Dad’s room,
   careful not to tread on bits of broken toys or bits of Lego
   you know what it’s like treading on Lego
   with your bare feet,
   yowwww
   shhhhhhh
   downstairs
   into the kitchen
   open the cupboard
   and there it is
   all shining.
   So I take it out of the cupboard
   put it on the table
   and I see that
   there’s a few crumbs lying about on the plate,
   so I lick my finger and run my finger all over the crumbs
   scooping them up
   and put them into my mouth.
   oooooooommmmmmmmm
   nice.
   Then
   I look again
   and on one side where it’s been cut,
   it’s all crumbly.
   So I take a knife
   I think I’ll just tidy that up a bit,
   cut off the crumbly bits
   scoop them all up
   and into the mouth
   oooooommm mmmm
   nice.
   Look at the cake again.
   That looks a bit funny now,
   one side doesn’t match the other
   I’ll just even it up a bit, eh?
   Take the knife
   and slice.
   This time the knife makes a little cracky noise
   as it goes through that hard icing on top.
   A whole slice this time,
   into the mouth.
   Oh the icing on top
   and the icing in the middle
   ohhhhhh oooo mmmmmm.
   But now
   I can’t stop myself.
   Knife –
   I just take any old slice at it
   and I’ve got this great big chunk
   and I’m cramming it in
   what a greedy pig
   but it’s so nice,
   and there’s another
   and another and I’m squealing and I’m smacking my lips
   and I’m stuffing myself with it
   and
   before I know
   I’ve eaten the lot.
   The whole lot.
   I look at the plate.
   It’s all gone.
   Oh no
   they’re bound to notice, aren’t they,
   a whole chocolate cake doesn’t just disappear
   does it?
   What shall I do?
  
 I know. I’ll wash the plate up,
   and the knife
   and put them away and maybe no one
   will notice, eh?
   So I do that
   and creep creep creep
   back to bed
   into bed
   doze off
   licking my lips
   with a lovely feeling in my belly.
   Mmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
   In the morning I get up,
   downstairs,
   have breakfast,
   Mum’s saying,
   ‘Have you got your dinner money?’
   and I say,
   ‘Yes.’
   ‘And don’t forget to take some chocolate cake with you.’
   I stopped breathing.
   ‘What’s the matter,’ she says,
   ‘you normally jump at chocolate cake?’
   I’m still not breathing,
   and she’s looking at me very closely now.
   She’s looking at me just below my mouth.
   ‘What’s that?’ she says.
   ‘What’s what?’ I say.
   ‘What’s that there?’
   ‘Where?’
   ‘There,’ she says, pointing at my chin.
   ‘I don’t know,’ I say.
   ‘It looks like chocolate,’ she says.
   ‘It’s not chocolate cake is it?’
   No answer.
   ‘Is it?’
   ‘I don’t know.’
   She goes to the cupboard
   looks in, up, top, middle, bottom,
   turns back to me.
   ‘It’s gone.
   It’s gone.
   You haven’t eaten it, have you?’
   ‘I don’t know.’
   ‘You don’t know? You don’t know if you’ve eaten a whole
   chocolate cake or not?
   When? When did you eat it?’
   So I told her,
   and she said
   well what could she say?
   ‘That’s the last time I give you any cake to take
   to school.
   Now go. Get out
   no wait
   not before you’ve washed your dirty sticky face.’
   I went upstairs
   looked in the mirror
   and there it was,
   just below my mouth,
   a chocolate smudge.
   The give-away.
   Maybe she’ll forget about it by next week.
   BOY FRIENDS
   Christine Elkins said to me
   under the oak tree
   in the Memorial Park –
   ‘I’ve got boyfriends.’
   ‘?’ I said. ‘?’
   
 
 Quick, Let's Get Out of Here Page 1