Gigue and Aranjuez
Hi everyone. I haven't posted here in ages. Now my A levels are out of the way I have a bit more time to do so.
Just thought I'd drop off a couple of stories I'd writted to see what everyone thought. Hopefully I'll be back soon and posting on a daily basis.
Gigue
In my mind he is fading and growing more distant until he is sitting in a corner
of the room as dusty and out-of-tune as the cello on which he used to play the second
movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet in C# minor.
“Beethoven,” he would say, and I couldn’t help but agree with him, “had more
passion than he knew what to do with,”
“But Bach,” (raising a finger that would tremble that little bit more each time
he said this), “had a clear view of himself. Of his passion.”
I knew he wished he himself shared these powers of inner perception.
The fingers that have never stopped trembling in these last years would mould
themselves, I remember, around the careful streams of notes of Bach’s cello suites as
if they had been designed for it. The passion he sought would travel from his mind
down his arms until his fingers would crackle with a life that they breathed through
the strings and into the corners of a living room that would stretch out indefinitely
into a concert hall where he had once played the same piece in front of a thousand
people.
“I don’t play in front of crowds anymore.” He said, smiling. Something in that
smile made me think of the way his hands shook.
I see him now in the act of tuning his instrument. To him such an act was
something austere and his great hands grasped and turned the pegs with a precise
dignity that was almost overwhelming.
Then he would begin to play, and practice runs through major and then minor
scales would begin to shape themselves into those pieces to which he always
attributed something deeply personal.
“Locatelli,” he breathed. “I won a woman’s heart with Locatelli.” He played
the piece as if he were still playing for her, the movements in turn ploughing and
harrowing long-fallow fields somewhere behind his softening eyes. I think he has
played more Locatelli that anything else these last years.
These last years he has not touched the books upon his shelves and they have
grown stale and sad, their words running together and all but unreadable now. He sits
and looks at them and tries to remember which of them he has still not read but he can
barely even recall the ones he has.
The books in their way look back at him in secretive, unfathomable thought.
Under their gaze he paces through this room and a hundred others in his mind.
He talks about himself in the third person.
In one room a doctor talks to him calmly and kindly. In another he has
forgotten his grandson’s birthday and he feels ashamed and inexplicably worried
about something. In a more distant room he listens to the third Brandenburg Concerto
and sips tea alone and in tears. In another his wife has been to the doctor and he feels
something dark rise up inside him.
In his mind he walks from room to room until he is listening to the third
Brandenburg Concerto on his grandfather’s knee. Something glorious is filling up
inside him and from that room he thinks he can see a hundred rooms he is yet to pace.
They stretch on and on to a room where an old man sits with shaking hands
and tries to remember something he had last thought about a long time ago.
This next one I wrote for a girl I met a couple of years back behind a bar in South Africa. Just about the strangest, most sensual human being I will probably ever meet. I'm terrible at poetry so here we have a love poem in prose form:
Aranjuez
Aranjuez is a Royal City to the south of Madrid. It lies alongside the banks of
the River Tajo but to me Aranjuez will always be my Spanish Rose for whom I would
sell my shoes or starve on some forgotten drizzly street.
Aranjuez, whose laugh I still hear resounding across the miles and years
between us. The sum of human knowledge and experience preserved in the form of
my rose behind the bar of a Cape Town hostel, looking at nights with dark brown eyes
on endless roads slick and sad with rain.
Aranjuez. In her way more grand and beautiful than her namesake, that night
in a strange city half the world away.
Aranjuez, who loved the sun and slept throughout the afternoon in its warm
dusty rays. Who called the crickets vain. Who spoke every word as if it were fresh
and new to her lips.
Who poured African whisky for me and laughed when I made a face. Who
tossed it back herself as if it were water. Whom I never forgave.
Aranjuez, fingertips yellow from eating oranges and her switchblade in her
hand, carving words I didn’t understand into the bar that night we were alone in all
the world.
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"When people thought the Earth was flat, they were wrong. When people thought the Earth was spherical they were wrong. But if you think that thinking the Earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the Earth is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together." -Isaac Asimov
Last edited by TheWalkinDude; 08-14-2005 at 12:58 PM..
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