Oscar Wilde wrote: “Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.”
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Sunday, November 30, 2008
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Necessary noise ... part 10
Barbara wrote:
Last night I was walking home from the Traverse alone, having seen a splendid new play by Paul Higgins who is a wonderful Scottish actor. An ambulance passed, lights flashing but no siren and travelling rather slowly. I was transported back to your accident and heard you saying you thought all would be well because the siren wasn't playing. Felt in some ways like a long, long time ago and in other ways not so.
You've achieved so much to be proud of since then - and exceeded everyone's hopes and dreams for your health and in every other way.
Sitting here in Sydney on a sunny Saturday afternoon, Spike's violin and accordion music playing (Sophie Solomon) as she prepares her portfolio in another room, I had a quiet wee weep. Not quite sure why. Melancholic Scottish middle-aged man shit, I would say.
_
Friday, November 28, 2008
Incomparable
On the other hand there is the white peach souffle and a glass of Pommier Chablis Premier Cruz at Pier Restaurant, Rose Bay, Sydney.
No contest really.
(photograph showing a young woman on the verge of a comatose slumber after dinner with, perhaps, the most boring date of the 21st Century ... a man who can send polar bears to sleep with just one glance)
.
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Not this life
many boxes can contain life’s essentials
stored regretfully in an empty room?
Years stacked up against each other,
one on top of another, but not necessarily
in chronological order.
Nineteen eighty-eight sits awkwardly
with nineteen ninety-six
and two thousand and two is crumpled
in a heap in the corner, rubbing
shoulders with the elbows of four
or five more years, eventful years:
not one will ever come again.
Paintings and prints lean patiently,
almost with no interest in the outcome,
against the barest wall. A frying pan,
bought in
rests adjacent to twelve or thirteen
albums of photographs that span the years
we never thought would end until
they ended, not as one might wish
they’d end but like an appalling soap opera,
a version of events going on elsewhere
in someone else’s life.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Soulmate?
Soulmate is a term sometimes used to designate someone with whom one has a feeling of deep and natural affinity, friendship, love, intimacy, sexuality, spirituality and/or compatibility. A related concept is that of the twin flame or twin soul – which is thought to be the ultimate soulmate, the one and only other half of one's soul, for which all souls are driven to find and join. However, not everyone who uses these terms intends them to carry such mystical connotations.
One theory of soulmates, presented by Aristophanes in Plato's Symposium, is that humans originally consisted of four arms, four legs, and a single head made of two faces, but Zeus feared their power and split them all in half, condemning them to spend their lives searching for the other half to complete them.
Monday, November 24, 2008
Delayed gratification is not always worth the wait
You might think that after taking forty-five minutes to prise open a new jar of Vegemite one's taste buds would be in a state of near sexual frenzy at the anticipated delight. But no ... fundamentally, when all is said and done, a vegemite sandwich is basically some bread with a vitamen B paste spread over the surface.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Hawk's Nest breakfast and beyond
It's not my photo by the way. That'll have to wait until I read my phone's manual to find out how to download pics. I'm sure there's a wire somewhere that I'll need.
Photograph by this guy
Stardust by Neil Gaiman
Check out Neil Gaiman's web site
Saturday, November 22, 2008
dreams, doctor?
Friday, November 21, 2008
Quantum of Solace
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Thunder (as forecast)
bearing the cleansing torrents
of rain unleashed upon us
without regard for who we are,
our small concerns, our big hopes,
the million little vanities
we throw high-up before us
into the charged atmosphere
to see if hurricanes may blow them
this way or that way but far from view,
far from who we think we are
when we confuse not only foolish men
who are, themselves, already
well-enough confused, but also draw
the wrong conclusions from the storm.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Okay is never the answer
to contemplate in the conscience mind?
Must they always come by stealth,
when you least expect the abyss
to open up in your front of you,
suddenly awake in the middle
of the night and at the very core
of your being? Or in the shower,
perhaps, on a summer’s morning
when the world outside is filled
with hope and life and light
and the world inside is bursting out
with hope renewed and fragile
anticipation of the idea ... 'maybe'?
_
Monday, November 17, 2008
Sunday, November 16, 2008
turning the page
can you hear the new season’s
grass grow in the quiet morning
when not even the harbingers
of dawn’s chorus have risen
to give voice to the hope
a weary man might look for
in the half light of a new day?
And if you sit still long enough
to witness one full revolution
of your whole world filled,
not only by silences and space,
but with people, players, places
and circumstances, births, deaths,
marriages, soap operas, plays
and sonatas that might uplift
the perplexed spirit of a cliché
masquerading as a man
of wit and wisdom
could you see the point
of departure on the axis
as it spins beyond control?
And if not, how do you
deal with life’s certainties
we can neither touch nor taste
nor hear nor see nor feel?
Someone ought to write a manual.
Passionate intensity for dummies,
with a contents page, a proper index
and one or two cartoon characters.
If you’re lucky you’ll find it
in the remaindered section
of book shops everywhere
until you need it
more than you had ever feared.
Life
thank fuck for the peace and quiet of the office on a Sunday.
Necessary noise ... part 8
Yesterday morning was marvellous. I put my friend Spike’s Tallis Scholars CD on to play as dawn came up. There were no early morning trains, no traffic humming somewhere in the mid-distance, very few birds. There was just me and the emerging light and the voices singing Media Vita for 6 voices, its transcendent sound filling the flat, doing something to me that I don’t understand but, when you’re wise enough, you simply accept for what it is.
Today, the dawn is still an hour or more away. But the music is with me to help me start a day on which my entire world looks completely different. Without any warning.
One moment you allow yourself to believe that all one's hopes can indeed be realised. Next minute you know that’s not how the world really is. Up or down the music remains transcendent. Today it does something different to me that I understand no more than I did yesterday. I simply pray (although I am not a man who believes in the power of prayer) that I am and will be wise enough to accept it for what it is.
I looked for Media Vita for 6 voices on the web but couldn’t find it. Palestrina will have to suffice.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
One man's essential truth
Play's done
A radio play in three Acts
Dedicated to Miss Amelia Starr
dreams, doctor?
It is early morning, still gloomy (in a Scottish autumnal way) before dawn. We might be looking at
We swim away from the bus stop, heading west along
To paraphrase Robert Duval's character in Apocalypse Now ...
NOT!
Friday, November 14, 2008
Lettie Lariot: A bohemian artist with an air of mystery about her
Lettie is dressed in a pair of trousers over which a split dress sits, sparkling with colours that seem to move and dance as she walks. Her overcoat is magnificent: now magenta, now purple, now red then blue and gold and green and yellow or was it ochre and magenta together. A wide brimmed hat sits on her long, flowing dark brown hair through which a streak of silver-grey strikes like lightening. Lettie carries stars in the pockets of her great coat and around her waist is tied the belt of Orion (not a fashion accessory but the true belt of Orion for in truth, it is said, Lettie may originate from somewhere beyond Ganymede.)
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Traitor
There were three of us in the cinema. A couple up the back who looked as if they were involved in an office affair and had gone somewhere cool, quiet and dark to neck. And me. Can a cinema survive on $24 income per session?
dreams, doctor?
We hit the sea bed with a bump. The van is sitting on its rear end in about a foot or so of water. Gentle waves roll in to the beach and I take in my surroundings. In front of me is the cliff I’ve just come off. It's covered in Caledonian forest trees. There is a massive structure attached to the cliff face, reaching almost to the top. It might be a giant Ferris wheel, it has that appearance and those dimensions, but it’s not for amusement. It could perhaps be a working wheel, except its not connected to any mill or water way. And its organic, made of wood and growing material, almost as if it’s part of the forest … watching too much Lord Of The Rings Dougie!
Over to the left there is a beach. Behind there are two blocks of 1960 apartment buildings like those my aunts, uncles and grandmother occupied in Castlemilk, Glasgow; except these are not modern day slums. They’re pleasant. It could even be a French sea side resort. There is a road separating the two blocks of apartments. It disappears towards the horizon.
There are quite a few people around. An old couple; children playing. Some folk out for a walk, some of them with dogs. I call frantically for assistance but no one seems too bothered. They look up and across at me. No one says anything but one or two smile, as if to suggest, ach it’s only Dougie horsing around as usual.
I rock backwards and forwards in my driver’s seat until the van rights itself. There’s some hissing and steam as the engine hits the water. I get out the van by the side door from which the hoist is usually deployed. I walk around the back of the van to inspect for damage. There doesn’t seem to be any. I return to the driver’s window, reach in through it to turn the ignition key and the van starts first time. I drive towards the beach but park just before it. Now I deploy the hoist. I’m standing on it, maybe sitting, when two police officers walk through the shallow water towards me. One says, good evening Dougie then they pass on out to sea. The other one simply smiles on seeing me, as if they’ve just been sharing a joke about me.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Fuck knows what that’s all about
Monday, November 10, 2008
is this all it comes to in the end?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
you get what you deserve Douglas.
Sunday, November 09, 2008
Can you, on a clear day, see forever?
suspended in a Michaelangelo blue sky.
John Martyn on the CD player
singing of Nick whatsit's solid air.
The green outside is dappled
with the lavender of jacaranda
here and there. Is that you
I can just see on the far horizon?
The chickens seem to be
distracting your attention
but I caught your wave
and saw you smiling.
Who knew?
when we’re young, inquisitive and oh so eager yet
to learn about the world and what it’s really like.
Instead, they offer facts and figures, dates, dynastic
lines and books of logarithmic tables, which help you
calculate some things that only Math guys understand.
The lucky ones, peut-etre, learn a little French and, maybe,
join the school exchange to visit some quaint towns
where no one understands a word you say but smile.
And when you’re seventeen, still spotty but so keen
to shave (although it looks a painful way to start each day)
they make you sit exams to test just what you know.
That’s very well and good, don’t get me wrong. I do not
mean to knock good education or insult the French
(nothing can persuade me of the need for cosines).
But does an adult warn you of the way a sunset falls
upon the heart, with blue and pink and gold; magenta
marbled clouds that fade to black against the sky?
Who warns of nights when trains roll down the track
like half-remembered words that thunder spoke
of how we dare not live without our dreams and hopes?
The answer is, of course, that not one adult speaks
a word of lessons still to learn when we have cast off
Maths, forgotten French and grown our first full beard.
Saturday, November 08, 2008
The Rest Of Your Life
is not without its ups and downs
both of which you might expect.
(maybe that’s a consequence
of diversionary therapy
or displacement theory
operating on your psyche).
which means the kitchen table is cleared
of a broken modem and unopened envelopes
mostly bills, of course,
and copies of The New Yorker
you never had the heart to read
because … well basically because
The New Yorker is way too optimistic
for a man who leaves his telephone bill
unpaid, his energy direct debit unopened
and his superannuation account
unexamined, although you could
attribute that reluctance to the collapse
of early-period 21st Century Capitalism
at the fag end of the Bush years:
It’s just that in some areas, we don’t.
You install software that’s been lying
close to your computer for quite a while
and you configure the programme
in ways you normally don’t bother
(reading the manual with attention to detail).
Some e.mails go unanswered.
Others, you put on a bright face,
learning how to use smileys on Skype,
which is a skill you never imagined
you’d acquire. And much to your surprise,
you learn about gravatars but don’t pick one.
Phone calls can be dodgy, if you take them.
You thinks it’s day one of the rest of your life.
Everyone else thinks it’s nothing more
than Saturday morning. So you have to put them right,
which can come as a bit of a shock (to them
because they’re in something like mild shock
but not wholly surprised;
while you’re aware you have to go over it again
and again and again.) But that’s life
on day one of the rest of your life.
But we’ll get round to that tomorrow.
Friday, November 07, 2008
Thursday, November 06, 2008
Ninety-one thousand, nine hundred and seventy-two
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Lost in space
a man may save himself
from the laws
of physics and of love
or stop the world
spinning
off its axis
in this universe
with planets (aligned
as they must be)
stars in constellations
(in which some have claimed
to read all things that pass)
where meteors collide:
they crash and burn
along inexorable paths,
they fall perhaps
into a black hole
where all known matter
disappears,
vanishes
without a trace,
not leaving
even the core of life’s
perpetual pulsar
which too succumbs
to forces that outweigh
and overwhelm
a solitary shooting star
in the dawn’s new day.
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
the key turns in the door
the ways love spoke to me
I think that no one,
not a living soul,
would understand
that it is in
the ordinary,
the way
love dances
(if you're lucky)
with a supermarket trolley
or carries home
a mop
or puts another pot
of breakfast tea
upon a kitchen table,
strewn
with debris
from a life
inconsequential,
or reads aloud
the novels of Neil Gaiman
and John Wyndham
(in which a field mouse
yearns to bite
the nut of wisdom
and three-legged plants,
carnivorous
and deadly,
race to the edges of imagination)
love lives forever on
beyond
mere hope
where anything ...
where everything ...
is possible.