Sursum Corda
Friday, March 21, 2025
Corazón - Der.
del lat. cor.
Diccionario
de la Real Academia Española
If I Can Stop One Heart from Breaking
By Emily Dickinson
If I can stop one heart from breaking,
I shall not live in vain;
If I can ease one life the aching,
Or cool one pain,
Or help one fainting robin
Unto his
nest again,
I shall not live in vain Jewels El Angelito Legātus
My Spanish dictionary traces the word corazón, heart to the
Latin cor. Cor, of course derives from the Greek. One of the most inspiring
statements in Latin, from the Roman Catholic Mass (but applies to anything) is
sursum corda which can in singular can mean “lift up your heart” or in plural “lift
up your hearts”.
My mother would often quote that to me particularly when I
felt depressed. When she died I made sure that Sursum Corda was written into
the tombstone in Mexico City.
This blog contains
a scan of the most valuable family jewel in my possession. I believe that my
Rosemary may have worn it once at a Vancouver function and many people were
dazzled by it. It consists entirely of little diamonds encrusted onto platinum.
In Spanish
there is a lovely word “corazonada” which is much lovelier that its equivalent
in English – hunch.
When I was
8 my father had a plainclothes cop called Manrique. When he would come on his frequent
visits I could spot the bulky shoulder holster behind his suit coat. One day he
gave me a lovely book which I have treasured and kept since, Corazón by Edmundo
de Amicis. I wrote about it here.
Some
years ago, when I returned from a trip to Buenos Aires I found myself alone in
a Toronto, hotel morning knowing I was having a heart attack. That led to me
finding my present cardiologist, Victor F. Huckell. A few months before my
Rosemary died on 9 December 2020 he called me. He told me, “I understand that
you have an appointment to get a right knee replacement. I would advise you
cancel it as you will need to take care of your ailing wife.” I took his advice,
cancelled and coincidentally I have never had problems with my right knee again. I have no idea why my scanner has given different colours to the little diamonds. The heart is scanned under my mother's red Mexican rebozo. My mother would often tell me that pearls had to be used. They needed to be close to skin or they would lose their sheen. I believe that I just might start wearing some of our jewels that have pearls. Would that include the heart of diamonds? I believe, yes!
El Angelito
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Ángel
Del lat.
tardío angĕlus, y este del gr. ἄγγελος ángelos; propiamente 'mensajero'.
Diccionario
de la Real Academia Española
Angels, in the early morning – Emily Dickinson
94
Angels, in the early morning
May be seen the Dews among,
Stooping — plucking — smiling — flying —
Do the Buds to them belong?
Angels, when the sun is hottest
May be seen the sands among,
Stooping
— plucking — sighing — flying —
Parched the flowers they bear along.
I have written about the jewels of my family most
recently in this blog (link below):
Legātus Today in the morning I knew what I was going to write
about today. I fished out my safety deposit box key and went to my bank. I took out this jewel
which we called either el angelito or the little angel. While my mother and
grandmother had lots of jewels and many that were most valuable, this one was
my mother’s favourite. She wore it to most of the functions she ever went to or
when she gave parties in our large house in Mexico City in the mid 1950s.
Because when we get curious (that is definitely my
problem) to ask about something, the people who can answer the question are
long dead. My suspicion is that my grandfather Don Tirso de Irureta Goyena had
the little angel made in France for my grandmother, Dolores Reyes de Irureta
Goyena.
I have no idea what will become of this little angel when
I meet my oblivion. My daughters don’t go to fancy parties or to concerts,
theatre or dance. People now, in Vancouver rarely dress up.
I have thus decided that I shall start dressing up,
wearing a tie (I have a lovely collection) and if I wear either a suit or
sports jacket I will place the angelito in my lapel.
Legātus
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Legātus
Eight or nine years ago when Rosemary and I still lived
in our large home in Kerrisdale sometimes
I would tell her when we would drive to visit our Lillooet, BC daughter Alexandra
that I might hire a professional arsonist to burn the house down. She
understood the relief we might have had to return and find nothing.
Now with her gone I live alone surrounded by valuable
stuff (we lived in Mexico for many years so we have pottery, etc). It weighs me
down in my mind.
I am 82 and I can plainly state that the idea of legacy
is diminishing to almost nothing. Once I have reached my oblivion I do not care
what happens to all my photographs or negatives. Who will have ample wall space
to put up all the framed family photographs?
My friend Djun Kim (a digital genius) is in the process
of transferring my web page/blog from a company in Texas that handles my domain
name and web hosting to one in Vancouver. When I am dead if my daughters want
to keep my blog going (6353 before this one) they will have to pay a yearly fee
to the company.
Friends tell me I should publish a book. Would it be
possible to have a book with at least 12000 pages? Would I want such a book?
No.
I tell people here that a peculiar feature in the memory
of our city inhabitants is that we ignore well known people when they are alive
to then speak of them eloquently when they are dead. Such is the case (my
opinion) of how George Bowering (Canada’s first Poet Laureate, and George
McWhirter, Vancouver’s first Poet Laureate) are ignored.
I wrote to a female friend on CBC Radio and suggested she
might want to do a story on Don Stewart’s MacLeod Books. She quickly answered
that her producers were not interested. I further told her that she could interview
me about my photography career while alive or would she wait for me to be dead.
And thus my notion of legacy has thinned.
I first had some knowledge of the term legacy when I was
eight years old in Buenos Aires. It happened to be the centenary of famous
Argentine patriot General Don José de San Martín and Juan Domingo Perón issued
a memorial publication that was given to every child in school in the country.
To this day I have treasured it. It has yellowed with age. I read it often.
In the scan there are three articles that I believe when
I am dead will have no meaning to those I leave behind. The wooden cross I
found on the beach in Veracruz where my mother lived. I converted it as a
necklace and gave it to her. The watch (it works perfectly) was given to my
mother by my mother. She often told me that it was the only valuable item he
ever gave her. The pearls (you might note that they are not perfectly round and
are slightly indented) are what my mother called barok (that’s how she pronounced baroque).
Such is this world where black wall phones have
disappeared that few now dress up to go to the opera or a party and wear
jewels. I have not worn a suit or a tie for at least one year.
I have a box, hidden away in my photo studio where I
store these slightly less valuable jewels. Many are called “joyería de fantasía”. My mother and
grandmother would go to an avenue called Cabildo in Buenos Aires in search of
these not so valuable jewels. The really valuable ones are in a safety deposit
box at my bank. My daughters have keys and access. Will they ever wear them? I
doubt it.
Part of my childhood upbringing was watching my mother and
grandmother open their large jewellery box to select what they were going to
wear for that evening’s performance or party. I was always dazzled. They would explain
the story behind every one of them.
It saddens me to understand that those memories will die
with me. I wonder what memories my two daughters and two granddaughters will
have of my Rosemary and me. I will never know.
Because I live in a double duplex the possibility of my
personal arson of my digs is out of the question.
A Weed & Usefulness Delayed
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
 | Taraxacum officinale - 18 March 2025 |  | Taraxacum officinale & Helleborus x niger 'Honey Hill Joy' |
It now seems only yesterday that Rosemary would arrive home
from her office when we lived in Kerrisdale and I would tell her that some art
director from a good magazine had called me for a job.
This was important as I felt useful. Now in this 21st
century when a grandfather is just an old man for his granddaughters and the
phone never rings my concept of my utility is all but gone.
The single most important event of the day (weather
permitting) is to take my male cat Niño for a walk around the block. I feel
useful because I am following in the footsteps of my Rosemary who taught Niño
to walk without a leash. We take the same route and in my mind is the
instruction from Rosemary, “Alex, don’t
shout at Niño when he lingers in some garden. Be patient.”
During these walks, and the one today, Rosemary’s presence
is almost tangible to me.
While walking on 8th Ave (a bike lane) I noticed a single
Taraxicum officinale (dandelion) was in bloom. I decided that somehow I would
find some excuse to scan it. For this weed to be in bloom and the only bloom in
my walk with Niño for me was a real harbinger for our coming spring.
I started scanning plants from our Kerrisdale garden in
2001. My original intent was to record with accuracy the status of a plant or
flower on the day and time I picked it. I have accumulated 3000 of them and I
know that once I am gone there will be no perceived value in them or in my
legacy. That is not important. What is important is that I have fun doing the
scan and then mating the image with some writing. It is pleasing to me. When
some people come for a visit and see a large printed scan on my living room
wall they invariably say, “Nice photograph, Alex.” I correct them and tell them
that it is a scanograph and that I am a scanographer. They rapidly lose
interest and turn around.
I now have to admit that some of my scans have become
something that is beyond accuracy and more in the direction of artistic. When I
would at one time scan only one type of flower or plant now I mix them. In
today’s scan I place that yellow weed with a bloom of Rosemary’s favourite
Hellebore which is usually called a Corsican one. A few weeks ago it was very
yellow. Today it was greenish. I think that both look lovely together.
In high school I used to marvel at looking through a
microscope. Now my Epson V700 scanner is as good as a microscope. When I looked
at the back of Taraxacum I saw beauty even there.
I scan my plants in the solitude of my office (sometimes my
male cat Niño sits by me and falls asleep). I know that at one time I would
have called Rosemary to see the scan on my monitor. She would smile as she
would have smiled today at my combination of a very good perennial with a
common weed.
As Argentine novelist (and nuclear physicist) Ernesto Sábato
wrote:
"La
fama es un conjunto de malentendidos, ya se sabe. Es vivir en una vitrina, y
para colmo desnudo, porque no hay desnudez más genuina y terrible que la
expresión artística, si es auténtica; toda obra de arte es una autobiografía,
no en el sentido literal de la palabra, sino en el sentido más profundo y
grave: un árbol de Van Gogh es Van Gogh, es su propia y desnuda alma ante
nosotros".
"That fame is a combination of misunderstandings is
known. It is to live in a glass showcase, and to make it worse, to be nude,
because there is no more genuine nakedness, and terrible, than artistic
expression, if it is authentic; all work of art is an autobiography, not in the
literal sense, but in the most profound and serious: a Van Gogh tree is Van
Gogh, it is his own and naked soul that is before us."
The scans today are a Rosemary. They are Rosemary.
Not a Cover Band - Get Back Unplugged - The Beatles Reimagined
Saturday, March 15, 2025
 | 15 March 2025 |
Of late I write a lot about my advanced age of 82 and how
since the death of my Rosemary on 9 December 2020 I have little inclination to
go alone to concerts, theatre and dance. I particularly avoid the large, and to me cold venues
like the Queen Elizabeth Theatre and the Chan Centre.
The Orpheum for me is now an exercise in nostalgia for the
warm personality of Bramwell Tovey. Few people that I ask now know who heads
the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.
I think this city is culturally sterile. We have no real newspapers that inform
us of cultural events in theatre, music and dance. And our CBC is now vacant in cultural programming with the exception of Ideas, Reclaimed and that intelligent The Debaters.
There is a happy exception. This is to be in the email lists
of your fave groups. Many of those are headed by virtuoso violinist Cameron Wilson
who is as busy as Leslie Dala. I reckon that their families no longer recognize
them as they are rarely home! Another email list of mine included The Turning Point Ensemble ,Yarilo and the Microcosmos Quartet.
Tonight I went with my designer friend Graham Walker to a
concert called Get Back Unplugged - The Beatles Reimagined. It was held at the
West Vancouver Yacht Club. After a longish trek on a curvy road we arrived to
find ourselves in an out-of-context situation of seeing elderly people having
dinner at many long tables. It occurred to me that I was probably older than
most of them. A reality check it became for me. I first heard the Beatles single Love Me Do in 1962 when I was 20 in the house of a Yorkshire friend in Mexico City. Yes, last night I was one very old man. Cameron Wilson - violin, vocals
Andrew Hillhouse - guitar, vocals,
LJ Mounteney - vocals, ukulele, percussion
Allan Dionne - accordion, vocals
David Gibbons - guitar, vocals
Brent Gubbels - bass
The band, a most definitely not a cover band, played many
Beatles songs that this musical ignoramus had no memory of ever hearing before.
Thanks to my Beatles expert, Graham Walker I was clued in.
Such is the virtuosity of this band that I marvelled at how
some of their Beatles versions sounded like Nova Scotia folk music or Tina
Turner versions. The female singer L.J. Mounteney performed her Turner impression and her singing throughout the night was stellar, and in particular,
with all her little noise making devices.
The evening’s revelation to this amateur music critic, was
the combination (they played on opposite sides) of British electric guitar/singer David Gibbons and accordionist/singer Allan Dionne (consider that I do
not like the accordion!).
Mentioning those three performers does not take away from
the other three who are a group called The Wahs. Cameron Wilson played his
violin with dazzling virtuosity. Guitarist and singer Andrew Hillhouse injected
his strong singing personality and bassist Brent Gubbles made his bass be the steady
pillar of the group. I can only add that Gubbles follows the Vancouver
tradition, perhaps begun by Mark Haney (he of the Isolation Commissions during
the Covid pandemic), of bassists being extremely handsome.
I find it perplexing that there is so much musical talent
in this city and that only a few lucky few like me are aware. CBC wake up!
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