Tres Hermanas Argentinas Y El Papá
Saturday, October 05, 2013
Sofi |
Agustina |
Maureen |
Jorge |
Embates y Oscilaciones
Friday, October 04, 2013
Embates y
oscilaciones
de un mar
de tribulaciones
ella
arrostró; y la agonía
saboreó su
fantasía;
y el
punzante frenesí
de la
esperanza insaciable
que en pos
de un deseo vuela,
no alcanza
el blanco inefable;
se irrita
en vano y desvela,
vuelve a
devorarse a sí.
From
Argentine poet Esteban Echeverría’s epic poem La Cautiva, 1837
When I first saw this
particular stanza while visiting Nora Patrich and Roberto Baschetti in Buenos Aires I was blown
away. There is no available translation and I would not tackle it here. It is
about a white woman who is captured by Mapuche Indians.
Everything & Nothing
Thursday, October 03, 2013
Everything and Nothing
(From Dreamtigers English version of El Hacedor) by J.L. Borges
There was no one in
him; behind his face (which even in the poor paintings of the period is unlike
any other) and his words, which were copious, imaginative, and emotional, there
was nothing but a little chill, a dream not dreamed by anyone. At first he
thought everyone was like him, but the puzzled look on a friend’s face when he
remarked on that emptiness told him he was mistaken and convinced him forever
that an individual must not differ from his species. Occasionally he thought he
would find in books the cure for his ill, and so he learned the small Latin and
less Greek of which a contemporary was to speak. Later he thought that in the
exercise of an elemental human rite he might well find what he sought, and he
let himself be initiated by Anne Hathaway one long June afternoon. At
twenty-odd he went to London.
Instinctively, he had already trained himself in the habit of pretending that
he was someone, so it would not be discovered that he was no one. In London he hit upon the
profession to which he was predestined, that of the actor, who plays on stage
at being someone else. His playacting taught him a singular happiness, perhaps
the first he had known; but when the last line was applauded and the last
corpse removed from the stage, the hated sense of unreality came over him
again. He ceased to be Ferrex or Tamburlaine and again became a nobody.
Trapped, he fell to imagining other heroes and other tragic tales. Thus, while
in London’s
bawdyhouses and taverns his body fulfilled its destiny as body, the soul that
dwelled in it was Caesar, failing to heed the augurer’s admonition, and Juliet,
detesting the lark, and Macbeth, conversing on the heath with the witches, who
are also the fates. Nobody was ever as many men as that man, who like the
Egyptian Proteus managed to exhaust all the possible shapes of being. At times
he slipped into some corner of his work a confession, certain that it would not
be deciphered; Richard affirms that in his single person he plays many parts,
and Iago says with strange words, “I am not what I am.” His passages on the
fundamental identity of existing, dreaming, and acting are famous.
Twenty years he
persisted in that controlled hallucination, but one morning he was overcome by
the surfeit and the horror of being so many kings who die by the sword and so
many unhappy lovers who converge, diverge, and melodiously agonize. That same
day he disposed of his theater. Before a week was out he had returned to the
village of his birth, where he recovered the trees and the river of his
childhood; and he did not bind them to those others his muse had celebrated,
those made illustrious by mythological allusions and Latin phrases. He had to
be someone; he became a retired impresario who has made his fortune and who
interests himself in loans, lawsuits, and petty usury. In this character he
dictated the arid final will and testament that we know, deliberately excluding
from it every trace of emotion and of literature. Friends from London used to visit his retreat, and for
them he would take on again the role of poet.
The story goes that,
before or after he died, he found himself before God and he said: “I, who have
been so many men in vain, want to be one man: myself.” The voice of God replied
from a whirlwind: “Neither am I one self; I dreamed the world as you dreamed
your work, my Shakespeare, and among the shapes of my dream are you, who, like
me, are many persons—and none.”
More from El Hacedor (Dreamtigers) by Borges
Everything and Nothing (the title in El Hacedor was in English)
J.L. Borges
Nadie hubo
en él; detrás de su rostro (que aun a través de las malas pinturas de la época
no se parece a ningún otro) y de sus palabras, que eran copiosas, fantásticas
y agitadas, no había más que un poco de frío, un sueño no soñado por alguien. Al
principio creyó que todas las personas eran como él, pero la extrañeza de un
compañero, con el que había empezado a comentar esa vacuidad, le reveló su
error y le dejó sentir para siempre, que un individuo no debe diferir de su
especie. Alguna vez pensó que en los libros hallaría remedio para su mal y así
aprendió el poco latín y menos griego de que hablaría un contemporáneo;
después consideró que en el ejercicio de un rito elemental de la humanidad,
bien podía estar lo que buscaba y se dejó iniciar por Anne Hathaway, durante
una larga siesta de junio. A los veintitantos años fue a Londres.
instintivamente, ya se había adiestrado en el hábito de simular que era
alguien, para que no se descubriera su condición de nadie; en Londres encontró
la profesión a la que estaba predestinado, la del actor, que en un escenario,
juega a ser otro, ante un concurso de personas que juegan a tomarlo por aquel
otro. Las tareas histriónicas le enseñaron una felicidad singular, acaso la
primera que conoció; pero aclamado el último verso y retirado de la escena el
último muerto, el odiado sabor de la irrealidad recaía sobre él. Dejaba de ser
Ferrex o "Tamerlán y volvía a ser nadie. Acosado, dio en imaginar otros
héroes y otras fábulas trágicas. Así, mientras el cuerpo cumplía su destino de
cuerpo, en lupanares y tabernas de Londres, el alma que lo habitaba era César,
que desoye la admonición del augur, y Julieta, que aborrece a la alondra, y
Macbeth, que conversa en el páramo con las brujas que también son las parcas. Nadie
fue tantos hombres como aquel hombre, que a semejanza del egipcio Proteo pudo
agotar todas las apariencias del ser. A veces, dejó en algún recodo de la obra
una confesión, seguro de que no la descifrarían; Ricardo afirma que en su sola
persona, hace el papel ene muchos, y Yago dice con curiosas palabras no soy lo
que soy. La identidad fundamental del existir, soñar y representar le inspiró
pasajes famosos.
Veinte años
persistió en esa alucinación dirigida, pero una mañana le sobrecogieron el
hastío y el horror de ser tantos reyes que mueren por la espada y tantos
desdichados amantes que convergen, divergen y melodiosamente agonizan. Aquel
mismo día resolvió la venta de su teatro. Antes de una semana había regresado
al pueblo natal, donde recuperó los árboles y el río de la niñez y no los
vinculó a aquellos otros que había celebrado su musa, ilustres de alusión
mitológica y de voces latinas. Tenia que ser alguien; fue un empresario
retirado que ha hecho fortuna y a quién le interesan los préstamos, los
litigios y la pequeña usura. En ese carácter dictó el árido testamento que
conocernos, del que deliberadamente excluyó todo rasgo patético o literario. Solían
visitar su retiro amigos de Londres, y él retomaba para ellos el papel de
poeta.
La historia
agrega que, antes o después de morir, se supo frente a Dios y le dijo: Yo, que
tantos hombres he sido en vano, quiero ser uno y yo. La voz de Dios le contestó
desde un torbellino: Yo tampoco soy; yo soñé el mundo como tú soñaste tu obra,
mi Shakespeare, y entre las formas de mi sueño estabas tú, que como yo eres
muchos y nadie.
El Hacedor
Wednesday, October 02, 2013
I took several copies (CDs) of Jorge Luis Borges’s 1967-1968 Norton Lectures on Poetry which he extemporaneously (he was almost blind by then and could not write or read notes) said in Harvard to Buenos Aires on a trip in 2013.
Just about any Argentine I know (including
many members of my Argentine family) will tell you that Borges spoke almost
perfect English, and not only that but also Old English. When I asked these
folks if they had ever heard Borges speak in English I received no affirmative
answers. And strangest of all, I only found two friends who were willing to
receive my present. One of them was Roberto Baschetti, who works at the
Biblioteca Nacional and took the DVD’s as my donation to the library of which
Borges was its director from 1955 for 18 years (he resigned when Perón returned in 1973). The other was my very Argentine first cousin Jorge Wenceslao de Irureta Goyena.
I would perhaps guess that few, except the
very old (like me) have ever read Borges in any language. This is a pity. Today
I re-read for the umpteenth time his 1960 El Hacedor which has short stories, none
longer that two pages, and essays and poems of the same length.
In this blog, I place one of the stories,
the very Gothic El Simulacro about a strange man who goes to the Chaco Province
at the time of Eva Perón’s death,
July 1952 and presides over a wake in which he places a little coffin, a blonde
doll inside, on a table. He charges entry and makes those who willingly pay
think that he just might be the famous widower.
The story is not very
favourable to the Peróns and Borges had a very good reason to dislike them.
When Perón rose to power in and was elected President in 1946 Borges was
critical. Of them, the Peronists, Borges said something quite delectable:
“They are neither bad nor good, they are incorrigible.” At the time Borges was working at the Miguel Cané Library but he resigned his post when Perón and company, taking a cue (well before the Prague Spring in 1968 when Alexander Dubček after the fall of his country to Soviet armed forces was given the job in Slovakia’s Forestry Service) was promoted to a post as inspector of poultry and rabbits at the Buenos Aires municipal market. At a dinner of the Argentine Society of Writers a speech written by Borges was read. In it was this caustic opinion on Perón and his Peronists:
"Dictatorships
breed oppression, dictatorships breed servility, dictatorships breed cruelty;
more loathsome still is the fact that they breed idiocy. Bellboys babbling
orders, portraits of caudillos, prearranged cheers or insults, walls covered
with names, unanimous ceremonies, mere discipline usurping the place of clear
thinking... Fighting these sad monotonies is one of the duties of a writer.
Need I remind readers of Martín Fierro or Don Segundo that individualism is an
old Argentine virtue."
What is curious to me
is that the then (and even now)
not-too-well-known English writer, Olaf Stapledon wrote a fantastic science
fiction story in 1937, The Star Maker in which a man sits under a tree during a
starry night and as he thinks and dreams his mind soars into outer space and
beyond. That book was translated into Spanish in 1965 (I purchased a first
edition in Buenos Aires
at the time, alas lost in time) which contained a prologue written by Borges.
The book’s title was El Hacedor de Estrellas. Hacedor is a beautiful word in
Spanish that is rarely used. And yet
there is this book by Borges, published in 1960 with that evocative title, El
Hacedor!
I attempted to look for an English translation of Borges's prologue to Stapledon's Star Maker but only found this: A Dog, A Turtle & Robert E. Lee's Horse
On Fading Friendship
Tuesday, October 01, 2013
It seems that it was not too long ago that
my Spanish friend, symphonic conductor Juan Castelao told me that he kept tabs
with his family in Galicia
with something that he called Es-sky-pee.
Some four weeks ago I watched Nora Patrich
in her home in Bella Vista in the outskirts of Buenos Aires
talk with her just over a year old granddaughter who is in Gijón, Spain. Nora did go to Spain earlier
this year but I wonder if her granddaughter who smiles and does all kinds of
tricks for her grandmother on Skype knows the reality from the virtual image. And
yet I cannot criticize this modern advancement that beats that “long distance
feeling” by a mile.
For some years I had a
tremendous friendship with Argentine painter Juan Manuel Sánchez and his wife
Nora Patrich (also an artist) who did not live far from my Kerrisdale home. We
talked every day (any hour of the day or night) and we visited frequently. We
worked on all kinds of collaborative work. Best of all it was to speak my
mother tongue and to discuss stuff that I could only do so with a fellow
Argentine. And through Sánchez I obtained a wonderful art education. I often
told him that he reminded me of a slightly paunchy Picasso.
Some 10 years ago the
couple split up and went back to Buenos
Aires on separate airplanes.
I was furious (!) with
both of them for having ruined this nice thing we shared. I expressed most of
my anger towards Patrich and for a few years I refused to answer her emails or
see her when she visited Vancouver. I was awfully silly. But I never did find anybody in Vancouver as receptive as they were to work on anything at any time.
With Sánchez I
kept up a pleasant relationship via Skype. I could never see him as he refused
to buy a computer so I had to call him via my computer to his phone.
Every time I would
call him he would ask me when I was going to visit him in Buenos Aires. This kept on for some years and
by then I had decided my fight with Patrich was stupid.
So when Patrich
invited me to stay at her house for three weeks when I told her I was planning
to travel to Buenos Aires
at the end of September I realized that my saving on the hotel made the
financial arrangements of the trip a possibility.
Via use of the
internet I obtained three Argentine models willing to work with Patrich,
Sánchez and me. There was a wrinkle when I informed Sánchez. In the end he said
he would allow his ex-wife to visit and work in his studio once.
I knew that Patrich
had a new partner, the sweet librarian Juan Boschetti. I also knew that Sánchez
had a younger girlfriend (an artist) with whom they shared a Woody Allen type
of relationship as Ruth (that’s her name) kept living in her house. I knew that
there was a level of possessive jealousy involved. But I planned accordingly
and even found that one of the models, Roxana was willing to return to Sánchez’s
studio once or twice a month to pose for him in exchange for the odd sketch.
I traveled to Argentina
with lots of hopes and plenty of cameras, two film and one brand-new digital.
I visited Sánchez and after
our first abrazo it felt like old times until I broached the subject of
bringing Patrich. That was a no. When I then pared down the idea of just the
two of us working with Roxana that became a no, too.
I saw Sánchez twice. The
first time we had pizza and moscato at the round-the-corner El Cuartito and he
met my first cousin Jorge Wenceslao. Ruth dropped in for a few minutes. After
that Sanchez refused all my overtures of going to his studio with a model to work
together. I suggested we work in another artist’s studio (a friend of Sanchez).
That was a no.
On my third week I
felt quite depressed in Buenos Aires
and I gave Sanchez a call. I told him over the phone that I was saying goodbye
and that I was disappointed that we had not worked together. He took this with
aplomb and did not question my motives.
I understand that an
83 year-old man who has a relationship with a woman in a large city and that lives
alone in a small studio/apartment has a lot to lose especially if he might
sacrifice all that for an artistic and collaborative fling with a friend (me). And
yet something in me makes me think that is the last I will see of the man as I
will perhaps not return to Buenos
Aires and both of us are not spring chickens.
I feel remorse for not
having properly said goodbye to him.
But that damn Skype
and all those promises that came my way from the man have been hard to forget.
It seems that every
time something like this happens I go back to Harold Bloom who wrote in How To
Read and Why (2000)
"We read not only
because we cannot know enough people, but because friendship is so vulnerable,
so likely to diminish or disappear, overcome by space, time, imperfect
sympathies, and all the sorrows of familial and passional life."
Argentine Diarrhea - Lost In Translation
Monday, September 30, 2013
For years I have formulated in my mind a pet theory on why countries like France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Latin American countries and few countries that speak romance languages in Eastern Europe invariably lost the military conflicts they began.
It has all to do with the very fact that
these countries all speak languages that had their origin in ancient Rome. Ultimately those
ancient Romans lost out to civilizations (or entities that lacked civilization)
that spoke un-romantic verbiage.
The romance languages all feature the
Subjunctive Mood. It is a mood of uncertainty. Americans and even the British
avoid the infrequent appearance of it. Thus, “I wish I were in Dixie (as I am
certainly not whoever might be singing that line),” becomes “I wish I was in Dixie.” That Future Subjunctive is excised and things become
a predictable as a constant present. That uncertain future is transformed most comfortably
into one of definite possibility.
The Subjunctive Mood is one of uncertainty, and the most uncertain of all uncertainties is the Future Subjunctive.
Consider, “When in Rome do as Romans do.” In Spanish it is far more complex. The very idea
of anybody finding themselves in Rome
is left as indefinite possibility. En
el país que fueres has lo que vieres.” It virtually defies translation but is
means something like, “In that country that you might just find yourself in
some future you may perhaps do as others do might do.”
Successful generals
fronting successful armies fight on certainties. If possible these generals
choose their place of battle and twist the situation to favour them. You cannot
run an army on just possibilities.
There is the Mexican
joke of the general that sends a soldier to the front to report on the numbers
of the attacking army. The soldier returns and says, “My general I saw about a
thousand and one of the enemy.” The general, incredulous at the lack of logic
in his soldier’s statement, orders him to clarify it. “Mi general,” the soldier
replies, “I saw one attacking soldier and perhaps a thousand behind him.”
And so, the French had
their Waterloo and their 5 de Mayo against the
Mexicans at Puebla.
The less said about the Italians in WWII the better.
Of late I have been
giving more thought to the vagaries of language and how language affects us
without our complete awareness.
Consider someone like CNN’s
Wolf Blitzer interviewing President Barrack H. Obama. They might sit close to
each other perhaps with the small interruption of a coffee table. Blitzer would
address Obama as Mr. President and might just continue with a, “What did you
mean bb… in your last statement, sir.” The sir would be marked.
Consider that in
English you might say:
Please come.
Please come here, sir.
Will you please step
this way, madam?
Or if a friend you
might say: Hey! Come over here!
It is difficult to
conceive rudeness or familiarity in those statements unless you shouted them or
simply said, “Get your ass over here!”
In Spanish like in
French we have two options:
There is the formal:
Venga señor.
Or the
informal
Ven.
The situation becomes
more complex in Argentine Spanish (perhaps borrowed from Italian immigrants) which gives you the further choice of:
Vení.
or
Venite para acá.
The informality of
that third method of ordering people around has a sense of intimacy unknown
(and what would I know of this if nothing) in other languages).
In English with the
advent of the World Wide Web we tried to give the impression of intimacy by stating:
“Visit us at our website.” Or “Browse our website.” The word visit seems to
inject an intimacy impossible to achieve in even in the most prurient of porn
sites. We cannot visit because we are alone.
All the above is my
introduction to the shock of finding myself watching a TV interview in which Jorge
Rial and Hernan Brienza, journalists, separately talked at length in two-part
interviews (separated by a week in which a cliffhanger question by one of the
journalists had to wait for a whole week!) with Argentine president Cristina
Kirchner.
The President, was
immediately called Cristina and the formal Spanish tense was used. The interviews
were very intimate and pleasant. Kirchner is a good talker and both journalists
did not press for uncomfortable moments with uncomfortable questions.
Once I became used to
the level of cheerful intimacies almost as if Kirchner were having a
conversation at the breakfast table with her deceased husband and former
Argentine president, Nestor Kirchner, I found myself enjoying the charla (chat).
To my horror Cristina (I want to write here Kirchner not Cristina) was asked
about names that had been used to insult her in the past. She mentioned “yegua”
(a female horse) with all the connotations to be read in a mare in heat waiting
for the stallion. But worse of all she said, “I have been called a puta.” Now
puta is an extremely nasty version of the English for whore.
Can you imagine
President Obama stating during an interview with a lessened in effect “I have
been called a son of a bitch.”?
For years before Nixon
went public and stated, “I am not a crook,” I used to emphatically say that the
difference in how Latin Americans perceived politicians and how North Americans
did was that the former expected politicians to be dishonest while the latter
were always surprised, even disappointed to find out that they were.
But because of
language, the use of the English language, even those who abhor Prime Minister
Harper would never resort to anything worse than, “He is an S.O.B.,”and would
probably do so in the intimacy of friends and never in public.
Argentina used to be run by patrician politicians, the
Catholic Church, the oligarch land-owners and the Military establishment.
Thanks to the Malvinas
war and the terrible and bloody campaign by the army in disappearing political activists
in the 70s the military establishment seems to be in a sort of bearish hibernation.
Conscription was eliminated by President Saul Menem. You do not see their military
uniforms and most officers and non-commissioned officers dress in civies on the
street. The Ministery or later Secretary of War became the less offensive Ministry
of Defence.
While the present
Argentine pope is as popular on the street as Messi the church no longer holds
the might it once did.
As I see it power in Argentina lies
in a sort of unofficial sharing by the moneyed oligarchies, many politicians
are from that sector, and powerful politicians with fingers in all kinds of
important infrastructure. Between these two powers lie the struggling middle
class and a vast, increasing in size, lower class.
Many of the lower class
have moved from the provinces in search of non-existent jobs in the sprawling Buenos Aires. They live
in shanty towns called villas miserias by Argentines.
One of my moneyed
relatives, a patrician, a very well educated lawyer with manners (most of the
time) and very white, upon seeing me said to me in Spanish, “You are a friend
of that chimpanzee. Luckily he is neither a Jew nor a homosexual.” He was of
course referring to my liking of the American President.
I was absolutely
speechless but in a few days I began to understand the level of vitriol that
Argentines have for politicians in the opposite side of their preferred political spectrum.
As a boy my father used to take me to the
Argentine and Buenos Aires version of Vancouver’s PNE. It is
called La Rural and it is housed in the leafy area of Palermo, close to the botanical garden and
the Zoo. It is right by the statue of Garibaldi. I will never forget seeing
those huge Simmental bulls walking slowly, side to side, like bull elephants,
with their huge testicles almost dragging and sweeping the hay floor.
I have no idea if testicles (huevos,
testículos, cojones in Spanish) have any bearing with ultimate insults in the
Spanish language. If you are easily offended by language leave this page now.
The worst of all possible insults in Spain is”
Me cago en Dios, or I shit on God.
The Argentine version sounds much more
offensive but is less controversial religiously.
Me cago en la concha de tu madre (or more intimate
and direct, tu hermana, or sister) which translates to I shit on your mother’s
cunt.
A paler version, which you can almost utter
in the company of casual friends is
La concha de la lora (is it understood that
one is to shit on a female parrot’s cunt?). This statement is said when one
wants to say wow!
But the most often used insult in Argentina involves balls, bolas and Pelotas. If someone is an
idiot you call him “boludo”. If he
really is stupid then you up the ante with “pelotudo”. I have no idea if the
origin of this is that lumbering bull in la Rural. Doughnut holes (much larger in Argentina) are either called "bolas de fraile", monk's balls or "suspiros de monjas" a nun's sigh.
If you are from the struggling left any
politician serving the oligarchs is a “boludo,”or “pelotudo.” If this
politician is deemed to not only be stupid but also intelligently using his
position to better himself then he is a “pelotudo, hijo de puta.” And the same
level of insult goes in the opposite direction.
Had you visited Argentina in the 50s, 60s, 70s,
80s, 90s or now you would get the same answer to this question, “How are
things?”
“Es un pais
de mierda." It is a country of shit. We have never been
worse. Our politicians are hijos de putas.”
And on a final note there is a particularly
Argentine expression that begins with:
Me cago de (I shit)
Nos cagamos de (We shit)
By: risa (laughter) frío (cold), calor
(heat), hambre (hunger) and you name it.
I find the expression offensive to my Vancouver sensitive ears
and I can only surmise that my erstwhile fellow citizens suffer from a collective but figurative diarrhea.
Alfonsina Storni
Sunday, September 29, 2013
VOY A
DORMIR ( Alfonsina Storni , May 29, 1892 – October 25, 1938)
Dientes de
flores, cofia de rocío,
manos de
hierbas, tú, nodriza fina,
tenme
prestas las sábanas terrosas
y el
edredón de musgos escardados.
Voy a
dormir, nodriza mía, acuéstame.
Ponme una
lámpara a la cabecera;
una
constelación; la que te guste;
todas son buenas;
bájala un poquito.
Déjame
sola: oyes romper los brotes...
te acuna un
pie celeste desde arriba
y un pájaro
te traza unos compases
para que
olvides... Gracias. Ah, un encargo:
si él llama
nuevamente por teléfono
le dices
que no insista, que he salido...
Teeth of flowers, hairnet of dew, hands of herbs, you, perfect wet nurse, prepare the earthly sheets for me and the down quilt of weeded moss I am going to sleep, my nurse, put me to bed. Set a lamp at my headboard; a constellation; whatever you like; all are good: lower it a bit. Leave me alone: you hear the buds breaking through . . a celestial foot rocks you from above and a bird traces a pattern for you so you'll forget . . . Thank you. Oh, one request: if he telephones again tell him not to keep trying for I have left . . .
Alfonsina Storni
A year and a half
after her friend Quiroga committed suicide in 1937, and haunted by solitude and
breast cancer, Storni sent her last poem, Voy a dormir ("I'm going to
sleep") to La Nación newspaper in October 1938. Around 1:00 AM on Tuesday
the 25th, Alfonsina left her room and headed towards the sea at La Perla beach
in Mar del Plata, Argentina. Later that morning two
workers found her body washed up on the beach. Although her biographers hold
that she jumped into the water from a breakwater, popular legend is that she
slowly walked out to sea until she drowned.
Her obituary,
published in La Nación on October 26, 1938 included the above poem that some
think was dedicated to her only
son, Alejandro who was 26 years old.
When I contacted Argentine model Roxana via email from Vancouver she indicated that she would pose for Nora Patrich and for me. She suggested we do something on modernist poet (Swiss born) Alfonsina Storni.
Because Storni had committed suicide by walking into the sea in Mar del Plata I saw a parallel with Hamlet's Ophelia. We took the picture in Nora Patrich's empty swimming pool (she was cleaning it). A nearby and very large clump of calla lilies (Zantedeschia aethiopica) fit right in with our photograph. |
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My Rosemary - Juan Manuel FangioOna Grauer Sandwiches Without Mayonnaise Grief & Potential Rosemary Framed in Gold All For the First Time at Yarilo's To Hope and Back A New Friend Again The Maser, the Overdue Library Book & My NYTimes Soft & White - A Purity of Heart First Man of the Land - Adlai Stevenson & the Gene... The morns are meeker than they were - Emily Dickinson Archives
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