Rosemary Where Are You? Not with H.G.Wells
Saturday, February 17, 2024
| Rosemary's beloved cat Casi
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In my two visits to Westminster Abbey it was on the second
time that I went with a mission. I was with Rosemary and our two daughters
Alexandra and Hilary. I located the tile with H.G. Wells on it and I stepped on
it and said, “How are you H.G.? “
My interest in death began when I first found
out of its existence. I was 8 or 9, and our next door neighbours on Melián
Street in Buenos Aires, had a son that had crashed his motor scooter onto a
train at a level crossing. I have no idea why my mother decided I should go and
see the young man in the open casket. His face was all in bandages.
From that point on and for many years I thought that the
only people who died or won the lottery were our neighbours. When Eva Perón died in 1952, Argentines mourned her loss with great ceremony. Her open coffin was called a "capilla ardiente" or burning chapel. It was then I began to recognize the funereal music of Chopin. For over a year the time of her death interrupted all radio programs with, "It is 20:25 the hour when the spiritual head of our nation, Eva Perón entered immortality."
The second death in my life was when I had to deal with the
1966 funeral of my father in Buenos Aires. He had died on the street and his
friend, a police sergeant, took him to the nearby Hospital Pirovano, where my
father was declared dead. The sergeant took the liberty of emptying my father’s
pockets as he would have been robbed at the hospital. He called me that evening
to tell me that my father had been saving money so he could bribe a general to
get me out of my stint as a conscript in the Argentine Navy and I would be sent
home to my mother in Veracruz, Mexico. My father had enough money to pay for
his funeral. I was a penniless conscript. I purchased the coffin but I was not
able to secure at the Chacarita Cemetery a grave in perpetuity. It meant that
after 7 years my father’s remains would be disinterred and thrown away. I have
no memory of the funeral.
My second death was that of my grandmother. She died in
1970. Rosemary got to meet her. A friend, Raúl Guerrero told me when I
mentioned that I had no memory of the funeral, that both of us carried the
coffin.
My third death was that of my mother who died in bed in
1972. Both Rosemary and I watched her breathe in and not out. The only doctor
in our neighbourhood who was able to come to pronounce her dead was a
veterinarian.
I made all the arrangements for her funeral and bought her
coffin. Rosemary and I were so poor that her parents helped us. Again I have no
memory of the funeral but I do remember that when I ordered her tombstone it
read “sursum corda”. My mother often
would say this to me when I was depressed. It is from the Latin Mass and it
means “lift up your heart”.
What these three deaths in my family have in common, is that they were
all buried. I could go to Mexico and I would be able to locate my
mother and my grandmother.
It is my Rosemary’s death on December 8, 2020 that changes
the equation. It has left me troubled.
I watched her die and a few minutes before she did die she
asked, “Am I dying?” I could not
respond.
From my hanging chair in the living room I watched her shrouded
body being removed by the funeral people. That was the last time I was aware of
her corporeal existence.
Alexandra took her ashes and spread them in her garden in
Lillooet. I understand fully her intention. Rosemary loved that garden.
But something about my old-fashioned beliefs has me grieving
even though I know I would never go to a cemetery had she been buried in one.
Because Rosemary and I believed we would never see each
other again, I find myself almost in delight to be alive as she is in my
constant memory all day. An oblivion, a total one, will mean the end of all
that.
And yes, H.G. I know where you are. I also know where
Rosemary’s beloved cat Casi is. His ashes are here in my scan.
La Bufanda
Friday, February 16, 2024
bufanda
Quizá del
fr. ant. bouffante.
1. f.
Prenda larga y estrecha, por lo común de lana o seda, con que se envuelve y
abriga el cuello y la boca.
Two things came to my mind about 20 minutes before I sat
down in my oficina to write this. I was thinking on my bed with Niño and
Niña asleep on my side. One is that because I have so much spare time to think
I sometimes remember Captain Beefheart who in his Ashtray Hearts lyric he has
this : Somebody’s had too much to think.
Two: Jorge Luís Borges famously wrote that in order to
remember you have to first forget.
I had just returned from my daily walk with Niño around the
block. I dress warmly but most important I wear a lovely and soft cashmere
scarf that Rosemary gave me not too long ago.
Thinking about the scarf, suddenly in my memory, there was the
word bufanda which is Spanish for scarf. I may not have used, or thought of
that word, for many years. Yet there it was popping in my mind. How does that happen? I have no idea but the word made me
think that I would go down to my office to write.
Rosemary had a penchant for scarves. Hers and mine are
inside a metal hoop in our entrance closet. Every time I see them I grieve as I
can remember which ones she wore when and where.
In this photograph which I took a few blocks from our house
in Arboledas, Estado de México perhaps in 1973 with a young Alexandra touching
the water in the pool designed by noted Mexican architect Luís Barragán in what
was then called Los Bebederos, Rosemary is wearing a scarf. Alas I cannot
remember it except that since our youngest daughter has that dress she might
also have the scarf.
Meanwhile I will glory in accepting the I keep remembering
what I forget in Borgesian style.
My Subjective Music Likes
Thursday, February 15, 2024
I often quote to friends what Spanish/Mexican anthropologist
Santiago Genovés said at a lecture that Rosemary and I attended many years ago
in Mexico City.
He said that when we read about history that we should be
aware that objectivity is a subjective invention of man.
I think that this concept plays an important role in how we
as individuals choose our music and our opinion on what makes some of it interesting
and some not.
My thoughts on this started when I told my friend Art
Bergmann that of all the songs he ever composed my favourite is an early one
called Data Redux. The melody sounds like 21st century new
avant-garde music. He laughed it off yesterday when he and my friend Brian
Stevenson were having coffee at the Contintental Café on Commercial Drive.
If there is one feature of the internet, Google in this
century, is that if you know of a piece of music it can be found almost always
on Youtube. Because of that I can place a link here to that amazing song. Data Redux -video
After listening to Data Redux (unfortunately on my phone and
I somewhere I have the record with it) I thought of other music that I
subjectively like.
First on my list is the trombone part in Ravel’s Bolero. In
my 10th grade at St. Edward’s High School we lived in a huge
dormitory with a Gothic ceiling. Brother Rene Lenhard, C.S.C. was our man-in
charge prefect. At night he would play classical music so that our cultural
education would continue into the night. Ravel's Bolero - Trombone part
Because I bought records in my youth I still have
Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture. To me the other side Beethoven’s Wellington’s
Victory is far more exciting as it has his orchestration of God Save the King. God Save the King - Beethoven
Another record in my collection is Gershwin’s Rhapsody in
Blue played by his pal Oscar Levant. On the other side is the fabulous but
rarely played Concerto in F. Gershwin Concerto in F - Oscar Levant
Just about everybody is familiar with the works of Ástor
Piazzolla. I have a preference for a most different Vayamos al diablo (Let’s go
to the Devil). Vayamos al diablo
It was through Early Music Vancouver concerts that I became
addicted to listening to chaconnes. My favourite is by a lesser known baroque composer
called Tarquinio Merula.
Tarquinio Merula -Ciaccona - Giardino Armonico In the late 60s when Rosemary and I had been married on Feb 8 1968 we would go to the movies in Mexico City where we had two options. If we went when the film was about to begin the seats were all taken and we had to be separated. If we went 50 minutes early we were subjected to government propaganda of the president cutting ribbons for opening hospitals. More often that not the background music was Aaron Copland's El Salón México. It grew on me and it is one of my fave 20th century compostions. A couple of years ago I discovered on Youtube Leonard Bernstein introducing Copland on Copland's birthday and then Copland conducts (I believe in Carnegie Hall with a luxury of TV cameras) his El Salón México. El Salón México
I remember to this day when I was going around 16th Avenue and turned to Granville on my way home. I had a cassette of Pablo Casals conducting Bach's Brandenburg Concertos. My fave has always been the second because of the difficult trumpet part. When it began I thought there was something wrong with my car's cassette player. The piece was being played so fast as if there were no tomorrow! Bach Brandenburg No2 - Pablo Casals
I could go on but I must stop and only cite one more and
that is my prized CD Money Jungle with Duke Ellington, Charlie Mingus and Max
Roach. I found out in this CD that Ellington was not only a great pianist but
that he sounded a lot like Thelonious Monk before Thelonius Monk sounded like
himself. Money Jungle
A Valentine's Story
Wednesday, February 14, 2024
| Susy |
I believe that I am an old fashioned romantic. In my 81
years, besides my wife Rosemary, I had two girlfriends. They were in Argentina.
The one I am going to write about died of cancer in the late 80s. The other one
is alive and well and lives in London.
If either of those two were to show up at my door I would be
madly in love with them. I never experienced the concept of falling out of
love.
Susy Bornstein was an Argentine woman of Austrian Jewish
extraction. When I met her in 1966 and she did not show any repulsion at
meeting with the nerd I surely was. I was astounded.
As the relationship progressed I told her that there was a
chap called Astor Piazzolla that was going to play in downtown Buenos Aires at
the Teatro Florida on a coming Saturday. I added that I was fascinated by his
term that he played Nuevo Tango.
She told me that we were invited to a party on that Saturday
and that we could leave in time to go to the concert.
During the party I reminded Susy that we had to leave. She
said, “Alex I am having fun. You go.” As I was waiting for my train on that
late afternoon I was depressed. I rode the train feeling a melancholy that
increased as I approached the cavernous Retiro train station.
I arrived at the Teatro Florida and sat down on my numbered
seat. The one to my right was empty. This was the first time I heard Pizzolla live, so I was momentarily
distracted. He then, with his group, began to play the loveliest composition
called Milonga del angel. Suddenly I felt something on my right thigh. And then
in my ear there was a whisper, “I had to come.”
If I was in love before, at that moment I was madly in love.
What happened after Susy said was purely my imagination.
After the concert we left holding hands and Florida which has always been an exclusively
pedestrian street meant that we were going to have a nice walk. Across the
street there was a kitchen appliance store. Susy pointed at an avocado coloured
fridge and said, “That would look nice in our kitchen.” You can imagine my
shock at of being offered marriage by the lovely apparition that Susy was.
A few months later she called me and said, “Alex I never
want to see you again. You are uncultured and you will never amount to
anything. I am leaving you for a violinist at the Teatro Colón Philharmonic.
Goodbye.”
Somehow around 1987 I found her address in Buenos Aires. I
visited my native city. I rang the bell. She opened it and said, “Alex aren’t you going to kiss me?” She died a few months later.
Milonga del ángel - Ástor Piazzolla
1, 2, 3 Is Not Always Linear
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
| With Rebecca - 31 July 2020
|
Diccionario de la Real Academia Española (RAE)
Del lat. imaginatio, -ōnis.
1. f.
Facultad del alma que representa las imágenes de las cosas reales o ideales. The Spanish dictionary definition of imagination is lovely. I translate that to: A potential of the soul that represents real or ideal things.
I had a thought while walking with Niño today. It was a
lovely sunny day. I always think of Rosemary as I take the same route around the
block that she did with him.
This thought was inspired by a CBC Ideas program I heard
last year about St. Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo, who is one of two Roman
Catholic philosophers (the other is St. Thomas Aquinas).
It seems that St. Augustine wrote a startling opinion about
music (obviously he was not aware of atonal music) in which he said that you
listen to a note in a piece of music in the past, you then hear it in the
present but then (important) you can predict the next note in the future.
For me this is an interesting modification of that linear 1,
2, 3.
In the back alley as I sensed the presence of Rosemary ( I
do not believe in ghosts) I had what seemed to me a startling thought.
All day I remember Rosemary in my memory and these
remembrances are all in the past. I cannot make them go away so I am in a
permanent state of melancholy.
But what if my sensing Rosemary in that back alley is something
from my imagination?
In my magazine photography and writer past I remember
imagining an idea and then going to pitch the story to the editor, and month
later my imagination was rewarded with the reality of a printed cover article.
Imagination is not all a memory of the past. I am imagining
the presence of Rosemary now. Can somehow that vision in my mind, while lacking a
material presence, be still a real presence?
What would St. Augustine say?
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