The last evenings of summer.
In my garden wasps swirl around the grapes I picked and laid
out for the sun to turn into raisins. I’d Googled it, but it didn’t work. All I got was mouldy,
vespid masticated globules . Blotchy. Disturbingly scrotal. Most definitely
inedible. Not fit for mixing with my morning porridge oats.
Nature is not kind, it is not PC. Nature bites, stings, and
dribbles and allows God denying
parasites to thrive: guinea worms, tape worms that encapsulate in the
cerebral cortex, fungal infections that provoke hot sweats and itchiness
in inaccessible regions of one’s
anatomy, liver flukes, toxoplasmosis, unrecognised spores that colonise the central nervous
systems….the theological implications
are immense.
Yesterday walked down the back lane. In the hedgerow I plucked
at succulent blackberries. The last one that I raised to my mouth was topped
with a grub that was so remarkable for its vivacity that I just had to
stare at it…a Naked Lunch moment…Not
sure whether my inner feeling was one of awe or one of horror. Or Sartrean nausea. [Sorry spellcheck doesn’t
recognise ‘Sartrean’].
Round the next bend, just beyond the Devon Brook, lay a dead
badger. Snout crushed by a car.
Grotesque, mocking grin. Vortex
of blowflies hovering above it, gyrating elegantly in the odd puff of breeze. The badger was
female. It was, clearly, pregnant.
I was glad to reach the top road where the air was fresh. But I had to dodge rat-running Range Rovers that seemed intent on provoking me to
play chicken. I observed further road kill there, and, amongst the rough
tussocks and thistles of the verge, the junk food detritus of modern England.
Interestingly there were more Red Bull cans than Coke cans, and more Chinese
take away cartons than Indian ones.
There were, also, Foster’s cans, Old English Cider cans, Budweiser cans
and Stella Artois cans. But I searched
in vain for the Carlsberg Special cans that the late and much missed Andy K.
used to leave. This made me feel sad.
There is so much going on that your average watercolour artist misses. Like the impossibly delicate
and detailed cirrus clouds that I observed
this evening, like the young
swallows that were swarming
around the village church’s spire, twittering excitedly in anticipation of their
long trip to Africa and like the bumble bees being busy, as they are
proverbially supposed to be, on the lavender on my neighbour, Martin’s,
ironstone wall.
I come in, pour a glass of Port. I want to be on my own. I want to be with people. It’s that
time of year: my birthday [I don’t celebrate it anymore], the drawing in of the
nights , the final croppings of runner beans and courgettes. Ideally I would
like to open a bottle of Malt whisky and sit up till four in the morning with a
sympathetic friend and talk about life, books, the minutiae of early
memories, my wild speculations about
pagan gods, my innermost feelings and fears, about art, about cats, about events and incidents that are in
danger of dissolving into the void and above all, about people, both the
loathed and the loved.
It’s that time of year…and I’m going to pour myself just one
more, small, glass of port. I’m feeling that feeling that is one part
nostalgia, one part sadness, one part euphoria and one part something else that
I haven’t got the slightest
comprehension of.
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