Thursday, 11 December 2014

Revisiting the Past: Venice

In 1967 I was a stroppy, love-struck teenager.  That year I went on a school cruise around the Mediterranean.  My boyfriend was good looking.  Far too good looking for me. Before the ship left I asked a friend to keep an eye on him.  And she did.  So much so that when I got back, she was his girlfriend and I was history.   Ah well. 


Most of the cruise was wasted on me – I was far too busy being the tragic heroine torn from the arms of her one true love.  We visited Tunisia (hot, dusty and leery men), a Greek Island (no idea which one), Ephesus (ruins) and Venice (canals).  The long days and nights on board were spent reading and re-reading the gorgeous boy’s one letter to me.  Looking back, I’m surprised he knew how to write – gorgeous, yes, but not bright.



So when Andy and I went to Venice in March this year, it was as if I’d never been before.  And it was beautiful.  Truly beautiful.  We arrived at the tail end of Carnivale, of which I knew nothing.  All these people in spectacular costumes and masks gliding around and graciously posing for photographs.  Amazing.


We visited art galleries, strolled over bridges, ate pizza and pasta, waded through the floods at high tide (Andy bought plastic galoshes, I took off my shoes and paddled through), took water buses and photographs galore. 



I have no idea how I managed to ignore its allure the first time I was there – the only excuse I have is that I was 14, and didn’t know any better.

Snapshots of Venice at Twilight

The sky is turning red over Santa Maria della Salute.
Street vendors begin to pack stalls; trundle cheap wares
up tiny alleys; head home for pasta.
Beside the bell tower a couple in bridal costume, remnants
of Carnivale,  strike poses for photographers.
A girl with autumnal hair and distant eyes weaves
through crowds, not seeing the Bridge of Sighs,
familiar as wallpaper.
Two women stand close to a closed Museum door, fingers
tracing words, working out the meaning.
Tourist boats wait for dawdling hoards, hooting
impatience to be on, to be gone, hurry up!  A clutter
of Japanese girls suddenly runs, startled from chatter.
Outside the Danieli gondoliers cover boats, gather
together, hats tilted, sharing cigarettes and stories.
An old woman, bent in half, trudges a shopping trolley
over another interminable bridge, as a young man, naked
to the waist, throws open shutters, leans out into the twilight,
sated, glorious.

Tuesday, 2 December 2014

Just When You Thought it was Safe...

You thought it was all over.  So did I.  But talking about India to a fellow poet - Paul Tobin (read his blog - magpiebridge.blogspot.com) - I realised that not only do I miss India, but I also miss writing...
So, I'm diving back in, with more on India, and, in the future some writing on all sorts of things.  I hope you'll join me.


They say that India gets under your skin.  That it will lie low in your memory for a while, then slowly begin to tug at you, easing itself into your conscious mind until it becomes imperative that you return. I know of one man who has gone back twice a year, for eight years, and is currently planning his next trip.
Before we went, I fully expected to fall in love with India.  After all, my family had lived there for generations. Surely, I believed, I would find a connection with the country and the people, a reason why it had beguiled so many of my ancestors. 
I loved it – don’t get me wrong.  The people we met were, by and large, the gentlest, friendliest, kindest people I have ever come across.  The country in the North-East was spectacular.  But there was no connection.  I had expected to belong, and I didn’t.  I left, thinking I could draw a line under that part of my history.  It was done.
I was wrong.  Already I am beginning to yearn for India.  For the smiling people of Kurseong and the gentle people of Gangtok, shaking my hand, taking my photograph.  For the monasteries and prayer flags.  For the clarity of the air and the way the clouds swirled over the foothills of the Himalaya.  For the mountains themselves – at dawn, at dusk, revealing glimpses of impossible peaks through the cloud or clear and sharp and magnificent. 
I want to walk again in the places where my father and my father’s father walked.  To look down on the backs of eagles as they glide on the thermal currents.  I have to explore the plains, the vast river deltas, to picnic on the Rangpo and see Changu Lake covered in ice and snow. I want to follow the journeys my grandfather made as he went about his work in Sikkim.




I long to sit and look at the foothills, to breathe in the shape of them swathed in acres of tea gardens.  I could do nothing quite easily there, except look and sigh, then look and sigh some more. 
I find I am missing the crazy driving on impossible roads that make your teeth chatter for hours after your journey is over.  Incredibly I miss the streams full of litter – England is so clean - and even the sheer numbers of people in Kolkata, the dirt and the smells, are beginning to exert a strange, compulsive yearning.
I have, to all intents and purposes, gone back to who I used to be before I went to India, but deep within me something has changed.

India is calling me.  I will have to go.