Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Lines in April

April is the cruelest month, wrote T.S. Eliot, and when I first read that I imagined that Eliot and I were twin souls: oh yes! April filled me with apprehension and dismay, too.

I later figured out that my kinship with T.S.E. was – in this matter, as in many others – bogus. To Eliot, April was cruel because it woke hopes of a summer happiness that would never come. To me, April was cruel because it presaged a summer weather that really would come, and which I hated for its own sake: for its featureless blue skies, burning sun, and meaningless glare; for the noisy nights and drunken fun that I found frightening and alienating; for the heat which made having a body a misery to me; for the sun that set too late and rose too early. I didn't want summer to come. The only thing I really liked about summer was that women wore fewer clothes.

I've changed. I have a guarded liking for summer now. Something has changed in me physiologically: the hot weather doesn't distress me as much as it used to. I used to dislike the sensation of the free air on my skin, and now I enjoy it. And I have always liked all the green and growing things waking up and reaching for the sky.



Always my days have seemed to me too short to achieve my desire.

Lines converging on the distance, and then flipping over my head, a sudden inversion. What are my hands for? Why all these gifts? And why the long whisper of sand running?

My Dad had a real hourglass, and it fascinated me. My vision was better than it is now, and I could watch the individual sand grains struggling to make it through the neck, and then, each one, drop like a parachutist out of an airplane. And when they were all through, except for a little inevitable dust, you could turn it again. Up became down, freedom became bondage, and the struggle began all over again.

But getting back to lines, convergences, asymptotic approaches, verges and swerves. Sometimes, above the silver ringing, there is a complicated drumming going on as well, a bass throb, a snare rattle, the sharp tok! of wood-block: an endlessly surprising syncopation, slightly delayed gratification, all the more gratifying for the wait. A broad jumper suddenly launched into the air.

A faint taste of vinegar in my bread, an unfamiliar tang to the lettuce. The pins that hold the day in place have slipped, and it's wobbling, wobbling.

11 comments:

Jayne said...

For me, Dale, summer is the opposite. The New England summer has become oppressive, and this body has not adjusted well. I seek the a/c often--something I never could have lived with in prior years.

"Up became down, freedom became bondage, and the struggle began all over again." Ah, and so it is with time. Spinning it is! Dizzy I am. Heh. ;)

Dale said...

:-) some of us are always in overwhelming sensoria.

marly youmans said...

It would be snowing off and on today... And that is rather cruel. Poor flowers. (Latest big Yank snow date in my 13 years here: May 25th, 2.5 feet of snow.)

I think you should do something with the grains in the hourglass. I like all that. Could be on the way to a poem. Is, I think.

Kathleen said...

I love your (father's) hourglass, too.

Dale said...

Thanks! I'm responding to April Poetry month by reverting to prose, which is I think my native dialect.

Zhoen said...

I too am impatient with the heat of summer, when I can't get cool, or sleep, and I crave rain and storms.

For me, it's just the tinnitus.

Dale said...

I'm beginning to suspect there's more of us summer-is-not-so-hot people than I first thought :-)

Murr Brewster said...

Every word, sweet pea, I loved every word. And all the rubato therein.

Dale said...

Murr -- xo

Anne said...

It stays cool enough here on this island that I am almost never bothered by too much warmth and sunshine. But, oh dear, how it does make the grass and weeds grow!

Dale said...

Anne, yes, after a couple summers in Connecticut I vowed I would never complain about a maritime Pacific Northwest summer again! It's lovely here.