Brushy One String
Sunday, January 19th, 2014
The sky was so starry and bright, that one glance was enough to make you ask yourself: surely, ill-natured and peevish people can’t possibly exist under a sky like that, can they?
The very houses are known to me. When I am walking along, each of them seems to slip out into the street ahead and look at me, all windows, as if to say: ‘Good day; how are you keeping? I’m quite well for my part, praise be, in fact I’m having a new storey added in May.’ Or: ‘How are you? I’m having repairs done tomorrow.’ Or again: ‘I almost burned down, what a fright I got!’ and so on. I have my favourites among them, indeed intimate friends; one of them intends to have treatment from an architect this summer. I’ll make a point of dropping by every day to make sure he doesn’t overdo things, Lord preserve it … I’ll never forget what happened to one ever so pretty rose-pink cottage. It was such a sweet little stone cottage and it looked so benignly at me and so proudly at its ungainly neighbours, that my heart positively rejoiced whenever I chanced to pass by. Then all of a sudden, last week, as I was walking along the street and glancing over at my friend, I heard a plaintive cry: ‘They’re painting me yellow!’ Villains! Barbarians! They spared nothing, neither column nor cornice, and my friend turned as yellow as a canary. The incident fairly sickened me and ever since then I’ve not felt up to seeing my poor, disfigured friend, now painted the colour of the celestial empire.
So now you understand, dear reader, in what way I am acquainted with all Petersburg.
What a beautiful fall! Everything shimmering and golden and all that incredible soft light. Water surrounding us.
Lou and I have spent a lot of time here in the past few years, and even though we’re city people this is our spiritual home.
Last week I promised Lou to get him out of the hospital and come home to Springs. And we made it!
Lou was a tai chi master and spent his last days here being happy and dazzled by the beauty and power and softness of nature. He died on Sunday morning looking at the trees and doing the famous 21 form of tai chi with just his musician hands moving through the air.
Lou was a prince and a fighter and I know his songs of the pain and beauty in the world will fill many people with the incredible joy he felt for life. Long live the beauty that comes down and through and onto all of us.
his loving wife and eternal friend
First of all, the art of living; then as my ideal profession, poetry and philosophy, and as my real profession, plastic arts; in the last resort, for lack of income, illustrations.