New Year Bolger - help us to decide
Rate yourself the best response and helps to consolidate the Customs Bolger.
Bolger What New Year?
A typical traditional festival in Milan, with people urlandoti singing in the ears, other people who sprays wine and cream to other people's houses while other people eat the sausage with your hands directly from the pot, and says pumagiaguaro nonsense about his work unknown and cakes with whipped cream.
An ethno-cultural celebration, such as the Maya New Year, Chinese New Year and the Celtic New Year. It produces a huge dress Bolger, Bolger then all you should place themselves in and around the town with this mega giant costumone by Bolger to annoy passers-by with the excuse of the new year Bolger.
Bolger is a celebration of tradition, during which Bolger Grandfather tells of how Bolgerini NABBA family, founded by the small "Bolge" saved from the waters of the canal, and then forced-upon presentation of miracles, and after a while 'breaking ball-head of municipal police, the mayor morattenkamen, and finally the president of the Indo-European traditional society, to vacate his Bolger, small people, being free from the slavery of ham sandaniele can finally eat his cake with candied fruit and all the mascarpone cream, chocolate cream she wants. But after the dinner started with dried fruit and sweet stuff.
A place where the stone age has given way to that of iron, because of the more obvious comfort in that the latter can obviously offer. A normal
family gathering, placed New Year's Eve, and usually overly publicized, in order to be convinced people to participate in an amazing party but in reality we are always doing the same things.
.
Monday, December 31, 2007
Monday, November 5, 2007
Praktica B Mount To Nikon F
I am a bit 'hard work, write the reviews.
In any case, this is easy: " The ruler of Jevons - Tales of forgotten forerunners " of Paolo Albani, is a small book of short stories that are told willingly, indeed, simply reveal them for review.
are 22 very short stories (2, 3 pages) that describe precisely the imaginary characters or real life events as precursors. Stories are funny and surreal, in the form of parodies of scientific writings, historical, journalistic. As I said, is a book that reminded me immediately " Cantatrix Soprana L" of Perec (which obviously it is a precursor ).
addition to summarizing the 22 stories it would also say something about the concept of precursor, about how the great literary and artistic works (at least in modern times) create their precursors, but I would not weight. For the same reason, not by the substance, for now, the character Oulipo-but-also-fairy tales of Alban.
So, the stories: The unlikely
American physicist James Balmer-Kress ( I also would like to do an exegesis of the names mentioned / invented by Albani, closed parenthesis) in 1899 sets up an experiment to test the so-called butterfly effect. Literally. Cages tot butterflies, study a method to shake them and then checks the weather events in Indonesia, statistical evaluation of any changes. Two pioneers of Psychology
define the state of uncertainty own human being. Examples: Ring Uncertainty is doubt about whether or not to answer the phone while watching a movie or take a shower, the Meteoropatic Uncertainty describes the worry about whether or not to take the umbrella out of the house in cloudy day , etc.
Critic Reinhard Koch dedication to study and catalog Sunday painter, clearly defining the nature and individuality.
precursors but is not a beautiful and ferocious satire of the art magazine Flash Art : describes the rise to success of the magazine Cash Art (rotfl!).
Manlio Traversari is arrested for a kind of malpractice in the medical profession: he entered hospital, he wore a coat and then revealed to a visitor that he saw in him the symptoms of a deadly disease. The aim is to induce in its victims, greater care for themselves.
Peter Kien, the protagonist of the famous sinologist "Auto-da-fe " Canetti writes a " characteriology pants." The painter Schlimm writes itself a treatise: "The soul of socks", he dedicates the rest of his entire artistic career painting socks.
In 1877, Alfred Lerner & Sons, Factory English flatware, commissioned research at the Institute of Human Research "Wilfred Alcott" regarding the disappearance of flatware, or how, when and how to be a missing piece to piece cutlery set in a family.
bizarre searches (those IgNobel Awards, so to speak) have a long history and case studies (and anecdotal, especially). Among the forerunners of the kind you remember William Stanley Jevons (1835-1882), economist, author and advocate of a theory that there is a match between sunspot cycles and economic crises. The insight came to Jevons by a letter from his housekeeper ...
Antonio Polidori, Commissioner of Police in the 70s, specializes in hunting down non-killers: When is a crime in its area of \u200b\u200bcompetence, after he was found guilty, he explores the greatest possible number of people in the area of \u200b\u200bthe crime to discover - or to confess - that each is a non-murderess about that crime.
The flu strain that hit Burma in 1994, large swathes of the population with its unique symptoms at all: the Burmese induced in the loss of spatial perception and motor coordination.
poetry and life of demented Learco Pignagnoli are described by his poems and anecdotes. The Pignagnoli is not for another invention of Alban: his bizarre non-existence has been Nori amply documented by Paul and his friends in Parma (the Bogoncelli) . The precursor is indeed Pignagnoli In Bogoncello , immortalized in various fanzines 90s.
The Australian poet Norman Steele is the precursor of many writers who, at some point in their life and career, they disappear, they lose track of them. Steele, at the age of 42 years ago by a notary to draw up a Deed of Separation in which you said you did not want to have anything to do with all his friends and relatives, the notary must serve the document to all interested parties.
Sandro Bartolini is a precursor of the tabloid press invented. Among his scoops: Brigitte Bardot was a man, Walt Disney turned the first porn film in history, Churchill and George VI loved to dress up as women - together.
Mario Diacono writes The slating of works (even famous) stating that he had never read.
Mr. Salvatore Mastropasqua try to start a professional activity as a "taster words" - a precursor of overzealous editor.
Alfonsina Lots and Julian Brogi you are working to become Siamese twins - stitched together. In 1857 the little
Giampiero, Onan inveterate and unrepentant, he becomes blind. In 1823 Stefan
Norwid studies, on the ground, the Islanders Grotriand and their language, the peculiarity of this language is that opposing concepts are indicated with the same word.
Calogero Furlan is a man so sensitive that, for example, hollow corks not pierce the cork protects covered with cobwebs; track lanes on its own ground for snails; puts networks around trees where the leaves can fall without getting hurt.
Jerome Jerome exaggerates his family with all the same complaints and regularly repeated. Until one day does not stop abruptly.
The University of Genoa will hold a conference on "Happy Corsetti, a precursor of the idea of \u200b\u200bpoetry as truth . History proves him wrong.
A senior professor of Busto Arsizio founded ANPNR, National Association Recognized precursor.
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Best Place To Watch Bang Bros
Walls, "Yellow on Yellow" The good people
I noticed that the authors of the last three books I read are similar. I mean, is not really resemble that, but somehow similar.
Meanwhile Gianni Mura, Gianni Clerici Giampaolo Dossena and all three are over 60 - actually, the last two are over 75. Sure, I get older and the age of my gods hand in hand goes away. Several are even dead.
But here I would write the book of Mura, " Yellow on Yellow" and the synopsis of the three will do Gianni again. I am still convinced that they should be very well, in a hypothetical coterie.
Gianni Mura, I said. Readers of The Republic knows, maybe appreciate it. Definitely knows his weekly column, "Seven days bad thoughts": a course that says the key events of the week, especially sporting events (Walls writes about sports), but with frequent and extensive forays into politics, ' enology, puzzles, news. comments very funny and often very bitter, and almost always shared - at least for me.
Besides that's why I bought it and read his "Yellow on Yellow " despite presenting himself as a thriller (though it'!?). I also enjoyed, although it is actually a thriller in the classic sense. (Explanation of the apparent contradiction: I do not read detective stories, but I like them.)
Meanwhile, the protagonist is the author himself, Gianni Mura, Gornal sent to the Tour de France 2005 (the second yellow title). When ever we have seen a yellow autobiographical, albeit with a fantasy story? Instead, the facts here happen at the Tour and Gianni Mura which again follows from the left, from suiveur . In fact, the novel takes place between reporters, runners, organizers. Walls following the Tour since '67, that environment knows him pretty well. Remember, digressions, Gypsies and gossip about the Tour, his characters, his world are in fact part of the larger (and better) than this book. Why Gianni Mura is not familiar with only the Tour, but also France, its culture, its towns and villages, chansonnier and poets, and then its wines and its food. Walls of the rest - which is the school of Gianni Brera - keep even with his wife, a section on culinary Friday.
So for each stage there is a restaurant, a specialty wine, distillate, a landscape. Moreover to be a journalist (the Barzini said, I think) is always better than working .
But most of all for each phase of the left Republic must send his piece. Walls and puts them all, his articles from the Tour, in the novel. Articles imaginary, of course. Because in "Yellow on Yellow" are fictional characters, real characters with real name, and characters with the name changed but recognizable. The game recognizes if there is someone behind every name, and who he is, is another enjoyable feature of the yellow. Easy to see that behind Bill Sheldon, American is going to win the 7th Tour after beating cancer, there is Lance Armstrong, who is behind the Kapetanova Kazakh Vinokourov (now 21 ° after 9 stages of the Tour 2007), that behind the Dane Jorgensen, said "chicken" because of the slender legs, is the current yellow jersey, Rasmussen, who is behind Valli Italian Basso, currently banned for doping.
Yes I read this book because it was during the Tour de France underway, followed by Gianni Mura for The Republic . For a few days I read articles on the imaginary walls Tour 2005 and the articles on the real Wall Tour 2007. Armstrong has run that was not withdrawn Last year, I could easily confuse the two chronicles.
This post is already superlungo. I would only add that this reading made me realize something I already knew (it happens) that the prose here, journalistic, and made up of short term dry and dense, has a huge potential of literature and unable to switch from ludolinguistica the news without caesura and without rhetoric. I already knew and now I know.
Meanwhile Gianni Mura, Gianni Clerici Giampaolo Dossena and all three are over 60 - actually, the last two are over 75. Sure, I get older and the age of my gods hand in hand goes away. Several are even dead.
But here I would write the book of Mura, " Yellow on Yellow" and the synopsis of the three will do Gianni again. I am still convinced that they should be very well, in a hypothetical coterie.
Gianni Mura, I said. Readers of The Republic knows, maybe appreciate it. Definitely knows his weekly column, "Seven days bad thoughts": a course that says the key events of the week, especially sporting events (Walls writes about sports), but with frequent and extensive forays into politics, ' enology, puzzles, news. comments very funny and often very bitter, and almost always shared - at least for me.
Besides that's why I bought it and read his "Yellow on Yellow " despite presenting himself as a thriller (though it'!?). I also enjoyed, although it is actually a thriller in the classic sense. (Explanation of the apparent contradiction: I do not read detective stories, but I like them.)
Meanwhile, the protagonist is the author himself, Gianni Mura, Gornal sent to the Tour de France 2005 (the second yellow title). When ever we have seen a yellow autobiographical, albeit with a fantasy story? Instead, the facts here happen at the Tour and Gianni Mura which again follows from the left, from suiveur . In fact, the novel takes place between reporters, runners, organizers. Walls following the Tour since '67, that environment knows him pretty well. Remember, digressions, Gypsies and gossip about the Tour, his characters, his world are in fact part of the larger (and better) than this book. Why Gianni Mura is not familiar with only the Tour, but also France, its culture, its towns and villages, chansonnier and poets, and then its wines and its food. Walls of the rest - which is the school of Gianni Brera - keep even with his wife, a section on culinary Friday.
So for each stage there is a restaurant, a specialty wine, distillate, a landscape. Moreover to be a journalist (the Barzini said, I think) is always better than working .
Yes I read this book because it was during the Tour de France underway, followed by Gianni Mura for The Republic . For a few days I read articles on the imaginary walls Tour 2005 and the articles on the real Wall Tour 2007. Armstrong has run that was not withdrawn Last year, I could easily confuse the two chronicles.
This post is already superlungo. I would only add that this reading made me realize something I already knew (it happens) that the prose here, journalistic, and made up of short term dry and dense, has a huge potential of literature and unable to switch from ludolinguistica the news without caesura and without rhetoric. I already knew and now I know.
Tuesday, February 6, 2007
How To Do A Spaghetti Bridge Strong
David Foster Wallace
They Were up on a picnic table at That park by the lake, by the edge of the lake, with part of a downed tree in the shallows half hidden by the bank. Lane A. Dean, Jr., and his girlfriend, both in bluejeans and button-up shirts. They sat up on the table’s top portion and had their shoes on the bench part that people sat on to picnic or fellowship together in carefree times. They’d gone to different high schools but the same junior college, where they had met in campus ministries. It was springtime, and the park’s grass was very green and the air suffused with honeysuckle and lilacs both, which was almost too much. There were bees, and the angle of the sun made the water of the shallows look dark. There had been more storms that week, with some downed trees and the sound of chainsaws all up and down his parents’ street. Their postures on the picnic table were both the same forward kind with their shoulders rounded and elbows on their knees. In this position the girl rocked slightly and once put her face in her hands, but she was not crying. Lane was very still and immobile and looking past the bank at the downed tree in the shallows and its ball of exposed roots going all directions and the tree’s cloud of branches all half in the water. The only other individual nearby was a dozen spaced tables away, by himself, standing upright. Looking at the torn-up hole in the ground there where the tree had gone over. It was still early yet and all the shadows wheeling right and shortening. The girl wore a thin old checked cotton shirt with pearl-colored snaps with the long sleeves down and always smelled very good and clean, like someone you could trust and care about even if you weren’t in love. Lane Dean had liked the smell of her right away. His mother called her down to earth and liked her, thought she was good people, you could tell—she made this evident in little ways. The shallows lapped from different directions at the tree as if almost teething on it. Sometimes when alone and thinking or struggling to turn a matter over to Jesus Christ in prayer, he would find himself putting his fist in his palm and turning it slightly as if still playing and pounding his glove to stay sharp and alert in center. He did not do this now; it would be cruel and indecent to do this now. The older individual stood beside his picnic table—he was at it but not sitting—and looked also out of place in a suit coat or jacket and the kind of men’s hat Lane’s grandfather wore in photos as a young insurance man. He appeared to be looking across the lake. If he moved, Lane didn’t see it. He looked more like a picture than a man. There were not any ducks in view.
One thing Lane Dean did was reassure her again that he’d go with her and be there with her. It was one of the few safe or decent things he could really say. The second time he said it again now she shook her head and laughed in an unhappy way that was more just air out her nose. Her real laugh was different. Where he’d be was the waiting room, she said. That he’d be thinking about her and feeling bad for her, she knew, but he couldn’t be in there with her. This was so obviously true that he felt like a ninny that he’d kept on about it and now knew what she had thought every time he went and said it—it hadn’t brought her comfort or eased the burden at all. The worse he felt, the stiller he sat. The whole thing felt balanced on a knife or wire; if he moved to put his arm up or touch her the whole thing could tip over. He hated himself for sitting so frozen. He could almost visualize himself tiptoeing past something explosive. A big stupid-looking tiptoe, like in a cartoon. The whole last black week had been this way and it was wrong. He knew it was wrong, knew something was required of him that was not this terrible frozen care and caution, but he pretended to himself he did not know what it was that was required. He pretended it had no name. He pretended that not saying aloud what he knew to be right and true was for her sake, was for the sake of her needs and feelings. He also worked dock and routing at UPS, on top of school, but had traded to get the day off after they’d decided together. Two days before, he had awakened very early and tried to pray but could not. He was freezing more and more solid, he felt like, but he had not thought of his father or the blank frozenness of his father, even in church, which had once filled him with such pity. This was the truth. Lane Dean, Jr., felt sun on one arm as he pictured in his mind an image of himself on a train, waving mechanically to something that got smaller and smaller as the train pulled away. His father and his mother’s father had the same birthday, a Cancer. Sheri’s hair was colored an almost corn blond, very clean, the skin through her central part pink in the sunlight. They’d sat here long enough that only their right side was shaded now. He could look at her head, but not at her. Different parts of him felt unconnected to each other. She was smarter than him and they both knew it. It wasn’t just school—Lane Dean was in accounting and business and did all right; he was hanging in there. She was a year older, twenty, but it was also more—she had always seemed to Lane to be on good terms with her life in a way that age could not account for. His mother had put it that she knew what it is she wanted, which was nursing and not an easy program at Peoria Junior College, and plus she worked hostessing at the Embers and had bought her own car. She was serious in a way Lane liked. She had a cousin that died when she was thirteen, fourteen, that she’d loved and been close with. She only talked about it that once. He liked her smell and her downy arms and the way she exclaimed when something made her laugh. He had liked just being with her and talking to her. She was serious in her faith and values in a way that Lane had liked and now, sitting here with her on the table, found himself afraid of. This was an awful thing. He was starting to believe that he might not be serious in his faith. He might be somewhat of a hypocrite, like the Assyrians in Isaiah, which would be a far graver sin than the appointment—he had decided he believed this. He was desperate to be good people, to still be able to feel he was good. He rarely before now had thought of damnation and Hell—that part of it didn’t speak to his spirit—and in worship services he more just tuned himself out and tolerated Hell when it came up, the same way you tolerate the job you’ve got to have to save up for what it is you want. Her tennis shoes had little things doodled on them from sitting in her class lectures. She stayed looking down like that. Little notes or reading assignments in Bic in her neat round hand on the rubber elements around the sneaker’s rim. Lane A. Dean, looking now at her inclined head’s side’s barrettes in the shape of blue ladybugs. The appointment was for afternoon, but when the doorbell had rung so early and his mother’d called to him up the stairs, he had known, and a terrible kind of blankness had commenced falling through him.
He told her that he did not know what to do. That he knew if he was the salesman of it and forced it upon her that was awful and wrong. But he was trying to understand—they’d prayed on it and talked it through from every different angle. Lane said how sorry she knew he was, and that if he was wrong in believing they’d truly decided together when they decided to make the appointment she should please tell him, because he thought he knew how she must have felt as it got closer and closer and how she must be so scared, but that what he couldn’t tell was if it was more than that. He was totally still except for moving his mouth, it felt like. She did not reply. That if they needed to pray on it more and talk it through, then he was here, he was ready, he said. The appointment could get moved back; if she just said the word they could call and push it back to take more time to be sure in the decision. It was still so early in it—they both knew that, he said. This was true, that he felt this way, and yet he also knew he was also trying to say things that would get her to open up and say enough back that he could see her and read her heart and know what to say to get her to go through with it. He knew this without admitting to himself that this was what he wanted, for it would make him a hypocrite and liar. He knew, in some locked-up little part of him, why it was that he’d gone to no one to open up and seek their life counsel, not Pastor Steve or the prayer partners at campus ministries, not his UPS friends or the spiritual counselling available through his parents’ old church. But he did not know why Sheri herself had not gone to Pastor Steve—he could not read her heart. She was blank and hidden. He so fervently wished it never happened. He felt like he knew now why it was a true sin and not just a leftover rule from past society. He felt like he had been brought low by it and humbled and now did believe that the rules were there for a reason. That the rules were concerned with him personally, as an individual. He promised God he had learned his lesson. But what if that, too, was a hollow promise, from a hypocrite who repented only after, who promised submission but really only wanted a reprieve? He might not even know his own heart or be able to read and know himself. He kept thinking also of 1 Timothy and the hypocrite therein who disputeth over words. He felt a terrible inner resistance but could not feel what it was that it resisted. This was the truth. All the different angles and ways they had come at the decision together did not ever include it—the word—for had he once said it, avowed that he did love her, loved Sheri Fisher, then it all would have been transformed. It would not be a different stance or angle, but a difference in the very thing they were praying and deciding on together. Sometimes they had prayed together over the phone, in a kind of half code in case anybody accidentally picked up the extension. She continued to sit as if thinking, in the pose of thinking, like that one statue. They were right up next to each other on the table. He was looking over past her at the tree in the water. But he could not say he did: it was not true.
But neither did he ever open up and tell her straight out he did not love her. This might be his lie by omission. This might be the frozen resistance—were he to look right at her and tell her he didn’t, she would keep the appointment and go. He knew this. Something in him, though, some terrible weakness or lack of values, could not tell her. It felt like a muscle he did not have. He didn’t know why; he just could not do it, or even pray to do it. She believed he was good, serious in his values. Part of him seemed willing to more or less just about lie to someone with that kind of faith and trust, and what did that make him? How could such a type of individual even pray? What it really felt like was a taste of the reality of what might be meant by Hell. Lane Dean had never believed in Hell as a lake of fire or a loving God consigning folks to a burning lake of fire—he knew in his heart this was not true. What he believed in was a living God of compassion and love and the possibility of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ through whom this love was enacted in human time. But sitting here beside this girl as unknown to him now as outer space, waiting for whatever she might say to unfreeze him, now he felt like he could see the edge or outline of what a real vision of Hell might be. It was of two great and terrible armies within himself, opposed and facing each other, silent. There would be battle but no victor. Or never a battle—the armies would stay like that, motionless, looking across at each other, and seeing therein something so different and alien from themselves that they could not understand, could not hear each other’s speech as even words or read anything from what their face looked like, frozen like that, opposed and uncomprehending, for all human time. Two-hearted, a hypocrite to yourself either way.
When he moved his head, a part of the lake further out flashed with sun—the water up close wasn’t black now, and you could see into the shallows and see that all the water was moving but gently, this way and that—and in this same way he besought to return to himself as Sheri moved her leg and started to turn beside him. He could see the man in the suit and gray hat standing motionless now at the lake’s rim, holding something under one arm and looking across at the opposite side where a row of little forms on camp chairs sat in a way that meant they had lines in the water for crappie—which mostly only your blacks from the East Side ever did—and the little white shape at the row’s end a Styrofoam creel. In his moment or time at the lake now just to come, Lane Dean first felt he could take this all in whole: everything seemed distinctly lit, for the circle of the pin oak’s shade had rotated off all the way, and they sat now in sun with their shadow a two-headed thing in the grass before them. He was looking or gazing again at where the downed tree’s branches seemed to all bend so sharply just under the shallows’ surface when he was given to know that through all this frozen silence he’d despised he had, in truth, been praying, or some little part of his heart he could not hear had, for he was answered now with a type of vision, what he would later call within his own mind a vision or moment of grace. He was not a hypocrite, just broken and split off like all men. Later on, he believed that what happened was he’d had a moment of almost seeing them both as Jesus saw them—as blind but groping, wanting to please God despite their inborn fallen nature. For in that same given moment he saw, quick as light, into Sheri’s heart, and was made to know what would occur here as she finished turning to him and the man in the hat watched the fishing and the downed elm shed cells into the water. This down-to-earth girl that smelled good and wanted to be a nurse would take and hold one of his hands in both of hers to unfreeze him and make him look at her, and she would say that she cannot do it. That she is sorry she did not know this sooner, that she hadn’t meant to lie—she agreed because she’d wanted to believe that she could, but she cannot. That she will carry this and have it; she has to. With her gaze clear and steady. That all night last night she prayed and searched inside herself and decided this is what love commands of her. That Lane should please please sweetie let her finish. That listen—this is her own decision and obliges him to nothing. That she knows he does not love her, not that way, has known it all this time, and that it’s all right. That it is as it is and it’s all right. She will carry this, and have it, and love it and make no claim on Lane except his good wishes and respecting what she has to do. That she releases him, all claim, and hopes he finishes up at P.J.C. and does so good in his life and has all joy and good things. Her voice will be clear and steady, and she will be lying, for Lane has been given to read her heart. To see through her. One of the opposite side’s blacks raises his arm in what may be greeting, or waving off a bee. There is a mower cutting grass someplace off behind them. It will be a terrible, last-ditch gamble born out of the desperation in Sheri Fisher’s soul, the knowledge that she can neither do this thing today nor carry a child alone and shame her family. Her values blocked the way either way, Lane could see, and she has no other options or choice—this lie is not a sin. Galatians 4:16, Have I then become your enemy? She is gambling that he is good. There on the table, neither frozen nor yet moving, Lane Dean, Jr., sees all this, and is moved with pity, and also with something more, something without any name he knows, that is given to him in the form of a question that never once in all the long week’s thinking and division had even so much as occurred—why is he so sure he doesn’t love her? Why is one kind of love any different? What if he has no earthly idea what love is? What would even Jesus do? For it was just now he felt her two small strong soft hands on his, to turn him. What if he was just afraid, if the truth was no more than this, and if what to pray for was not even love but simple courage, to meet both her eyes as she says it and trust his heart?
They Were up on a picnic table at That park by the lake, by the edge of the lake, with part of a downed tree in the shallows half hidden by the bank. Lane A. Dean, Jr., and his girlfriend, both in bluejeans and button-up shirts. They sat up on the table’s top portion and had their shoes on the bench part that people sat on to picnic or fellowship together in carefree times. They’d gone to different high schools but the same junior college, where they had met in campus ministries. It was springtime, and the park’s grass was very green and the air suffused with honeysuckle and lilacs both, which was almost too much. There were bees, and the angle of the sun made the water of the shallows look dark. There had been more storms that week, with some downed trees and the sound of chainsaws all up and down his parents’ street. Their postures on the picnic table were both the same forward kind with their shoulders rounded and elbows on their knees. In this position the girl rocked slightly and once put her face in her hands, but she was not crying. Lane was very still and immobile and looking past the bank at the downed tree in the shallows and its ball of exposed roots going all directions and the tree’s cloud of branches all half in the water. The only other individual nearby was a dozen spaced tables away, by himself, standing upright. Looking at the torn-up hole in the ground there where the tree had gone over. It was still early yet and all the shadows wheeling right and shortening. The girl wore a thin old checked cotton shirt with pearl-colored snaps with the long sleeves down and always smelled very good and clean, like someone you could trust and care about even if you weren’t in love. Lane Dean had liked the smell of her right away. His mother called her down to earth and liked her, thought she was good people, you could tell—she made this evident in little ways. The shallows lapped from different directions at the tree as if almost teething on it. Sometimes when alone and thinking or struggling to turn a matter over to Jesus Christ in prayer, he would find himself putting his fist in his palm and turning it slightly as if still playing and pounding his glove to stay sharp and alert in center. He did not do this now; it would be cruel and indecent to do this now. The older individual stood beside his picnic table—he was at it but not sitting—and looked also out of place in a suit coat or jacket and the kind of men’s hat Lane’s grandfather wore in photos as a young insurance man. He appeared to be looking across the lake. If he moved, Lane didn’t see it. He looked more like a picture than a man. There were not any ducks in view.
One thing Lane Dean did was reassure her again that he’d go with her and be there with her. It was one of the few safe or decent things he could really say. The second time he said it again now she shook her head and laughed in an unhappy way that was more just air out her nose. Her real laugh was different. Where he’d be was the waiting room, she said. That he’d be thinking about her and feeling bad for her, she knew, but he couldn’t be in there with her. This was so obviously true that he felt like a ninny that he’d kept on about it and now knew what she had thought every time he went and said it—it hadn’t brought her comfort or eased the burden at all. The worse he felt, the stiller he sat. The whole thing felt balanced on a knife or wire; if he moved to put his arm up or touch her the whole thing could tip over. He hated himself for sitting so frozen. He could almost visualize himself tiptoeing past something explosive. A big stupid-looking tiptoe, like in a cartoon. The whole last black week had been this way and it was wrong. He knew it was wrong, knew something was required of him that was not this terrible frozen care and caution, but he pretended to himself he did not know what it was that was required. He pretended it had no name. He pretended that not saying aloud what he knew to be right and true was for her sake, was for the sake of her needs and feelings. He also worked dock and routing at UPS, on top of school, but had traded to get the day off after they’d decided together. Two days before, he had awakened very early and tried to pray but could not. He was freezing more and more solid, he felt like, but he had not thought of his father or the blank frozenness of his father, even in church, which had once filled him with such pity. This was the truth. Lane Dean, Jr., felt sun on one arm as he pictured in his mind an image of himself on a train, waving mechanically to something that got smaller and smaller as the train pulled away. His father and his mother’s father had the same birthday, a Cancer. Sheri’s hair was colored an almost corn blond, very clean, the skin through her central part pink in the sunlight. They’d sat here long enough that only their right side was shaded now. He could look at her head, but not at her. Different parts of him felt unconnected to each other. She was smarter than him and they both knew it. It wasn’t just school—Lane Dean was in accounting and business and did all right; he was hanging in there. She was a year older, twenty, but it was also more—she had always seemed to Lane to be on good terms with her life in a way that age could not account for. His mother had put it that she knew what it is she wanted, which was nursing and not an easy program at Peoria Junior College, and plus she worked hostessing at the Embers and had bought her own car. She was serious in a way Lane liked. She had a cousin that died when she was thirteen, fourteen, that she’d loved and been close with. She only talked about it that once. He liked her smell and her downy arms and the way she exclaimed when something made her laugh. He had liked just being with her and talking to her. She was serious in her faith and values in a way that Lane had liked and now, sitting here with her on the table, found himself afraid of. This was an awful thing. He was starting to believe that he might not be serious in his faith. He might be somewhat of a hypocrite, like the Assyrians in Isaiah, which would be a far graver sin than the appointment—he had decided he believed this. He was desperate to be good people, to still be able to feel he was good. He rarely before now had thought of damnation and Hell—that part of it didn’t speak to his spirit—and in worship services he more just tuned himself out and tolerated Hell when it came up, the same way you tolerate the job you’ve got to have to save up for what it is you want. Her tennis shoes had little things doodled on them from sitting in her class lectures. She stayed looking down like that. Little notes or reading assignments in Bic in her neat round hand on the rubber elements around the sneaker’s rim. Lane A. Dean, looking now at her inclined head’s side’s barrettes in the shape of blue ladybugs. The appointment was for afternoon, but when the doorbell had rung so early and his mother’d called to him up the stairs, he had known, and a terrible kind of blankness had commenced falling through him.
He told her that he did not know what to do. That he knew if he was the salesman of it and forced it upon her that was awful and wrong. But he was trying to understand—they’d prayed on it and talked it through from every different angle. Lane said how sorry she knew he was, and that if he was wrong in believing they’d truly decided together when they decided to make the appointment she should please tell him, because he thought he knew how she must have felt as it got closer and closer and how she must be so scared, but that what he couldn’t tell was if it was more than that. He was totally still except for moving his mouth, it felt like. She did not reply. That if they needed to pray on it more and talk it through, then he was here, he was ready, he said. The appointment could get moved back; if she just said the word they could call and push it back to take more time to be sure in the decision. It was still so early in it—they both knew that, he said. This was true, that he felt this way, and yet he also knew he was also trying to say things that would get her to open up and say enough back that he could see her and read her heart and know what to say to get her to go through with it. He knew this without admitting to himself that this was what he wanted, for it would make him a hypocrite and liar. He knew, in some locked-up little part of him, why it was that he’d gone to no one to open up and seek their life counsel, not Pastor Steve or the prayer partners at campus ministries, not his UPS friends or the spiritual counselling available through his parents’ old church. But he did not know why Sheri herself had not gone to Pastor Steve—he could not read her heart. She was blank and hidden. He so fervently wished it never happened. He felt like he knew now why it was a true sin and not just a leftover rule from past society. He felt like he had been brought low by it and humbled and now did believe that the rules were there for a reason. That the rules were concerned with him personally, as an individual. He promised God he had learned his lesson. But what if that, too, was a hollow promise, from a hypocrite who repented only after, who promised submission but really only wanted a reprieve? He might not even know his own heart or be able to read and know himself. He kept thinking also of 1 Timothy and the hypocrite therein who disputeth over words. He felt a terrible inner resistance but could not feel what it was that it resisted. This was the truth. All the different angles and ways they had come at the decision together did not ever include it—the word—for had he once said it, avowed that he did love her, loved Sheri Fisher, then it all would have been transformed. It would not be a different stance or angle, but a difference in the very thing they were praying and deciding on together. Sometimes they had prayed together over the phone, in a kind of half code in case anybody accidentally picked up the extension. She continued to sit as if thinking, in the pose of thinking, like that one statue. They were right up next to each other on the table. He was looking over past her at the tree in the water. But he could not say he did: it was not true.
But neither did he ever open up and tell her straight out he did not love her. This might be his lie by omission. This might be the frozen resistance—were he to look right at her and tell her he didn’t, she would keep the appointment and go. He knew this. Something in him, though, some terrible weakness or lack of values, could not tell her. It felt like a muscle he did not have. He didn’t know why; he just could not do it, or even pray to do it. She believed he was good, serious in his values. Part of him seemed willing to more or less just about lie to someone with that kind of faith and trust, and what did that make him? How could such a type of individual even pray? What it really felt like was a taste of the reality of what might be meant by Hell. Lane Dean had never believed in Hell as a lake of fire or a loving God consigning folks to a burning lake of fire—he knew in his heart this was not true. What he believed in was a living God of compassion and love and the possibility of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ through whom this love was enacted in human time. But sitting here beside this girl as unknown to him now as outer space, waiting for whatever she might say to unfreeze him, now he felt like he could see the edge or outline of what a real vision of Hell might be. It was of two great and terrible armies within himself, opposed and facing each other, silent. There would be battle but no victor. Or never a battle—the armies would stay like that, motionless, looking across at each other, and seeing therein something so different and alien from themselves that they could not understand, could not hear each other’s speech as even words or read anything from what their face looked like, frozen like that, opposed and uncomprehending, for all human time. Two-hearted, a hypocrite to yourself either way.
When he moved his head, a part of the lake further out flashed with sun—the water up close wasn’t black now, and you could see into the shallows and see that all the water was moving but gently, this way and that—and in this same way he besought to return to himself as Sheri moved her leg and started to turn beside him. He could see the man in the suit and gray hat standing motionless now at the lake’s rim, holding something under one arm and looking across at the opposite side where a row of little forms on camp chairs sat in a way that meant they had lines in the water for crappie—which mostly only your blacks from the East Side ever did—and the little white shape at the row’s end a Styrofoam creel. In his moment or time at the lake now just to come, Lane Dean first felt he could take this all in whole: everything seemed distinctly lit, for the circle of the pin oak’s shade had rotated off all the way, and they sat now in sun with their shadow a two-headed thing in the grass before them. He was looking or gazing again at where the downed tree’s branches seemed to all bend so sharply just under the shallows’ surface when he was given to know that through all this frozen silence he’d despised he had, in truth, been praying, or some little part of his heart he could not hear had, for he was answered now with a type of vision, what he would later call within his own mind a vision or moment of grace. He was not a hypocrite, just broken and split off like all men. Later on, he believed that what happened was he’d had a moment of almost seeing them both as Jesus saw them—as blind but groping, wanting to please God despite their inborn fallen nature. For in that same given moment he saw, quick as light, into Sheri’s heart, and was made to know what would occur here as she finished turning to him and the man in the hat watched the fishing and the downed elm shed cells into the water. This down-to-earth girl that smelled good and wanted to be a nurse would take and hold one of his hands in both of hers to unfreeze him and make him look at her, and she would say that she cannot do it. That she is sorry she did not know this sooner, that she hadn’t meant to lie—she agreed because she’d wanted to believe that she could, but she cannot. That she will carry this and have it; she has to. With her gaze clear and steady. That all night last night she prayed and searched inside herself and decided this is what love commands of her. That Lane should please please sweetie let her finish. That listen—this is her own decision and obliges him to nothing. That she knows he does not love her, not that way, has known it all this time, and that it’s all right. That it is as it is and it’s all right. She will carry this, and have it, and love it and make no claim on Lane except his good wishes and respecting what she has to do. That she releases him, all claim, and hopes he finishes up at P.J.C. and does so good in his life and has all joy and good things. Her voice will be clear and steady, and she will be lying, for Lane has been given to read her heart. To see through her. One of the opposite side’s blacks raises his arm in what may be greeting, or waving off a bee. There is a mower cutting grass someplace off behind them. It will be a terrible, last-ditch gamble born out of the desperation in Sheri Fisher’s soul, the knowledge that she can neither do this thing today nor carry a child alone and shame her family. Her values blocked the way either way, Lane could see, and she has no other options or choice—this lie is not a sin. Galatians 4:16, Have I then become your enemy? She is gambling that he is good. There on the table, neither frozen nor yet moving, Lane Dean, Jr., sees all this, and is moved with pity, and also with something more, something without any name he knows, that is given to him in the form of a question that never once in all the long week’s thinking and division had even so much as occurred—why is he so sure he doesn’t love her? Why is one kind of love any different? What if he has no earthly idea what love is? What would even Jesus do? For it was just now he felt her two small strong soft hands on his, to turn him. What if he was just afraid, if the truth was no more than this, and if what to pray for was not even love but simple courage, to meet both her eyes as she says it and trust his heart?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)