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Now one cheek has begun to cave in under my eye, the wince of lechery, no doubt, and meteors, no less. Lines around my mouth give the impression that I have never had a good time-never laughed. My eyes, when I swivel them in a mirror, warn me that grave changes are taking place inside and that denials will get me nowhere: grey hairs, wrinkles, poor vision...they are the roistering gift of time, markings on the stone, to remind myself that I am here, that escape is never, that courage is all that counts, humor with its leg lifted on the monument, peeing on vanity.
The sullen bell called me to school and I went reluctantly, leaving my fishing pole behind the door, pike and trout lost to me. Early morning was almost beyond endurance; I rubbed my eyes and stumbled downstairs, to eat amid yappings, survive, survive.
I did not resent school when Hunt read aloud in Latin, reading masterfully, giving us Caesar, Antony, and Cleopatra. When he read, I wandered beside the pyramids, the Nile dotted with boats, ibis, and heron; I tramped battlefields, fought with black spears piercing the hot, dusty air. It was along the Avon that I sensed man's struggle. I saw. Heard. As the water grew greener and greener and deeper and deeper, the air motionless, the past was there, Hunt's past, Cleopatra's...her barge, like a burnished throne, burnt on the water; the p.o.o.p beaten gold, purple the sails, so perfumed that the winds were love-sick with them; the oars were silver, which to the time of flutes kept stroke...
When I dared I got away early and went to fish or loafed at the mill pool where I hung my feet in the Avon and counted dragonflies, my line thrown as far as I could throw it. Sitting on a mossy mound, I heard the warblers and lark spell morning into warm sun.
Thirty-five years ago!
Summer:
Naked swimmers, five boys, p.e.n.i.s fun, laughter:
Naked girls in bushes along the same river bank:
Church bells in distance:
Behind a copse boy and girl kiss and squirm.
Henley Street
May 4, 1615
G
rowing up, our greatest fun was swimming, our greatest anguish church. From church, as quickly possible, we got into nakedness, rival of summer lightning. We swam the Avon in laughter and rowdiness, three, four or five of us, and if others were at our favorite pool we chased them off, our p.e.n.i.ses flying, rocks and yells going everywhere. We scared them half to death, or, if we were in proper mood, we adopted them, kids like us; we swam and climbed on them and trampled the ooze of plants, and the ooze slicked our bodies over their bodies: I can feel it almost like a lover getting ready to make love: and that's about what we did: we made love to the day and we made love to the water: we yelled and slapped it and cuffed it into obedience, and o.r.g.a.s.med it, and tore our legs till blood p.r.i.c.ked, and then we swam and I was pretty good and I out-swam some though some out-swam me, and we swam until we felt cool and easy, and then lay on the gra.s.s by the mill, to watch the swallows and gape and groan, like lovers after their bout in bed: our spirits ebbing for the nonce, then rising to dress and yell and pull and sing and chase each other home.
How I reveled in summer haying.
Usually, I loaded a small wagon pulled by Burt, Burt eying me, snuffling at me as I pitched the hay: he was getting old and the grey of his wooly hide was shedding outrageously; he lifted each black hoof slowly, often fetching a fart. He liked working the field alone but I preferred working with others. Stripped to the waist, hatless, I forked and grunted and Burt pulled and farted.
Some of the time I had to sing, the smell of hay and sun inspiring my songs: sometimes, when I worked with others, all of us sang, horses perkier for our merriment.
Mildred was as good at the fork as I: working side by side, we often b.u.mped and her blue eyes would widen and light up: pretty, blonde, barefooted, she wore a blouse, skirt and Dutch ap.r.o.n: our field ended at the river, an apple grove along the other sides. Two or three of us, in teams, harvested Papa's hay each season: I still smell the timothy and the girl.
Wonderful, wonderful and most wonderful...and yet another.
Henley Street
May 10, 1615
Choir singing was boring-just sucking melancholy out of song-and whenever I could, I skipped it and went off with Becky. No matter how icy, there was fun, hands linked, our runny noses beatific: Becky, whose giggle alerted every boy, was my girl whenever we could steal away and turtle hunt-that was our joy: tirelessly, we combed the creeks and river, staying long past staying time, scolded but not caring.
I see her giddy black eyes, brown mop, skinny legs, tiny hands and tiny feet-barefooted beside me, wetting herself to the legpits, screeching or silent, often too silent, wading l.u.s.tily. She loved to steal apples, raspberries, strawberries, turnips, hungry from morning till night. I peeled turnips for her and we munched them on a stile, then raced one another, slithered downstream:
"There's one, see, on that log. Be quiet!"
"I'll get 'im."
"No, let me. It's my turn. He's tiny. He's for me."
"Go slowly."
A few times Becky and I rang the church bells for the s.e.xton; together, we stole buns and cookies at home, but best of all we stole happiness, books in running brooks.
She married a seaman and lives in London: I warrant you there are eight children, a happy family-G.o.d bless t'em!