Thursday 13 November 2008

Words, words, words - oh, yes please

My hardcover copy of the collected works of Shakespeare lies open next to me. I am trying to use it to draw up the feeling that I carried when we returned from England yesterday. But one day back at work has almost beaten my beautiful memories into submission, and it is with great effort that I attempt to describe one of the most fantastic experiences of my life.

I suppose I shall start at the beginning, since I am less liable to become confused. We left in the middle of the night, despite numerous flood warnings cropping up around England. JP prefers to drive when most people are asleep, and I can understand this since this is a small island with a ridiculous number of cars packed onto it. Still the drive down was less than enjoyable, as there were still plenty of lorries (trucks) to deal with and every bit of light was reflected by the rain, threatening us with sudden blindness.

We arrived in Stratford just before 8am, with the whole day ahead of us for wandering and exploring. I took an inordinate number of photos of old buildings with skewed timbers that seemed to be barely holding the structures together. Some of the best examples of these were the house thought to have been Shakespeare’s birthplace, and another house down the same street which stands beside a vacant lot where once stood another of Shakespeare’s homes from later in his life.

Roaming through some of the tourist attractions we quickly learned how little is known about the man himself, about his beginnings and his early life, or the lives of his family members. There are more maybes and informed presumptions than there are facts. But this does not stop the shops from cashing in on “Will Power”- everything from First Folio Towels and Shakespearean magnetic “swearing kits” to pop up cards and William’s chocolate head on a stick.

We took a short walk along the River Avon, through the graveyard to the church to visit the famous bard’s grave. It is an intensely strange experience to take photos of someone’s grave, to idolize a person so much that you feel the need to visit the place where their bones are held. Or perhaps humans come with an inbuilt capacity for the morbid and macabre. From public hangings to ghost stories, we are often drawn to the things that remind us how close we are to oblivion.
Later that afternoon we visited a small garden which harboured (I say “harboured” rather than “boasted” for good reason) a collection of modern sculptures meant to be the creative shavings inspired by each of Shakespeare’s plays. “You may have to read the plaques,” advised the monotone guide before we headed out.

It was then that JP’s ability to deal with my love of eccentric strangers was dearly tested. On the other side of the lawn we spied an old woman dressed in a stunning dark hat and a long coat, onto which was pinned a traditional poppy (as it was Remembrance Day). She wore white gloves and was clutching a small bundle of what looked like red flowers. She moved slowly from her place on the park bench and with great care leaned her back up against the sunny side of a large tree.

At that moment the wind plucked several items from her hand and tossed them to the ground. We watched her as she used her cane to drag them closer to her and then struggled to bend down to pick them up. After one successful attempt and several subsequent failures, I couldn’t bear it any longer. I bounded across the grass with a cheery “hello” and bent down to pick up the leaves (they weren‘t flowers after all) before she lost her balance completely.

And that is how I met Lucy.
“Oh, THANK YOU my dear,” she cooed in her Lancashire accent. Thus began nearly 40 minutes of me smiling deliriously while she talked about everything from Edinburgh (“isn’t it maaarrrrvellous…It’s been 11 years since I visited and I would love to go back. Perhaps in January - that’s when the National Gallery - I’m on their mailing list, you know- that’s when they haul their Turners out of the basement. Have you seen them?”) to the Black Watch (“My uncle was in the Black Watch, and when he was captured they tortured him by plunging a bayonet through his funny bone. Can you imagine?”) and Remembrance Day (“I wanted to attend the ceremony today but I wasn’t fast enough and I missed the eleven o’clock observance. So I thought I would come here instead. Isn’t it funny - when I got up this morning I had it in my mind that to honour the day I was going to spend it entirely in silence!”).

Lucy is 84 years old, and explained to me that she is also a “tree hugger.”
“I don’t believe in the NHS (National Health Service). You see the sun shines against the bark and what I do is lean my spine up against it and let the warmth soak into me. Oh, it’s wonderful.”
She was kind enough to let me take her photo and even arranged her “poise” of leaves and fallen flowers.

All this time, JP sat patiently reading on the other side of the park, and when I finally said goodbye to Lucy, he calmly spent the next hour listening to me rattle on about this gloriously unconventional creature. She was one of the highlights of my visit to Stratford and I can only hope she manages to make it to Edinburgh and that she pops into the office to see me. I have already decided where I’m taking her - to the Sheraton for high tea.

With several hours to relax before the play, we checked into our hotel, The Mercure. (Our first hotel stay! Fantastic water pressure! Huge bed! Use your imagination!).

But the play’s the thing…A game of light, lunacy and language.
A blank stage, with a series of tall, mirrored doors at the end (no photos allowed but JP was sneaky and snapped one before things got underway). JP and I have been to see many plays now and have become completely addicted to live theatre. But we agree that this production of Hamlet causes many of the other plays we have seen to pale in comparison.

I am glad that I knew the story of Hamlet and had read the play (albeit some years ago) before going in. This allowed me to take additional enjoyment from the use of language. I am so in love with Shakespeare now. This man who can still make actors convulse in agony or ecstasy, as they speak the words that pound or skip from their mouths, creating ripples in the air that reach our ears and make us shudder in pleasure. I’m telling you it gets into your bones.

What, what an ass am I! This is most brave,
That I, the son of a dear father murder’d,
Prompted to my revenge by heaven and hell,
Must, like a whore, unpack my heart with words,
And fall a-cursing like a very drab,
A scullion! Fie upon’t! foh!

There was also a real sense of intimacy because along with the traditional options of exiting stage left or right (and in this case, through the glass doors), there were two paths from the stage through the crowd to backstage. And so Patrick Stewart, dressed for battle as the ghost of Hamlet’s slain father, stood next to us and beckoned the bewildered Hamlet, played by David Tennant, to follow him. And as Hamlet descended into madness and Ophelia, too, each in turn ran past us, their eyes wild with fear and rage.

Hamlet is Shakespeare’s longest play and the production lasted more than three hours. However despite the uncomfortable seats that made our backs ache, we didn’t want it to end. All I wanted to do was go back, turn everything back so I could see it again. It was wondrous and shocking and heavy and furiously beautiful.
In July we are travelling down again, this time to see Julius Ceaser. I cannot wait.

So, you five (actually I think we may be up to seven!), do one thing for me today. Read something, even if it is one sentence, which moves you. Words that when spun together, stir something in your belly that is akin to arousal. Let yourselves become a little flustered. Then read it again, slower. And again.

Nay, do not think I flatter;
For what advancement may I hope from thee,
That no revenue hast but thy good spirits
To feed and clothe thee? Why should the poor be flatter’d?
No, let the candied tongue lick absurd pomp,
And crook the pregnant hinges of the knee
Where thrift may follow fawning. Dost thou hear?
Since my dear soul was mistress of her choice
And could of men distinguish her election,
Sh’hath seal’d thee for herself; for thou hast been
As one, in suff’ring all, that suffers nothing;
A man that Fortune’s buffets and rewards
Hast at’en with equal thanks; and blest are those
Whose blood and judgment are so well comeddled
That they are not a pipe for Fortune’s finger
To sound what stop she please. Give me that man
That is not passion’s slave, and I will wear him
In my heart’s core, ay, in my heart of heart,
As I do thee…

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

i'm glad you had a fantabulous trip! sounds super-smurfy. i am reading "suite francais" by irina (something)lova. have you read it? she was murdered in a concentration camp mid-writing, so the novel was published posthumously. i think you'd like it.

C.S. Perry said...

Sounds great. I wish I had been there. Fabulous pictures.
The last time I saw "Hamlet" was in Atlanta and the actor playing Hamlet's father had this weird, glow-in-the-dark make up in his mouth that slathered out when he spoke and it was really something to see. Very creepy and spooky.
But it is long isn't it? And I think we had the same uncomfortable chairs that you did.
And I might suggest that, after we read and re-read the words that move us, we all endeavor to write some words that will move us too.

Anonymous said...

I'm glad you had an enchanted trip. I love the picture of the tree root in the shape of a hand, and of course this absolutely fantastic lady. She's delicious.

Jacqui said...

It all sounds so amazing. Obviously I haven't met Lucy but she is obviously a gorgeous lady, both inside and out. I'm so pleased that you went over to see her, I bet that you made her day and that she is now telling everyone about this wonderful Canadian woman that she met. I hope that she does come up to Edinburgh, you'd both have a ball.

Do you know, your plea to everyone to read and remember one fabulous sentence that is moving has made me decide to record every sentence which makes me feel that the author and I are kindred spirits or that leaves me feeling sexy, angry or fulfilled. There are so many sentences which have had a profound effect on me over the years and now I can't remember them, not any more. You've also inspired me to record some of the wonderful and quirky moments where conversations have been struck up with strangers because they are so very, very precious. Your post has made me smile, thank you!

Anonymous said...

irene nemirovsky. sheesh i am an idiot.

PurestGreen said...

Holy comments! My word cup runneth over.

Welcome, Kundry! The hand was part of a sculpture, but the whole thing was like a gnarled ancient tree. And yes, Lucy is utterly divine.

Moe, thanks for the book recommendation, I shall add it to my list. And for using the phrase super-smurfy, which I need to use more often.

Jacqui - that is a great idea. I have a folder on my computer where I sometimes write down quotes that inspire me. I think I should expand it to write down passages from books that I love. Like snippets of Tom Robbins (yum).

Sir Perry, I would love it if you would write a longer description of a man with a glow-in-the-dark mouth. I am intrigued. And the full moon has passed - what evil could arise?