My life 105

Stanislav Barszczak – Lord Joy

It is the story of an attainment of me of self-knowledge (perhaps my mother never has any need of that) but whereas in the primeval garden self-knowledge comes, along with the certainty of death, in the later paradise of youth, I presume self-knowledge is of a redeemed state. I’ve always spoken to you of my youth. Now once more you listen to me. Please believe me or not. As far back as I could remember I had longed to be free. As a child I had liked an owner of house near a church on my little town, who roamed from village to village selling pots and string and ballads. What was so wonderful about my life, to the child, was that I could get up at sunrise and go to sleep when he felt tired. I from the age of seven, had been shaken awake by my mother a few minutes before six o’clock in the morning (mother had been getting to a factory), and had worked down the school for seven hours, “finishing” at five o’clock in the afternoon; then had staggered home, often to fall asleep over his evening porridge. I no longer wanted to be a pedlar, but I still yearned for a different life. I dreamed of building a house for himself, in a valley like the fields near railroad of Ząbkowice (Poland’s Silesia), on a piece of land he could call his own; of working from dawn to dusk, and resting all the hours of darkness; of the freedom to go fishing on a sunny day, in a place where “the salmon” belonged not to the laird but to whoever caught them. In a broad valley, at the foot of a sloping hillside, beside a clear bubbling stream, II wanted to build a house. In a few days of my youth I had remained outside all morning, alternately walking the street and sitting under the chestnut-tree. This is my town, I thought; they can’t catch me here. Then I knocked on the door of room of my mother. “Who is it?” I walked in…She had not changed. She had a merry figure. My mother was going through a room, wearing a silk robe. She stared at me. She had glossy hair, long and thick; large, greatly protruding ears, pensive eyes with court eyelashes; high cheekbones which saved her face from roundness and gave it shape; an short-lived nose; and a full, little tabloid mouth with even white teeth. Her body was all curved aside. Her eyes flashed with pride. “What are you doing here? Where did you go? What happened to your face? I put down my cases and sat on the couch. For rhis reason first I was embarrassed. I thought. I had always been risen to a momentary faith! I had spent too much of my life looking for love in the wrong places. Then once day my mother had spoken to me: what do you make of that? No pass, no invitation to his place, not even a good-night kiss- what game was he playing, hard-to-get? “Did you enjoy it?” I hesitated. I looked out of the window, narrowing my eyes against the brightness outside. A pretty girl was crossing the pavement. I looked out of the window, narrowing his eyes against the brightness outside. A pretty girl was crossing the pavement. I listened, and heard the sound of his wife’s voice, out in the back, arguing shrilly with an employee. The row would go on for several minutes – they always did. Satisfied that he was safe, the baker permitted himself to gaze at the girl lustfully. Her summer dress was thin and sleeveless, and the baker thought it looked rather expensive, although he was no expert in such things. The flared skirt swung gracefully at mid-thigh, emphasizing her slim bare legs, promising – but never quite delivering – delightful glimpses of feminine underwear. She was too slender for his taste, he decided as she came closer. Her breasts were very small – they did not even jiggle with her long, confident stride. Then the girl came to our room, and I realized she was no beauty. Her face was long and thin, her mouth small and ungenerous, with slightly protruding upper teeth. Her hair was brown under a layer of sun-bleached blonde. She selected a loaf from the cupboard, testing its crust with her long hands, and nodding in satisfaction. No beauty, but definitely desirable, I thought. Her complexion was red-and-white, and her skin looked soft and smooth. But it was her carriage that turned heads. It was confident, self-possessed; it told the world that this girl did precisely what she wanted to do, and nothing else. I told himself to stop playing with words: she was sexy, and that was that. I flexed my shoulders, to loosen the shirt which was sticking to his perspiring back. ‘Frances, hein?’ I said. The girl took coins from her purse and paid for her bread. She smiled at his remark, and suddenly she was beautiful. ‘Le soleil? Je l’aime,’ she said. She closed her purse and opened the door. ‘Merci!’ she flung over her shoulder as she left…My mother had a way of spoiling things like that. She was always interrupting the fun. She used to say: “You’re so selfish, just like your father.” Mother often was supposed to be witty and engaging. I remember the days were long and warm, as the children we were indulged. At age eleven we used to steal oranges from other people’s gardens, throw stones at river…Only my mother minded, and all she could do was warn us that we’d get punished eventually. She was always saying that- “They’ll catch you one day, Stasiu!” I looked up at her. She stood with her hands on her hips, her face thrust forward. “You’re beautiful,” I said. “You know, I never had left you without saying good-bye. Nothing less than the truth sounding convincing. Reluctant as I was to share my secret, I had to tell her, for I was desperate and she was my only hope. Mother looked at the curtains which divided off the bedroom, then she handed me a box of chocolates. She had been curiously happy to have me in her room, sitting on her couch, talking something. I felt so depressed that I wondered whether things could possibly get any worse, and I realized that, of course, they could. She deliberately made her voice a little deeper as he began to speak. Her voice was full of the expectation of disappointment. “Stasiu?” I felt a surge of affection for her. Whatever happened, she would be on side of me. But “I need help,” I said levelly. In a moment I had already been slept. When sleeping I saw an image as follows: The people crossed a ridge and dropped down the far side, back into Joy Glen. As they descended the air became a little less cold. A few moments later the small stone church came into view, beside a bridge over the dirty river. Near the churchyard clustered a few crofters’ hovels. These were round huts with an open fire in the middle of the earth floor and a hole in the roof to let the smoke out, the one room shared by cattle and people all winter. The miners’ houses, farther up the glen near the pits, were better: though they, too, had earth floors and turf roofs, every one had a fireplace and a proper chimney, and glass in the little window by the door; and miners were not obliged to share their space with cows. All the same the crofters considered themselves free and independent, and looked down on the miners. However, it was not the peasants’ huts that now arrested the attention of me and brought me up short. A closed carriage with a fine pair of greys in harness stood at the church porch. Several ladies in hooped skirts and fur wraps were getting out, helped by the pastor, holding on to their fashionable lacy hats. Now my Mother touched arm of me and pointed to the bridge. Riding across on a big chestnut hunter, his head bent into the cold wind, was the owner of the mine, the laird of the glen, Sir George Morgan. Morgan had not been seen here for five years. He lived in Warsaw, which was a whole day’s journey by train, two days by stage coach. He had once been a penny-pinching Katowice chandler, people said, selling candles and gin from a corner shop, and no more honest than he had to be. Then a relative had died young and childless, and George had inherited the castle and the mines. On that foundation he had built a business empire that stretched to such unimaginably distant places as Bombay and Abidjan. And he was now starchily respectable: a baronet, a magistrate, responsible for law and order along Katowice’s waterfront. He was obviously paying a visit to his Silesia estate, accompanied by family and guests…In the dreams I went to the chestnut wooden Villa from my childhood also. A fine day, wonderful, sun shines soundly. The house got its name from a small public garden across the street where a grove of chestnut-tree was till now in bloom, shedding white petals like dust on to the dry, brown grass. The place had not been lived in for at least a year. First of all I found an half open door there. It took me three or four minutes to kick it open through. Behind it there was a room, which was clean and tidy, with a few pieces of rather luxurious furniture: a hand-carved coffee table, a couch, a mirror. I sat close a mirror on the right corner of the chamber and I looked around the room. It was a feminin room, the home of a domestic servant, a woman who was on the one hand careful, precise and tidy and on the other hand sensitive and sensual. I was intriqued. But suddenly once more I saw the door opened and a man came into the kitchen of my mother and me. He was a tall with brilliantined black hair and an air of gravity which was transparently fake. He was wearing in the liturgical robes. “Stella, go for I would celebrate you a divine service,” he said. As I knew him as a owner of my first house near the church, he had run away to sea as a boy, and had jumped ship in East Africa. Sir George Morgan there on safari had hired him to supervise the native porters, and they had been together ever since. Now he is here travelling with from one house to another, and as much of a friend as a servant could be. Then I remembered that house as it had been when I was a boy, loud with talk and laughter and life. I had thought of this place all through my thinking’s journey. It’s a Christmas time. The priest went to this house, is always singing a carol. The room had been carefully cleaned out…And now I am seeing another scene. I am returning to my second wooden house. Moon shines on way soundly. When I got home I went to bed. This later house itself was fine. I liked the spicy smells and the rows of gaily colored boxes and cans on the shelves in the back room. From my house mother had never gone cold. Now I see her. She relaxed. For she was still not completely convinced of my sincerity, but I wanted her to come and sit beside me, and tell me I was brave and I had done well. After a moment I walked into the room as a priest in pajamas. I see such a scene: a man he was in his thirties with dark hair, dark skin and dark eyes. He had a large hooked nose which might have been typically European-aristocratic. His mouth was thin-lipped, and when he smiled he showed small even teeth-like a cat’s, I thought. I knew the signs of wealth and she saw them here: a silk shirt, a gold wristwatch, tailored cotton trousers with a crocodile belt, handmade shoes and a faint masculine cologne. “We’ll need to ask you some questions,“-I said…In a few moments I am seeing a strong light. The wide church was already thronged with people. In the side aisles, hooded monks held torches that cast a restless red glow. The marching pillars of the nave reached up into darkness. The nave filled up quickly. I am knowing Joy, the man of my childhood. Probably he had never seen so many people in one place. It was busier than the cathedral green on market day. People greeted one another cheerfully, feeling safe from evil spirits in this holy place, and the sound of all their conversations mounted to a roar. Then the bell tolled, and they fell silent. Around the edges of the crowd the monks extinguished their torches, one by one, until the great church was in utter darkness. There were hundreds of children in the cathedral. The silence was broken by a terrible scream. It sounded like someone being tortured. Some of the adults laughed nervously. They knew the noises were made by the monks, but all the same it was a hellish cacophony…Everyone was tense, alert. “The knight” would be sensitive to any touch. The devilish noise grew louder, then a new sound intervened: music. At first it was so soft that Joy was not sure she had really heard it, then gradually it grew louder. The nuns were singing. Joy felt his body flood with tension. The moment was approaching. Moving like a spirit, imperceptible as the air, he turned so that he was facing priest John. Priest John was too interested in the scene at the altar to notice what was happening under his nose. He glanced upward and realized he could just about see the outlines of people around him: the monks and nuns were lighting candles. The llight would get brighter every moment. He had no time left. Priest John had a purse attached to his belt by a leather thong. The purse bulged. It looked as if it contained several hundred of the small silver coins, and farthings that were the English currency as much money as he could earn in the years if he had been able to find employment. It would be more than enough to feed the poor until the next spring. The purse might even contain a few foreign gold coins, for him “florins” from Florence or “ducats” from Venice. Joy had a pair of scissors in a wooden sheath hanging from a cord around his neck. The sharp blade would quickly cut the thong and cause the fat purse to fall into his small hand—unless priest John felt something strange and grabbed him before he could do the deed…Priest John grunted quietly: had he felt something, or was he reacting to the spectacle at the altar? The purse dropped, and landed in Joy’s hand…A tall, good-looking monk stepped up to the altar, and Joy recognized him as Anthony, the prior of a foreign Monastery. Raising his hands in a blessing, he said loudly: “And so, once again, by the grace of Christ Jesus, the evil and darkness of this world are banished by the harmony and light of God’s holy church.” The congregation gave a triumphant roar, then began to relax. The climax of the ceremony had passed. The people went out of the church. The sky was pearly gray with dawn light. Joy wanted to hold Mother’s hand, but the baby started to cry, and Mother was distracted. Then he saw a small three-legged dog, white with a black face, come running into the cathedral close with a familiar lopsided stride. “Hop!” he cried, and picked him up and hugged him…Here from my point of view this movie has expired. For when I awoke there was very warm, and my mother is embarrassed. I thought for a moment that I was a boy again, and that my adult life had been a dream.

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