Surges

Stanislaw Barszczak; Memory of a storm on sea

The year culminated in the huge free Concert in the Park at the end of the summer. There is a story about a power of sentiment and love. First I would say I make general orders before enter interference in new period of life definetely. On the same statement of a will Lev Tolstoi gave liberty of a paisants, and Thomas Jefferson gave liberty to all slaves. I’m giving the liberty liberty all heroes of my books , who so faithfully served me during my writer’s working. You, stand up now, because you are free! My greatest concern is that I feel the fragility of the fabric of our space and time. I feel its growing attenuation. Maybe it’s running out of steam, coming to its predestined close. Perhaps it will fall away like a shell and the great granite truth of the otherworld will stand revealed in its place. Maybe the otherworld is the next world, not in a supernatural sense, not in the sense of an afterlife, but just the world that will succeed our own. I am still convinced that when our scientific knowledge is greater, we will be able to explain such phenomena as these without recourse to superstition. It is simply a new aspect of the real. Maybe our own world is no more than a vision in some other accidental individual’s damaged eye. We are aboard the whaleboats of the Pequod, awaiting the final coming of the whale. As a man of peace, I am not shouting “Man the harpoons! But I do say we must brace ourselves for the shock.” Neither hearse nor coffin can be thine…but our present life is as a glove…So, call me Ishmael. Once when I was young my mother took me to the state fair. There was a special kind of wheel, the Orrery, with cages around the seats and a lever you could pull that would permit your little capsule to spin right over, turning you head over heels while the wheel took you up and around. Of course you could lock it off if you wanted and have the normal ride, but the bored little rat-toothed runt of an attendant didn’t bother to tell them a damn thing about that, so when they started tumbling they both thought something had gone dreadfully wrong and they were about to die. Those five screaming minutes in the moving cage still returned to me in dreams. Then I was talking about it wasn’t funny. I was talking about being out of control of your little bit of world, of being betrayed by what you counted on. I was talking about panic and the fragility of being and the skull beneath the skin.

I remember her despair. I remember promising at that moment, I will see this marriage if it’s the last thing I do. She still fought her daily bout against self-doubt and existential uncertainty, the universal bogeys of the age. She was saying she was married to a lunatic and she loved a husband and couldn’t handle it and didn’t know what was going to happen, how it would end. Recently she has taken up new residence at village of Ząbkowice. Now she was standing in window with based hands about windowsill. Certain boy proceeded this street close to her window. The boy has learned her from first look. She worked in store “after stairs”. For the years the boy visited a store, came for the sweets Now he is fifteen year old. He has a full face and the plainest eyes as sea in a beautiful weather, dressing to jacket and sweter. Then a high store’s woman had taught the boy to hear her voice and the boy loved her. Now the boy stopped at window.
“Mrs. Yanina, I could go with you again,” the boy said.”We’ve made some money.”
“No,” the store said. “You’re with a lucky boat. Stay with them.” He was as serve in church.
But remember how you went eighty-seven days without fish, bread. Commodity, there had been a meat on sheets of paper, rationing coupons.
“I remember,” the store said. “I know you did not leave me because you doubted.”
“It was papa who made me leave. I am a boy and I must obey him.”
“I know,” the store’s woman said. “It is quite normal.”
“He hasn’t much faith.” The boy has remembered squally sea, surges here , he saw the years before.
“No,” the Mrs. Yanina said. “But we have. Haven’t we?”
“You bought me a buds,” the store said. “You are already a man.”
“How old was I when aunt Wartak first took me from my mother for store?”
“Four and you nearly were killed when I brought the fish in too green and he nearly darted in container with water awfully. Can you remember?”
“Can you really remember that or did I just tell it to you?”
“I remember everything from when we first went together.”
The store’s woman looked at him with her sun-burned, confident loving eyes.
“If you were my boy I’d take you out and gamble,” she said. “But you are father’s and your mother’s and you are in a lucky boat of church.”
“May I get the reminders-souvenirs?”
“You didn’t steal them?”
“I would,” the boy said. “But I bought these.”
“Thank you,” the store said. He was too simple to wonder when he had attained humility. But he knew he had attained it and he knew it carried no loss of true pride.”
Tomorrow is going to be a good day with this current,” she said.
“Where are you going?” the boy asked.
I will go to the parish-priest of Liszka at Wieruszów. When he worked in our parish, there was ideal priest, very good person.
“I admire you,” the boy said.
“I am a strange store.”
“But are you strong enough now for a truly big fish?”

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