My life 93

Stanisław Barszczak; Gala uniform of the life, part 2

I would like to return to my journeys now. When I was for the first time abroad in 1992 I saw a carnival at Nice. I remember the effigy – a coloured giant, first of all, close to it two rag effigies stuffed quite professionally with straw, tarred all over with pitch still smoking, and encrusted with feathers. Except for their heads, upon which sat the insignia of city — their abysmally unfashionable but very sensible hats, brim turned down all the way around so that the low round crown sat like the yolk blister in the middle of a fried egg…I’ve been at Edinburgh also and I visiting a dungeon of the fears. Though the noonday sun shone outside and light did diffuse through the bullioned panes of glass in the windows of the entrance one. Then we strolled over to the counter and the rays of an oil lamp had been seen. The large room was dim. Suddenly we saw the man like professor from the seventeen century, who it seemed he might have taken the butt of a horse pistol protruding from each greatcoat pocket. Spectacles perched upon the end of his nose, he started to read aloud, voice rising and falling in dramatic cadences. He roared of the parents with children, “bad” learners: ‘in open and avowed rebellion…the utmost endeavors to suppress such rebellion, and bring the traitors to justice…’ The next day I went to church and was arriving at my peroration. ‘The die is now cast! The polish colonies in Scotland must either submit or triumph!’. ’If the colonists in a faith endure, they must win.” I thundered…Once I descended into a mum’s flat still golden-lit as much from the westering sun outside as from the oil lamps fixed to the exposed beams of walls and ceiling, black against the brilliant pallor of whitewashed plaster…Mum went to a hook on the wall and plucked his stout canvas apron from it. I go to church-she said…I must help poor Stasiu. She was still thanking God as he bounded down the stairs, it having slipped his mind that until he saw a pustule of me developing, she had quite given up on God. She bought me plenty of palatable food…I were merry enough to tumble into bed and sleep the moment we got home, because that extended gloaming kept darkness at rail station…I would say here an angel was a cat, a plaster statuette, I had found after serving in my church. I gave him a coin, I prided myself. When a customer wanted a measure of generosity, he put a coin into its box and rested it upon the flexible knees, which flopped down with an audible click. Naturally the older children present were its greatest users; many a dad and mum were wheedled into drinking more than they ought for the sheer pleasure of putting a coin into angel’s knee. At the time of youth I was walking with the priest of Ząbkowice to the houses of our parishioners. I remember I brought the coins home and took it to mum. As I said in 1995-2004 years I lived for the second time at Ząbkowice. In this wooden house I would say I would not had been there. I came at seven in the morning and stayed until five in afternoon, sitting at “my” table under the window, which bore several quills, composing my lampoons. These were printed up by Częstochowa’s bookshop in John Paul II Street and sold there, though I also had outlets on a few stalls far enough from there’s not to affect its market. They sold extremely well, for I owned a rare ripeness of epithet and was apt into the bargain. My targets were usually Corporation Ecclesiastical Officials, or religious entities addicted to pluralism, or those who presided over the courts. In this wooden house’s back room I held an excellent double bed with thick linen curtains drawn about it from rails connecting its four tall posts, several chests for clothing, a cupboard for shoes and boots, a mirror on one wall for Peg to prink in front of, a dozen hooks on the same wall. There were carpets on the oak floor…And it was quite as good a room as any one would see in any house of similar standing, namely of the middling classes…I also good remember once, I was sleeping there soundly, mum in another room; but I lifted the cot closer to her bed. Mum took off her apron, her voluminous white cotton shirt, her shoes and thick white cotton stockings, but not her flannel underdrawers. At that time there was not with us Miss Helena, “the grandmother”, who I knew on parsonage at Konopiska near Częstochowa. She donned the linen nightshirt. She had had untied the ribbon confining his long locks and fitted a nightcap securely over them. All this done, he slipped close to us into bed with a sigh. I went to mum and snuggled up to her despite the warmth of the night and began to kiss her cheek. Very carefully I pleated up my nightshirt and hers, then fitted himself against her and cupped a hand around one high, firm breast. “Oh, mum, I do love you!” I whispered. “No man was ever gifted with a better mum.” “Nor woman with a better son, Stasiu.” In complete agreement, we kissed down to the lips. Then smiling to himself, I rolled flat in my linen breeches onto my side and slept. Winter came, the ordinary gloom of fog, drizzle, a damp coldness which seeped into the bones; untroubled by the ice which often pocked our river the Trzebyczka. Mum had had a cradle rockers and many broomstick in the corner of her room. She used to be the light of my life. She had, an uncle said, her grey-blue eyes and waving brown hair, her mother’s nicely shaped nose, and the flawless tan skin both her parents owned. The best of both worlds, I used to say, laughing, the little creature I cuddled to her chest with her eyes — his eyes — upturned to his face in adoration. At an end of her life mum was on the house of the Camillians near Olkusz. I went to Bolesław. I tried to help nurse, sitting hour after hour beside mum’s cot. Mum looked up, smiling contentedly. But her left upper arm was sore, she lay sleeping on his right side with the offending limb drawn comfortably across his chest. A nurse talked to mum and crooned to her, I held mum’s plucking hands while nurse changed her linens, washed her shrunken little buttocks as wrinkled and juiceless as an old woman’s. But the fever did not diminish. Brothers Mróz was overwhelmed with burials. But the Barszczaks had kinship rights, so despite the calls on my time I interred mum, aged eighty five, with all the solemnities the Church of Poland could provide. Heavy with exhaustion and near my time, Stanislawa leaned on her sister Janine (both were the daughters of my uncle Adalbert) while I stood, praying desolately, quite alone close to mum on the chapel. There were also Joseph, Janine’s husband and their son Christopher on the funeral. But I would not permit anyone to go near mum. So, mother had lost child — indeed, who had not? –I was humiliated by this torrent of grief, this unseemly unmanning. ‘My mum was dead and I, who would gladly have died in her place, was alive and in the world without her. God was not good. God was not kind or merciful. God was a monster more evil than the Devil, who at least made no pretense of virtue. The only anodyne for my grief was a new faith to love. Mum was right, God wrong.’ For the second time I was enveloped in that ocean of love, though now I had some idea of its profundity. Knew the immensity of its depths, the power of its storms, the eternity of its reaches. Mum had prepared herself empty the privy vault during her last years of life. With this vault, I had vowed, I would learn to float, I would not expend my strength in fighting. The parson of Ząbkowice he has not been a bloated heir at that time. So plain Stephania Barszczak, my mum was apotheosized into village, and now has a Ząbkowice street named after her. Tomorrow, I thought drowsily I will go to St. Holy Spirit’s burying ground and put flowers on mum’s grave. Soon it will be winter again, and of flowers there will be none. Dear Reader, I dream always. I was several time in Warsaw already. I would say I’m there near a river Vistula now. A peculiar lethargy had descended upon the Old City as a result of the panic which seemed to wing citywide in minutes whenever riots threatened. Passing the Coffee House, I stopped for a moment to contemplate the dangling effigies of heroes, my ears assailed by the fitful roars of laughter and spleen originating among the dining ranks of the free Society. Walking swiftly now, I strode along Street. From there I cut north up small Street and emerged onto the Warsaw’s castle. The vista spread southward was extraordinary. It looked as if a very wide street had been filled with ships in skeletal rigging, just masts and yards and stays and shrouds above their beamy oaken bellies. I saw the penthouses coastwise near a bank, then I heard day’s hubbub. Of the river wherein I actually sat, nothing could be seen because of those ships in their multitudes, patiently waiting out the days of their six weeks’ turnaround. The tide had reached its ebb and was beginning to flood in again at a startling rate: the level of the water in rose some feet, then fell thirty. At the ebb the ships lay upon the foetid mud, which sloped steeply and tipped them sideways on their beams; at the flood, the ships rode afloat, as ships were built to do. Many a keel had hogged and buckled at the strain of lying sideways on town mud. I’ve remembered once again the mum’s story. At mother’s time I had had a putridity of the world, winter’s sledge, but first of all a gem of cosmos. So the cosmos was hers. After a while my mind, once over its instinctive reaction to that wide avenue of ships, returned to its rut. People were boiling everywhere at street level, people leaned from every penthouse with necks craning; not a stone of the flagged road could be seen, nor a single slab of the new pedestrian pavement down either side of main street. The three men pushed into the crush and moved with it toward the junction — no, these were not rioters. These were affluent, extremely angry gentlemen who carried no women or children with them. I clearly terrified that I too would be lampooned in some highly uncomplimentary way, I descended from my vantage point and melted into the crowd.
PS. It is all in an author’s imagination only

Leave a comment