So did the leaves tremble at the breath of a sudden chill, in the midst of colorful hopes already owned by others, as the same road awaits. Montreal cold and gray with all those shops, incongruous with spices and pungent smells deceived us of where we really were. Then I left you in such moldy flats to spend a never ending winter, lone at your empty banquet. The sightseeing along the highway staged a melancholic show: distant reds, yellows, and agonizing greens red, burgundy, into brown again. A see-through of skeletons the stretched trees stood slowly sinking into apparent death. I now stand looking at the dense black water of the ocean washing needles ashore while the unrelenting joy of a clear day stands behind the newly built outstanding condos promenade.
Tuesday, September 4, 2018
THE BAY OF BOSTON
Monday, August 13, 2018
THAT VIRGINIA by Amalray
Under cascades of birds
chirping colorful swarms
I walk on the
same clean roads
you just walked
yesterday.
A toy stuck in its
mechanism
I religiously search
Over and over, I
vacuum
all areas of town, it's the same sun
that strikes me in late mornings
along the barren roofs’
skyline
strawberry, lavender
and after mint tints.
A pale yellow
pierces me deep in my heart
was it your tank top
or your beautiful
arms.
I stroll down
Virginia ave
on sunny mornings
alone,
delinquent I burst
blindfolded by light
and slide down the
hill
as I do many times
others' working
days in leisure I enjoy.
I am out on my own with
no one to play
I turn left on
Monroe
there are no signs of
life
just quiet cars
cruise by the lifeless row
of soft pastels
townhouses’ emaciated tones.
I turn my eyes
uphill to the traffic that speeds
and see butterflies
drawn to fire that kills
beauty
and poison
of decadent flowers
that grow wild on
Ponce to breathe air that’s sour .
There is a tranquil
simplicity
here hiding our crimes
covering tragedies of everyday life.
It’s hope or
monotony which make us all numb
to live in a dream’s
dissonance and charm.
Could it be
the architecture, the linear design
the empty stores’
windows, the derelict beings?
This walk is a
sample of our Southern lives
covered by dust and
irreparable lies.
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
VAN GOGH
Many times things lay under our eyes, inert,
unnoticed. Today I saw a picture of a well known painting by Vincent
Van Gogh, called “The Bedroom” completed about two years before
his tragic death. In the synopsis on the painting it’s mentioned
that in a letter to his brother Theo, Van Gogh considered this piece
to be his best one at that time. According to the record some of the
original color of the walls and doors, initially purple, due to
discoloration has become the light blue we see today. This made me
think of Michelangelo’s frescoes of the Sistine Chapel before the
restoration, how time added a special touch to the masterpiece.
There are certainly many more interesting facts related to
this work. Here I will only take to consideration those inherent to
the personal impact and intimate connection that drew me to it.
Therefore I won’t go deep into the fore standing details and
historical circumstances in which Van Gogh gave birth to this
particular work, obviously well documented. What I am interested in
is the transcendent light emanating throughout the space. It might be
plausible my thoughts will coincide with the actual meaning and form
related to it, but I will leave it to chance.
The
moment I saw “The bedroom” it felt familiar. The striking light,
crystal clear and all pervading, made it sort of a universal
prototype, essential and primordial, it let on an element present in
all things, a subtle thread binding them all together. It reminded me
of the mornings at my parents house, waking up late in the
reinvigorating brilliance of the sunshine. It gave me the same
feelings of old Italian movies, the literary works of Pierpaolo
Pasolini or T.S. Eliot’s Waste land just to cite a few examples;
where the transient past is captured into the same eternal glare. A
blinding light ubiquitous and permeating. A morning light that washes
away impurities. It appears as if the artist had cleaned and neaten
the room in a desperate ritual. The furnitures and objects are
different elements with iridescent affinity, dynamically alive. We
see a welcoming environment meticulously arranged, a joyous tragic
day celebrating rebirth. Is it Sunday? A sunny ordinary day or
overcast indeed? Is the light coming from within the room, from its
inner space, the walls or the objects? There is no need to open that
window at the far end, to know what’s behind it, it could be
anything or any place. There is such energy in this work that it
makes it almost unbearable to look at, terrifying. The sharp and
clear vision is overwhelming. It shows the process of life, a
continuous and constant act of rebuilding over ruins. It is human
tragedy endlessly repeating where time stands as bright as an never
ending dream, leaving us in anguish. We are aware that Van Gogh
expressed his mystical experiences with the clarity and awareness
that led him to madness. Madness, superficially condemned and exiled
because incompatible with the intellect of common mortals, who fail
to grasp its essence and the driving force behind it. This is “The
Bedroom”, a place of no return. It’s the joy and the curse that
haunts humanity. It’s my life but also yours.
TORINO
TORINO
by Albino Mattioli
The heavy iron door shut
behind me. I felt the key turning and the deadbolts sliding into the
sockets in my chest. My wrist hurt. Under the bandage the tight
stitches were stretching my skin. I walked slowly through the narrow
corridor, the rooms were all on the left with no doors. The yellowish
walls were bare and dirty, stained mattresses were folded on the
vacant beds. All windows had bars. I saw a desolate patient seating
by the barred window. The sergeant in charge of the psychiatric ward,
looked really off, he wore a white coat and had an Indian cap from
Manali on his head. He pointed towards the narrow and gloomy
corridor with glittering eyes and told me, with a slight grin "you
can take any bed you want" as he hastened back to his post near the
entrance to finish his cigarette.
Still
drowsy from the medication they had given me in Alessandria, I
dragged myself around, peered in the empty rooms without fully making
a sense of where I was. Weakened by the loss of blood, I ended up
crushing on one of those stinky mattresses, oblivious of the smell
and my surroundings. I looked outside through the bars. It was a damp
morning. I thought about my mother’s ingenuous joy at the train
station a week earlier, happy to see me off to the military service.
Here I was at the psychiatric ward waiting for my dismissal, a slit
wrist and under medication.
The
sergeant in Savona at the military camp infirmary had told me he
would bring flowers to my grave rather than sending me home. I
couldn’t eat. Then few days later, seeing my emaciated condition,
he relented and had me transferred to the Alessandria Military
Hospital for treatment. When the ambulance dropped me off in the morning, it
was assembly time and all the patients, mainly young boys from the
South who were also there hoping to be sent home for convalescence,
had all gathered in the main hall on the first floor. The Alessandria
Military Hospital was managed like a prison and even though gloomy
and decadent, the architecture preserved its aesthetic value and
charm. Originally a church, the Chiesa di San Francesco with
adjacent convent, it was built during the late 1200 AD
and later transformed into a hospital. At the assembly the colonel
strongly repeated with a resonant voice “...from Alessandria
everybody gets cured and is sent back to the battalion!”. Those
words made my heart shrink. The idea to return back to Savona to be
assigned later to some remote area on the north and waist one year of
my life in such depressing environment made me more sick. The
following days I aimlessly wandered around the vaulted pavilions and
ancient chambers. Everybody looked desperate and lost. All the eyes I
saw were downcast, void, depressed. Some of the boys were crying. I
finally had a break down, I couldn’t take it anymore, it all became
unbearable. One night I couldn’t sleep, I looked at the high
concave ceiling for hours, then as the first morning light appeared
everybody started to get up, pale as a shroud, I went to ask for a
razor. Someone kindly handed me a plastic disposable one. I entered
the crowded bathrooms, everybody was going in and out. The noise of
water running and the undistinguished voices bounced loudly against
the vault above. I felt the dampness in my joints, there was a mixed
smell of urine and disinfectant. I went in one of the toilettes, tore
the razor and extracted the tiny blade. I held my breath, closed my
eyes, raised my right hand and let it drop sliding the thin blade
through my left wrist. I just walked out of the bathrooms in the
crowded hall standing with my arms down, a stream of blood dripping
on to the floor. Many petrified eyes were staring at me, I heard a
lot of commotion, then officials arrived, as I collapsed on the
floor, they took me to the infirmary were, in front of the shocked
and upset eyes of the colonel, I was given few stitches and afterward
sent urgently to Torino were I was now interned.
The
loud sound of the deadbolts echoed in the room again. As the iron
door opened and closed I heard there was someone else at the
entrance. The voice of the officer calling my name resounded in the
corridor. I got up and from the threshold I could see him talking to
a doctor. The doctor looked at me and shouted “Why is he here? He
should be in the general medicine ward!”. He was holding my medical
report. He got on the phone, then he hanged up and gestured me to
follow him. The heavy iron door unlocked again and opened with a
screech. I followed the doctor through the gardens, we passed the
church, I was finally breathing some fresh air. The hospital was a
vast complex. The main driveway was lined with trees, a big park
stood amid the rows of long buildings connected one another by glass
galleries. When we entered, our steps resounded as we went up the
staircases, through the long vacant corridors and the luminous
galleries from where the outside world, veiled by the glass, appeared
vague, blurred and devoid of life. The pavilion I was assigned to,
was on the second floor of the General Medicine Ward, spacious with
tall ceilings and arched windows. There were quiet nuns dressed in
white, moving slowly around the beds while attending to the patients.
The
doctor called for the head nun and after wishing me good luck he left
me in her care. My bed had clean sheets and was neat. For dinner they
brought a plate of steamed spinaches, fresh mozzarella and bread.
There were four kids next to me, also waiting to be sent home, with
whom I instantly became friend. They were from all different parts of
Italy. Two of them, every night, after the unsuspecting nuns retired
to their rooms, would disappear behind the thick curtains, crawl down
from the window, jump over the wall and vanish in the dark. They
would come back later on with pizza, beer, cigarettes and magazines.
One
week passed and due to the gravity of my case, I was the first one to
be dismissed and to be sent home. When I broke the news to the group,
there were cheers of joy and unrestrained happiness as if all of us
were leaving together. They all hugged me and congratulated me, some
of us even shed few tears; we all exchanged addresses and promised to
keep in touch, although it never happened.
The
hospital sent me home with one month of recovery leave, then I would
have to go to a local military hospital near Rome, with medical
certification in hand from a local psychiatric center, to regularly
assess my conditions. I was free and I could finally taste again
Rome's bright days.
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