Peter Paul Markin comment:
Marcel Proust, from many accounts,
was not above making some kind of sketch out of some happenstance event,
occurrence, or just something that he picked up and interested him. In that
same sense sketch from a while back the following flows forth…
Peter Paul Markin, Class Of 1964
(2010), comment:
....with apologies to the great
early 20th century modernist French writer Marcel Proust whose most famous (and
massive) work I am stealing the title from in my headline. Apparently I will
steal any literary tidbit, from any source and from any time, just to round out
an entry in this space. I had also better explain, before some besotted,
hare-brained, pencil at the ever ready, school of novel deconstruction devotee,
probably tragically childhood’d, post-modern literary-type jumps on me I know,
and I know damn well, that an alternative translation for the title of Proust's
six volume work is Remembrances Of Things Past. But isn't this In
Search Of Lost Time a better title for the needs of this space? In any case
I promise not to go on and on about French pastry at teatime (which, by the
way, brother Proust did do, for about sixty pages in the volume Swann’s Way,
so there is the trade-off. Okay?).
*********
As I, clumsily, pick up, or try to
pick up some precious dirt to rub between my fingers from the oval in front of
the old high school, on this bedraggled, prickly frigid, knife-like wind-
gusting in my face, not fit for man nor beast, kind of a winter’s day as the
shortly-setting sun begins its descent into night, I really do wonder what
demons, what cast-out-of-the-inner-sanctums-of-hell demons, have driven me
here, here to this worn-out patch of an oval, after so many years of statutory
neglect. Moreover, picking up dirt from an oval that I have not walked on, much
less picked up gravel from, in over forty-five years, although I have logged
many a mile around a larger version (I believe) of this oval either practicing
during track or cross country season, or, and this may jog reader memory,
running the 600 yard dash as part of the old time President’s National Physical
Fitness Test. Yes, I thought mention of that event might bring ring a bell, a
bell of anguish for some, as they puffed and chortled their way to the finish
line in their tennis shoes, or whatever knee-busting sneakers we wore in those
days, in order to be cool. Hey, just like today.
In any case, here I stand, and now
you know, or have a pretty good idea where I am. What you do not know, at least
do not know yet, is that I am not here, rubbing some funky old town dirt
through my fingers on a cold winter’s day just for the joy of it. For raider
red oneness, either. Or some such old man’s quirks. Rather, I am here, and you
can start calling 911 right now if you like, to evoke, evoke mind you so there
is no fooling around about it, the spirit, the long past spirit of days gone by
at the high school. The spirit of the time of my time. Probably not since old
Tommy Wollaston went looking for a suitable site for his maypole debaucheries,
and stumbled on Merrymount has this town seen such a land grab, in a manner of
speaking. See, what I am thinking is that some dirt-rubbing, a little
kabala-like, or druid-like, or keltic-like, or Navajo-like, or something-like,
dirt-rubbing will give me a jump start on this “voyage”.
I will confess to this much , as
this seemingly is a confessional age, or, maybe just as a vestige of that
hard-crusted, family history-rooted, novena-saying, stations of the cross
walking, ceremonial high mass incense-driven, mortal sin-fearing, you’ll get
your reward in the next life so don’t expect it here, buster, fatalistic
Catholic upbringing long abandoned but etched in, no, embedded in, some far
recesses of memory that my returning to North Adamsville High School did not
just occur by happenstance. A couple of years before my mother, Doris Margaret Markin
(nee Bradley) NA HS Class of 1943, passed away.
For a good part of her life my
mother lived in locations a mere stone's throw from the school. You could, for
example, see the back of the school from my grandparents' house on Young
Street. As part of the grieving process, I suppose, I felt a need to come back
to North Adamsville. To my, and her, roots. In part, at least, for the feel of
roots, but also to figure out, or try to figure out for the 584th time, what
went wrong in our old, broken down, couldn't catch a break, working poor, North
Adamsville -historied, family. As part of that attempted figuring out, as I
walked up Hancock Street from Walnut Street (the old, woe begotten, seen better
days, ram-shackled homestead now standing guard above part of the Newport
Avenue by-pass) and swung down East Main I passed by, intentionally passed by,
the old high school. And here I stand, oval-stuck, dirty-handed, bundled up not
to well against the day’s winds, or against the fickle, shifting winds of time
either, to tell my tale.
Now I will also confess, but without
the long strung-out stuff that I threw in above about my Catholic upbringing,
that in figuring out why ill winds blew across my family’s fate I was
unsuccessful. Why, after all, should the 584th time bring some sense of
enlightenment, or of inner peace, when the other five hundred, more or less,
did not do so. What this sojourn did do, however, was rekindle, and rekindle
strongly, memories of sitting, without number, on the steps of the high school
in the old days, in the high school days, and thinking about the future, if there was going to be a
future.
I tried to write this story, or a
part of it, a couple of years ago so a little background is in order so the
thing makes some sense to others. That now seemingly benighted entry,
originally simply titled A Walk Down “Dream” Street started life by
merely asking an equally simple question posed to fellow classmates in the
North Adamsville High School Class of 1964 about whether their high school
dreams had come true or not, as least for those who had thought about the
issue, on the class website. I had “discovered” the site that year after having
been pushed and pulled in ways that drove me back to memories, hard,
hard-bitten, hard-aching, hard-longing, mist of time, dream memories, of North
schoolboy days and of the need to search for my old high school friend and
running mate (literally, in track and cross country, as well as “running”
around town doing boy high school things, doing the best we could, or trying
to), Bill Riley. I posed the question this way there:
“Today I am interested in the
relationship between our youthful dreams and what actually happened in our
lives; our dreams of glory out in the big old world that we did not make, and
were not asked about making; of success whether of the pot of gold or less
tangible, but just as valuable, goods, or better, ideas; of things or
conditions, of himalayas, conquered, physically or mentally; of discoveries
made, of self or the whole wide world, great or small. Or, perhaps, of just
getting by, just putting one foot in the front of the other two days in a row,
of keeping one’s head above water under the impact of young life’s woes, of not
sinking down further into the human sink; of smaller, pinched, very pinched,
existential dreams but dreams nevertheless. I hope, I fervently hope, that they
were the former."
Naturally, the question was posed in
its particular form, or so it seemed natural at the time for me to pose it that
way, because those old, “real”, august, imposing, institutionally imposing,
grey granite-quarried (from the Granite City, natch) main entrance steps (in
those days serious steps, two steps at a time steps, especially if you missed
first bell, flanked by globular orbs and, like some medieval church,
gargoyle-like columns up to the second floor, hence “real”) is a place where
Bill and I spent a lot of our time, talking of this and that.
Especially in summer night time:
hot, sultry, sweaty, steam-drained, no money in pockets, no car to explore the
great American teenage night; the be-bop, doo-wop, do doo do doo ,ding dong
daddy, real gone daddy, rockin’ daddy, max daddy, let it be me, the night time
is the right time, car window-fogged, honk if you love jesus (or whatever activity
produced those incessant honks in ignition-turned-off cars), love-tinged, or at
least sex-tinged, endless sea, Adamsville Beach night. Do I need to draw you
the big picture, I think not. Or for the faint-hearted, or the merely good,
denizens of that great American teenage night a Howard Johnson’s ice cream
(make mine cherry vanilla, double scoop, no jimmies, please) or a trip to American
Graffiti-like fast food drive-in, hamburger, hold the onions (just in case
tonight is the night), fries and a frappe (I refuse to describe that taste
treat at this far remove, look it up on Wikipedia, or one of those
info-sites) Southern Artery night.
Lost, all irretrievably lost, and no
thousand, thousand (thanks, Sam Coleridge), no, no million later, greater
experiences can ever replace that. And, add in, non-dated-up, and no
possibility of sweet-smelling, soft, bare shoulder-showing summer sun-dressed
(or wintry, bundled up, soft-furred, cashmere-bloused, I would not have been
choosy), big-haired (hey, do you expect me to remember the name of the hair
styles, too?), ruby red-lipped (see, I got the color right), dated-up in sight.
So you can see what that “running around town, doing the best we could” of ours
mainly consisted.
Mostly, we spoke of dreams of the
future: small, soft, fluttery, airless, flightless, high school kid-sized,
working class-sized, North Adamsville -sized, non-world–beater-sized, no weight
dreams really, no, that’s not right, they were weighty enough but only until 18
years old , or maybe 21, weighty. A future driven though, and driven hard, by
the need to get out from under, to get away from, to put many miles between us
and it, crazy family life (the details of which need not detain us here at all,
as I now know, and I have some stories to prove it, that condition was epidemic
in the old town then, and probably still is). And also of getting out of
one-horse, teen life-stealing, soul-cramping, dream-stealing (small or large
take your pick on dream size), even breathe-stealing, North Adamsville. Of
getting out into the far reaches, as far as desire and dough would carry, of
the great wild, wanderlust, cosmic, American day and night hitch-hike if you
have too, shoe leather-beating walking if you must, road (or European road, or
wherever, Christ, even Revere in a crunch, but mainly putting some miles
between).
We spoke, as well, of other dreams
then. I do not remember some of the more personal aspects of the content of
Bill's dreams. If you want the “skinny” on Bill’s dreams he’s around, ask him.
However, a lot of what Bill and I talked about at the time was how we were
going to do in the upcoming cross country and track seasons, girls, the
desperate need to get away from the family trap, girls, no money in pockets for
girls, cars, no money for cars, girls. (Remember those were the days when
future expectations, and anguishes, were expressed in days and months, not
years.) Of course we dreamed of being world-class runners, as every runner
does. Bill went on to have an outstanding high school career. I, on the other
hand, was, giving myself much the best of it, a below average runner. So much
for some dreams.
And, maybe, on my part, I also
expressed some sketchily-drawn utopian social dreams, some fellaheen justice
dreams. Oh, you don’t know that word, "fellaheen", perhaps. To have
oneness justice for the "wanters" of the world; for the “no got”, not
the other kind, the greed-driven kind, want; fear-driven, fear to go left or
right or to put two feet in front of you want; for the misjudgment-making from
having too little of this world's goods want; for all the cramp-spaced in this
great big planet want; for the too many people to a room, one disheveled sink,
one stinking toilet want: for the bleary-eyed pee-smelled, dawn bus station
paper bag holding all your possessions want; for the two and three decker house
no space, asphalted, no green between want; for the reduced to looking through
rubbish barrels, or worst, want; for the K-Mart, Wal-mart, Adamsville Square
Bargain-Center basement outfitted out of fashion, no fashionsista, no way,
want,; for the got to have some Woolworth’s five and dime trinket to make a
small brightness want; for the lottery, keno, bingo, bango, mega-bongo waiting
for the ship to come in pay-out want; for the whiskey soaked, wine-dabbled, or
name your poison, want; for the buddy, can you spare a dime want; for the cop
hey you, keeping moving you can’t stay here, want; for the cigarette butt
strewn pick-up streets want; for fixing, or fixings, to die want; and, for just
plain, ordinary, everyday, non-descript want, the want from whence I, and,
maybe, you came.
This is the sing-song of the fellaheen, the life-cycle of
the fellaheen, the red masque dance of the fellaheen; the dance of the working,
or not so working, poor, the day time dance. The dance that I will dance, at
least it looks that way, until I draw my last breathe. For the night time, the
"takers", stealth thief, jack-roller, pimp daddy, sweet-dark covering
abandoned back alley streets, watch out behind you (and in front too), sweated,
be-fogged, lumpen fellaheen night, the no justice wanted or given night, you
will have to look to the French writers Genet, Celine, or one of those rough
boys, the takers have no need of my breathe, or my tears. I have had my say
now, and it was worth standing, as the night devours the sun, at this damn
wintry oval to say it, alright.
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