The Heelers Diaries

the fantasy world of ireland's greatest living poet

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Location: Kilcullen (Phone 087 7790766), County Kildare, Ireland

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

a passage to india

Lunch with my brother Doctor Barn in the Chat and Chew cafe in Newbridge.
Sweet Autumnal breeze dusking down Main Street, tousling the heads of myriad school children on their way home for tea.
Light rain and sunny spells.
We're in the window seat looking out.
"I'm thinking of moving to India," I tell the brother.
"You're what?" he exclaims.
"Just thinking about it," sez I.
The brother's expression indicates he would be interested in further explanation.
"I had a dream last week," I tell him. "Not a dream exactly. I woke around 3am. There was a hand in my room."
The brother's face was now a study but he remained silent. His eyes were as wide as they go.
"The hand sort of moved," I recalled softly. "It didn't beckon. It swayed a little. Then it reached towards my face and disappeared. It had Hindu symbols on it."
"You're mad," declared the brother with some warmth. "I'm a doctor. I know about these things."
I shook my head.
"The hand was gone," sez I. "Then I saw a storm. Stretching along the horizon. Then I slept."
"Bloody hell," said the brother. "A storm stretching along the horizon of your bedroom wall. Strange hands waving at you. And you're off to India. It's a dream of course."
"It wasn't a dream," I told him. "But there's more. Last night I was walking the dog through the fields and a phrase from one of my old theatre plays kept popping into my head."
"What was the phrase?" asked the brother.
"Forbidden fruit," sez I.
"Sounds like one of yours alright," quoth he drily enough.
"Anyway," sez I. "Today I switch on the internet. And this Indian girl has a poem on her site. And it's about people who love her. And one of the verses is addressed to someone in a land far away who she calls forbidden fruit."
"Coincidence," sez the brother.
"I don't think it was," sez I.
We quaffed our coffees for a few minutes in silence.
Traffic sighed in the street. The rain had started again. People hurried by. A thought struck me.
"Imagine living in a country," I mused, "where when you want to go outside, people say: Better put on your coat, it's the moonsoon. Imagine that. Wouldn't it be great Barn? You'd see me walking around in the moonsoon with no coat on."
"Then you'd be dead," grinned the brother, drawing on his immense medical skills for an instant prognosis.
I wasn't listening.
"They've got parrots Barn," I murmured. "Living wild. More parrots than you could shake a stick at. I'd surely find a poem there. Maybe even the greatest poem of a generation."
The brother was laughing heartily.
"I give up," he said.
Outside the rain had stopped and the last rays of a gentle September sun were dancing on the glistening road and pavement. At the end of the street I could just make out... eternity.

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Are you in love with an indian girl now? Oh my God, Jim... :-*

9:49 PM  
Blogger heelers said...

Bia, quando tu sei qui con me, qeuesta stanza non ha piu paretti, ma alberi, alberi infiniti.
James

1:26 AM  
Blogger Schneewittchen said...

Yeah, see I'm thinking not so much 'move to' as 'visit'. I think that's what your vision meant.
OR... it could mean 'avoid India, too stormy'
OR.... 'make a nice cup of darjeeling James and take one to the Mammy, she always knows a storm in a teacup when she sees one'.

2:36 AM  
Blogger heelers said...

Ah Schnee, meine kleine nachtmusik.
The line between madness and genius is a fine one. Assist me with my experiments and you may decide which I am.
James

9:50 PM  
Blogger Schneewittchen said...

I didn't realise there was a line between them, I thought they were pretty much the same thing....

1:53 AM  

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