16 December 2012

Walking and Street Trash

15 December 2012. The day in review. 


(1)  Walking


You all know that the British drive on the wrong side of the road. But, at least they do so consistently. When it comes to walking, it's a different story.

For consistency's sake, some, say half, want to walk on left side of a pedestrian street. According to one cabbie in Birmingham (UK not Alabama - something to remind your small town airport check-in staff of if flying to Birmingham, UK, say from Gainesville, Florida), this has everything to do with the placement of one's lance 'whilst' jousting. Most people are right handed. So, the majority of lances were held in the right hand. That meant driving your horse up the left side of your opponent. I've never seen anyone hold a lance while driving a car, but the British do love their heritage. (This, by the way is the reason that they make Americans living in the UK learn how to drive. The lance in the modern horseless conveyance is a stick-shift, which is daftly handled in the left hand.)

Meanwhile, the other half of British pedestrians walk on the right. I firmly believe that these are contrarians. Only countries that have experienced revolutions drive on the right side of the road. France. The USA. Haiti. Venezuela. The Russian Federation. (I predict, incidentally, that the U.S. Virgin Islands will never throw off its colonial yolk for this simple reason: they drive on the left, mostly with American cars, which makes riding through the narrow streets of Charlotte Amalie, the capital of the USVI, something of a seat-of-your pants thrill for a passenger in a colleague's car.) 

The result, amongst pedestrians, is a super-collider on a human scale. As people try to make their way, chaos - the mathematical patterns of chaos - results. 

Pedestrians in London


Now, why is this important? 

Firstly, it make the British a more tolerant and self-effacing people. Ask yourself, how many times could you excuse yourself for someone bumping into you before you exercise your second amendment rights. Americans, because they all drive and walk down the same side of the street, have a certain directness to them that is, well, direct. I have yet to walk straight down a British street. No wonder the UK is slightly ahead of the USA in matters of equal rights for lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and the transgendered.

Secondly, in American eyes, it makes the British inconsiderate. Not intentionally. If they paid attention to every on-coming obstruction, they'd have a meltdown either from indecision or having to make so many decisions. It is a marvel - and I write this with admiration - a marvel that there are not more accidents. Britons have developed the reverse polarity of magnets. To achieve the same unadulterated sense of personal space a New Yorker has to wait on a rain-storm and start swinging his or her umbrella like Occam's razor.

Sadly this marvel of modern British movement results in the 'law of metal'. If it has more metal than you, you get the hell out of its way. An American cyclist, though he runs red lights as diligently as any British cyclist, would stop to give way to a pedestrian. And, a car's driver in the USA certainly would not roll down his window to scream at the cyclist he's barely clipped, "You don't flippin' pay the road tax, do you!" If it's an American cyclist, he's left with the puzzle: what did he mean when he told you to "get back on the pavement"? The pavement is what they British call the sidewalk. You and the car are riding on what the British call the "tarmac". Lord knows what the planes and jets are flying down. But, if you have to ask, you should review the 'law of metal'.

 

(2)  Street Trash


David Sedaris moved from France to the UK, and . . .   I'll let that sink in. Many people I talk to think that David Sedaris still lives in the USA.  . . . and, what's the first thing out of his pen after he settles in? "The British are pigs!" -- in the Sunday Times (of London) no less.

They are! Pigs. You would have to be blind not to notice. The carefree abandon with which the British abandon stuff on the streets as they walk is impressive in its audacity. It's easy to believe that the entire country operates under the assumption that "Your mother lives here." She probably does: Live here. Before she died, while I lived in Florida, my mother lived in Ohio. That's like saying my British neighbour's mother lives in Finland or Italy. He can drop all the stuff he cares to. His virtual Italian mama might as well be a Pope in the woods. As it is, there's always someone to pick up after him.

Walking the dog up the "High Street" -- that's "down Main Street" in American English -- on a Saturday night, the average American dog walker could be forgiven for concluding that an army of bag-laddies had blown themselves up, to paraphrase Winston Churchill, on the streets and in the parks.

Before moving on, I feel, I need to comment on the difference between Britons walking up High Street and Americans walking down Main Street. It's the riddle of "The Bonnie Banks o' Loch Lomond". America was settled by the Scottish, where as Britain - ask any Englishman - was settled by the English.

Of course, not all of the British are pigs. And, there are pigs in the USA too. There are even historical reasons for this slovenly behavior. While Americans were being blitzed by public service campaigns insisting "put it in the can Gator fan!", the British were in the midst of "The Troubles". The Troubles was that period during the conflict in Northern Ireland when the Irish Republican Army was planting their bombs in trash cans up and down the British isles. The result, whether through the removal of trash cans or blowing them up, was the creation of a nation that discarded its trash anywhere it felt like it. 

Americans taking the UK citizenship test puzzle over the question, "What is the purpose of a wheely bin?" A wheely bin is the ubiquitous British trash bin. We've got black ones for garbage. Green ones for compost. And, Blue ones for recyclables. Any philosophy or linguistics teacher will tell you that a purpose does not necessitate a use. While out walking the dog, you're obliged to pick up its "mess". You tell yourself as you carry it away, "I am a Buddhist monk. And, this bag holds the jewels of refuge: dāna, sīla, and bhāvanā . . . alms, restraint, and concentration." You know that the next trash can you see will probably be back home.

So, what would David Sedaris do? (WWJD? you might ask.) In his Sunday Times article, he asks Britons to be ashamed and to bin it like the good Americans we all suspect they want to be. (They don't want to be European, that's for sure.) BTW: Bin it, that's British English for "put it in the can Manchester United fan".


Discarded nappy - a bag of baby poo.

14 December 2012

Sunday Evenings, Late

Something about late Sunday evening dog walks encourages he off-cant.
   
(1)

     I, I know Florida, said the nice man Max just met on his evening walk. That's where ...
     I've heard this - Mickey Mouse - a million times, but no ...
     That's where Neanderthal Man comes from, says he.
     No, I say, George W. Bush comes from Texas.
     

   
(2)

     Another delightfully weird Sunday late-evening dog walk in Cambridge.
     Sitting outside the Starbucks - closed at this hour, we came across a man who looked like Dusty Hill of ZZ Top, accessing the Wifi on an ultrabook. He was blogging.

     A celestial event - he said.
     Good night for it - I said - an unusually warm evening. - Tribute? - I asked.  Sir Patrick Moore, a distinguished British astronomer died today. He'd been the world's longest running TV host for a program called, "The Sky at Night".  It was like watching your dowdy old aunt pull the frumpy sitting room furniture out onto the lawn to watch the stars.
     No. I am reporting the progress of that orb . . . - He said - . . . the one hovering in the sky over your shoulder.
     I turned to see what might be described as an orb, stationary in the sky.  The sight of sky lanterns isn't unusual here.  They're used to mark weddings, births and deaths.  This was brighter, however, than any sky lantern I've seen.  It was roughly on the flight path used by planes landing at the local airport.  But, aircraft wonted for a soundtrack: the reverse thrust of jets eventually landing, the beat of helicopter rotors, ...  Even the jets sent to pound the hell out of Libya during the revolution made a mighty roar.
     How long have you been here? - I asked, assuming he'd tell me how long the orb had been laying about.
     Fifteen. - He said nothing of how long he'd seen the orb.
     Ingenious! - I said - I'd never have thought of coming here to use the Wifi at night.
     I have Internet at home - the tone of his voice seemed to say, "I'm not crazy", as he continued - I came here to see the orb.
   
     What characterizes late Sunday evening encounters is the need to just go with the flow.  It's claimed that Cambridge is a UFO hot-spot.  But, there are also UK and US air bases near-by.  Lord knows what they're flying off into the night sky.
 
 

What shall we be today?



This as part of a submarine. A periscope.
 
The Empire of England remakes its objects as they age, as purpose becomes obsolescence. Drains without feed are become submarines. Lamp posts without light, a temple's ruins. Alone, each seems to ask, "What shall we be today?"
 
I once attended an international conference on literature for children. Standing in the farthest reaches of the conference theatre, among the rafters like a planet in deep space, I heard "just-so" and "might-be" stories the likes of how coyote learned to call, or, crocodile came to smile, or, in translation from the near-Asian steppe, why mommy took a wife.
 

 
You put your head to the window of the periscope and you can see them. The race that sails round and round the stationary scope. Traveling millions of miles if only in their own special sense of distance. Like a set of chattering plastic teeth at the end of a wind-up key held stationary, or, planets laid out on a mechanical form.
 
The mirrors that take the light down bend it along with the images of the over-land world above. I come out, below, with a broad nose and thin lips as is fitting an alternate reality. My eyes, sadly though, read like a bad poem. With gravity far beyond their years, those eyes - at first sight - spark broad panic. It dies down, but, not without much discussion of the blinkered code they might be sending.
 
Aware of your own distortion, you consider that the mermaids you see there, below, might be sea cows. Might they survive on the refuse washed down drains from the nearby open-air market's fruit and vegetable vendors, you allow yourself to wonder. Meanwhile, those below create myths in which we gain the role of gods. We should be honoured but wary. What goes down must come back up.
 
Indeed, whether mermaids or sea cows, they're ravenous with a propensity to belch. Initially, we've mistaken the gurgling sound for conversation. Attendant malodorous scents, however, neither suggest nor confirm that our hypothesis is false. But, they certainly rise as quickly as our hopes give rise to having discovered intelligent life beyond, if inside, our own world. If they, below, only knew what our scientists are saying!
 
Having described the submarine below as a kind of sit-n-spin, they've now moved on to postulate that those farthest aft experience age in advance of those closer to the spout. A society of contrarians labels the theory "Daft", outlining a mocking theory that considers those to the rear are stern and those forward are loopy. They refuse, simply, to allow prevailing theory to be edified by uncertain observations of the subterranean world. Indeed, reminding us of smoke-and-mirrors, they suggest, it may be our world, not that below, that is spinning.
 
   

21 September 2012

Far and Away



I * L O V E * Trafalgar Square.  You never quite know who you'll meet there, or, sometimes how you'll communicate with them.

This is a lovely Japanese woman, whom I met on the Square.  She was bravely traveling alone without a word of English in her vocabulary.  Somehow, we managed with what I like to think of as international sign-language and the photos we'd logged on our cameras that day.  She was making her way across London, photographing herself in front monuments, buildings and bridges. I had on my camera what a friend calls "vacation snaps", only not my vacation.  A visual log of conversations missed or started.

When I was a student in college, in the early 1980s, I used to take off for the hills on weekends.  Literally.  The hills of Appalachia.  I'd go as far as half of my pocket money would take me, end up in some small town, and sit myself down in the public square with my camera.  Even when it had no film (and there usually wasn't film - I couldn't afford it), I'd point it at the passing traffic. Invariably someone would stop.  A conversation would pick up.  I'd be invited off for dinner and hard liquor. 

I can't tell you the number of times I heard, from those who took me away and gave me a room for the night, that I was incredibly stupid.  I suppose that the Silence of the Lambs was a possibility.  But, it struck me that if you invite a stranger into your house, the stupidity was mutual.  — It strikes me now, this is a person I've hidden from almost all of you.  Something about a photo of a woman whom I really couldn't talk to reveals it.  Maybe it's just age, with its impulse to review what is written in, as a preacher I met called, "The Lord's little book of light".

I met all sorts of people.  Grannies who lost sons to the big cities up north or on the coast, and, who just wanted to feed someone.  Single men who wanted to talk about life far away.  Some were sailors, the closer I got to the sea.  I was taken in by couples, who wanted to talk about red-neck music, or, who spoke a language I barely understood.  Sometimes, we went to backwoods bars that smelled of beer on oak floors.  Then, there was Nate, the fellow who lived on a tobacco farm — had several barns in which to dry staked shoots — converted one into a disco.  A disco in the middle of nowhere, complete with mirrored ball and choreographed colored lights.  We kept in touch, infrequently.  I learned last year, he died in a car crash, broadsided at the intersection of two roads crossing a flat field in Indiana.  He had to cross the Ohio River on a ferry from western Kentucky to ride to his death; there's something poetically ancient in this fact.  There was the lesbian couple who'd been together for ages.  I remember they ordered what would be my first Hawaiian pizza.  The delivery boy knew them both well enough to come in for a Coke.  This was a time when the broadsheet of America outside small towns would have run them out.  There were good up-standing Christian women, and, small-town bankers, and, students from local colleges.  The latter wanted to talk about life in the "sin city" I'd come from, some thumped bibles, others were liberal with weed and dreamed of moving on.  I met police and undercover cops.  The undercover boys — they were always young — would come sailing into the public square like they owned it.  They wore tight fitting jeans and shirts untucked.  It was the black shoes and white socks, gave them away.  Then, there were the conflicted, usually male high-school teachers and seminarians, who just wanted to talk all night about nothing in particular.  Soft drinks were their choice of beverage; they needed a clear head, unless they took an impulse to action.

I wish, now, that I'd had film in the camera.  Their stories would come back to me the more easily if I had had photos to linger over.



Generations (above).  The elevator on Trafalgar Square is a glass cube.  With reflections of cloud cover imposing themselves, it seemed they might sail away into the sky.

20 August 2012

Graduation Nebula


This image is from a few weeks back.  Graduation for the House of Hufflepuff, or is it Ravenclaw.  Actually, I think it's Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, if I read the colours correctly (http://tinyurl.com/9e9483q).

Cambridge Colleges graduate in the Senate House. (http://tinyurl.com/9vu9q5r). A neo-classical hall with a main gallery reaching the height of two floors. It's big, but not big enough for an entire graduating class, faculty and family -- not even of a very small College. Students and their families will be called into the house at appointed times and proceed through the standing room only ceremony (http://tinyurl.com/97ju9dz). Graduates, rolled diploma in hand, then wend their way toward the back of the House and exit onto the pavement of King's Parade.

As the graduation spectacle splashes out onto the streets of Cambridge, beside the cameras of townies and tourists, it's like carrion placed before buzzards. — Faculty, marshals for the day, keep order. — Students circle, awaiting colleagues. — Old money families mingle with the foreign and new. (I don't know if this makes sense, but you don't necessarily need to be a foreigner to be foreign amidst the commingling.) — The punt touts resign themselves to writing off the day; more than enough will make their way, on their own, ungoaded, to the River in due course. — The pick-pockets find easier pickings amongst the gathering crowds. — And, plain-clothes police make a good living nicking* the pick-pockets from their unknowing bait. — Meanwhile, forming a Saturnal ring, the photographers like me snap up pictures of the nebula.




*Note: sadly coppers are now said to 'nick' their prey.

In the 1850s, the police 'copped' criminals. The verb, from the old French for 'to capture', seems to have fallen on hard times, if not into a house of ill repute, where it survives only by 'copping a feel' and, occasionally, by 'copping a plea'.

In any case, 'nick', the verb, has venerable history in the English of the early 1600s when the 'notch' it referenced was a small, literally a 'bolt-hole', a tiny cell in the local police station.

My, how did I get from graduation to government?

11 August 2012

North & The South



Yesterday evening, a young woman stopped me not far from my house to ask directions.  Normally, I would have given directions referencing cardinal points.  "Go to the coffee shop and turn South", I might have said.  That's largely because I've never properly taken to the concepts of Right and Left.  Forget about all that "writing hand is right" stuff; such aids usually begin with the question, "Are you right-handed?".  How would I know?

It was easy, knowing North from South.  Living in Florida, working my way across the Caribbean, the sun always rose in the East, set in the West, and was overhead -- neither North or South -- at all other times.  Here in England, it's more difficult.  The sun rises in the South.  It sets in the South.  And, its southerly all day-time long.  ... When it can be seen through cloud-cover, that is.


It was easy too, if more conceptual, to fix cardinal points whilst living in the American North.  In Cincinnati, Gainesville, Lexington, Washington, and in New York City — even when I worked in Gaborone (Botswana),  water was always fixed in the South.  Of course, directionality was aided by the position of my bed, which — while not deliberate — always gave me a southern footing.  It was grand, laying in bed at night, watching lightning storms tearing up the Ohio River valley.  Here in Cambridge, the River Cam bends like a lower-case 'n', arching north westward, around the city centre.  And, inside, at home, there's nothing to tell what direction my bed is oriented.  

More confounding, the arching shape of the River Cam lends the impression — to someone used to walking, anyway —  that the city bends over on itself as if on a Möbius strip.  Like the highways in Cleveland (Ohio), if you want to go south out of downtown, you head north.  "Its counter-intuitive," the taxi driver tells you, "but it's one in the same."  Of course, in Cambridge, the fact that major streets change names virtually every block or so doesn't help in the giving of directions either.  You imagine that people, here, used to live and work so close to home that they needn't ask directions, and, never need know, "Dem Bones" style, that Hills Road becomes Regent, becomes Saint Andrew's, becomes Sidney, then Bridge, and Magdalene, Castle, and Huntington all within one linear mile.

At the short of this story is one question: How do you give directions when cardinal points and left/right have not meaning?  Street-view.  Not the Google Maps product by that name, but the view that pops into your brain like maps used to.


"Go to the coffee shop that you can see in the distance", you say.  You might qualify the distance in meters, "12 metres or so".  "There you'll see a big 'S' laid into the pavement."  This is one of four cardinal points, laid in as decoration, public art, rather than direction.  "Follow in that direction.  Turn at the next intersection."  It a T intersection — most intersections here are —  and there is only one way to turn.  You might add that a cycle shop stands at the intersection, possibly give the new street its name: "That's Paradise Street".  And, "You'll find Guthrie Court half-way up the street. It's the big building.  The one with marquee lights on over the large double doors."

Is it a wonder that in the former British colony of British Honduras, now Belize, you can still address an envelope to "My cousin, the barber, three doors down from the parrot (a reference to the sign that's faded on the wall where it was painted), 'round the corner from the old pink shower tree (a cassia tree that flowered only well into the dry season, but that is now little more than a rotting trunk), Centre, Belmopan, Belize".

10 August 2012

Caps of Cambridge




I bet that the architect read Coleridge.  

That aqua copper bit, the tower roof, resembles the tents one sees painted on the page of early Turkic (Mongol Turk) texts.

Coleridge's Kubla Kahn was published in 1816.

The University Arms Hotel, on Parker's Piece, was built in 1834, the year Samuel Taylor Coleridge died.




Just one more Coleridge inspired architectural jot, the copper cap of the Sedgewick Museum of Earth Sciences in Cambridge. 

The cap takes the form of a Mongul warrior's helmet.

[Aside:]

This photo also contains a Cambridge curiosity, a gift of the city's Nightclimbers.

Look carefully at the tail fin of the whale weather vane. That's a red Santa's cap.

The Nightclimbers delight in scaling impossible heights - at night, of course - and leaving something behind.

In one story of their escapades, a Nightclimber's cap appeared on one of the ornate towers of King's College Chapel. At great expense, the College erected scaffolding to reach it. The night before the scaffolding reached the top of the tower, the cap was removed ... to a facing tower.