23.7.23

 

Chambers Of The Senses


This story, remembered as if through mist, does seem distinctly odd.
I neither edit nor romanticise; I present the curious little affair uncut, unembroidered.

It was the late summer of 1965. I was 16. In some respects doubtless pretty silly, but with interested eye and ear, a sensitive creature.

My parents had driven to see my aunt Jasmine at her country house, Sandburg, in the hills above a village in Devon, home to the Glasher-Lamb family.

It was an imposing building, many windows and chimneys, a Bösendorfer grand in the sitting room, oil paintings, oriental rugs, two enormous Great Danes.

I sat in the back, subdued, sulking, letting all know that I hadn’t wanted to go; it was the school holidays, I’d been set on a day of sketching, dancing, riding my bicycle in the woods.

We swept into the drive, past the Lodge, Rhododendrons.
There was some family concern or other: when we arrived the adults convened in the kitchen; their voices, at first softly undulating, soon became raised, heated.

Listening at the door, I gathered that the boathouse was slowly subsiding into the river; the talk was of what was to be done.

I was directed to spend time with my cousin Sulamith, 6 years older than myself, of striking appearance; tall, slender, striking cascade of fair hair, retroussé nose, dark brown eyes.

I had been to the house, and met her and other assorted cousins, several times before. Over preceding years, when mentioned, she was often referred to to as being ‘temperamental’, a little wayward.

I gathered she’d been expelled from school, two in fact, for misdemeanours unknown to me; she’d been tutored at home, then went to art school, before being sent to ‘finish’ at Villa Pierre.

I spent, perhaps, just three hours with her that day, we were back at the house in time for tea, but I recall it having felt much longer.

Sulamith leading, we went outside: across the lawns, past the pond, in the centre of which was a statue of her sister Rosalind, past the giant rhubarb, the croquet lawn, the sloping rockeries.

For a while we took turns with her air rifle, shooting at targets pinned to trees.
Then to the Mews, converted stables. Upstairs were rooms for the staff, underneath were garages, I remember an Alvis, a Triumph Roadster, an old dusty black Bentley. S) 

Sulamith asked if I would care to see her ‘special things’

A stirring!, my mind raced, what on earth might these be? I had rather hoped she was going to take me somewhere where we would kiss and cuddle (I’d long had a ‘crush’ on her).

Instead, probably to my disappointment, she took me to the lodge; we descended stone stairs to a large basement, she motioned me to sit on an upturned box.

Then, to my surprise, she began to sing to me, some rather peculiar inventions I think.
There were several sung passages, each an expressive little story. From written notes, she provided an explanation of her material.

In between the songs, she invited me to improvise dances to music she had composed. This I did.

I recall her “Chambers Of The Senses”..... five dedicated to the recognised ones.... taste, smell and so on; plus ones devoted to such things as movement and shape.

At first a little embarrassed, the occasion nevertheless held my attention, made an impression on me; her ‘performance’ seemed sure-footed, precocious certainly, altogether quite remarkable.


First, Sulamith gave an introduction...


"I present to Hedone and all present,
the Eight Receptacles of varied Complexion lying before me and within me, these Chambers Of The Senses:
in all their wonder, containers for

Sounds, Touch, Colour; Taste; Movement; Smell; Shape, Disposition,

Before which I have registered Astonishment.

Here is Rapture - Allure of Form,
Lingering Sensation,
Delicious Memory

I am now preparing to withdraw from the world and its ways.
I move away from The Aesthetic life;
so I remember these things here, commemorate them, then put them aside"



Then her recital began with the First Song:

"I sing to you of the Plum Chamber for SOUNDS...

I’m 14, in my room, twilight, Choral Evensong in the distance, alarm call of a blackbird flying into the bushes.

On the radio, Byron:

“And oh! that quickening of the heart, that beat! How much it costs us!.. 

I remember: tenebrous opening of The Firebird; scampering of Pathetique 3rd; bustling mountain streams; cascades along the fjords; ripples by the loch.

I imagine: a brace of French Horns in a woodland glade; heroic, ecstatic passages, rolling, sighing, echoing to the Carpathians....

On the radio, Eliot:

“We have lingered in the chambers of the sea...”

Most adorable sound of all...ballet shoes brushing and thudding on stage, the most sensual sound.

Reverie interrupted.... exciting rumble of a V8 engine, father’s Maserati. What will he bring me? What will he bring? (..... I wanted an oboe).

I got a trumpet, cold, wretched! Oh, I do not like it, I am so disappointed. I hated the trumpet until hearing Khachaturian.

From the radio, Britten’s Evening Quatrains

“...the fainting Sun has but a little way to run...”

Mornings: lying in bed, wondering at the abrupt end to the wood pigeon’s phrase....da da da - da da da; da da da - da da da, da’.......
And
from the Larch, the danger call of the squirrel.

The radio, Butterworth’s Lad:
“Give crowns and pounds and guineas, But not your heart away...”

Then, tears, the opening ascent of the first Ballade.
Life punctuated by radio plays and readings, a constant love.

Feeling besieged by random noise, of people and things, I now rejoice only in quiet, blessed quiet.

Goethe, my companion: 

...Often in silent groves I go walking, When all is quiet...


The Second:


"I sing to you of the Amaranth Chamber for TOUCH...

An early memory: on a carpet before the coal fire, pushing arms and legs against the fibres; kicking-against.

Perhaps, even then, rebelling, unreconciled, antagonistic towards surroundings, obstacles, surfaces; seeking pleasure / relief in rituals.

I’m 10. Best Christmas present: an Amerindian headdress, crown of feathers, the feel of the long train down my back, thrilling over bare shoulders.

Stroking, fur of my rabbit, cats. Caressing intricate lacy ferns, water in the pond, fir cones, taffeta, fresh bed linen.

Touching... peeling paint on Croquet hoops, leaves on the fig tree, huge paving stones;

Brushing paper, notebooks, folders, diaries. I explore my form...tracing the curve behind the knee, neck to clavicle, under the arm.

Hours spent concentrating, placing beloved objects, of brass, copper, china, dark wood; arranging the Dolls House, the toy farm, my Scalextric cars....

Rubbing fingers over embossed volumes, tree bark, sea shells, the rasp of Chintz.

The feel of my feet in soft moccasins, ballet shoes, hands in soft mittens, neck in velvet choker, feel of the toboggan on the snow.

Each year cricket and games in the park: centring the ball on the springy middle of the bat, feel of shuttlecock, tennis ball, bare feet on the grass, legs on the rug.

Sad that we cannot properly feel, cannot really touch small delicate things due to clumsiness of hand.....petals, hair, fair down on a cheek, powdery snow, moss,

And the shuddering, upsetting misery of disorder; objects in the world not behaving themselves, disruption, unbalanced touches bringing disquiet.

I just long for stillness, for my arrangements of chosen things to be undisturbed"


The Third:


"I sing to you of the Dark Cherry Chamber for CHROMATICS, SATURATIONS, LUSTRES, TINCTS & GLOWS...

Oh, the colours: seductive Aubergine, irresistible Red Cabbage, ravishing Pomegranates; looking up through dense Apple Blossom.

I lick up the colours of Purple Iris, Hollyhock, Persian Lily, Grape Hyacinth, Clematis, Calendula, Columbine, Coreopsis,

Gazing, still, before Foxgloves, Sambucus Nigra, St John’s Wort, riotous gaudy Nasturtium, many plants etched / impressed / captured inside.

I wonder at the glow of Beetroot juice, dazzling moisture of Gooseberries, strawberries, blackcurrants;

above all, the bleeding nearly-black liquid of luscious Dark Cherries

At 15, I have a beautiful green coat, zip and toggles, wool lined, hemmed, around the hood.

It was later given away, given away!... along with my blue bicycle.

I wanted to wear pretty Sapphires with my white dress with the ruched midriff, Emeralds with the flowing azurite dress.

Now, the sunrise is enough,
and the silhouette of a crow in front of the moon, the huge moon behind black branches"


The Fourth:


"I sing to you of The Olive Chamber for TASTE...

Each year, my birthday, a special dinner party for friends.

First... exquisite artichoke leaves, warm dressing; lambs lettuce with heady Coriander; avocado on matzos; tuna-stuffed lemons.

With a Chassagne-Montrachet
Then Sauerbraten; Schweinelendchen, Kartoffelpuffer; Lapin au Vin Rouge;

Dauphinnoise.
With a Gevrey Chambertin

Lastly....Grape and Ginger Syllabub; Sweet sticky Dates; Figs with cinnamon; Large juicy Italian peaches; Pistachios; Very very thin fine dark chocolate;

With a golden Barsac.
One year we played roulette afterwards; I was drunk, stained my dress, crawled up the

stairs, I was so sick, for hours.
But, next morning, the miraculous effect of a glass of
Auslese.
Then we went to the Fox at Bay and had cheddar Ploughman’s and cider.

Now, things are changed, I gave up these diversions; no taking father’s whisky, no pre- lunch Sherry, no Brandy in my room. No more dinner parties.

I have fennel tea, fruit, cereals, my own Cauliflower with spiced lentils; baked aubergine with kale; squash with spinach.

it is nearly sufficient...

with, still, the evening promise of raspberry pavlova and very very thin fine dark chocolate!"


The Fifth:


"I sing to you of the Teal Chamber for MOVEMENT...

I’m 13. Flouncing in ruffled Ra Ra skirt, craving height, thinness, effortless poise, grace, disdainful attitude, perfection and impenetrability through exercise / ascetics.

I adore Fouettés, up practising at 4am; aching to be Kitri from Quixote, Échappés, fast Passés. At the piano... enraptured, lost in satisfying patterns of the ’48’ and the ’32’.

I want a decent stylish backhand at tennis, after many lessons, it develops, “step forward and strike through the ball”. I love swimming / diving, racing my Go-Kart, ten-pin bowling.

Ah, the writhing of Otters, stretching of Cats, chasing / tumbling of Squirrels, tail-wag of ducks, shaking of Dogs; gentle agitation of lily pads; shimmering of the silver birch, waving of catkins, swirling of starlings, falling of snow, slashing with my bayonet at the army of stinging nettles,

watching the lines through the corners at Goodwood, the parade of waves, my gyroscope, fascination of flame, Ice-skating,

Then, satiation, tiredness; alI became jumbled commotion, all too fast.

Now, I savour the cessation of movement, pulling of curtains, laying on the bed"


The Sixth:


"I sing to you of the Azure Chamber for SCENTS, FRAGRANCES...

With blush, coy, flirtatious, trying to attract, terrified of attracting; drifting along in a sweet cloud of Anais Anais or Samsara, just a little too much.

At school, in the common room, I recall the smell of oranges mingling with the cedar wood of my tuck box.

In the walled garden, by the Flint House, the Delicious scent of Sweet Peas, lime trees, Night-Scented Stocks, Blackcurrant bushes.

Lying in the garden, beneath the laburnum and the lilac. I breathe in... Honeysuckle; Meadowsweet; Heliotrope; Angelica; Feverfew.

In the kitchen, there is nutmeg, cardamon, cinnamon, coriander, bergamot and pear.

Now: hours wandering alone in the woods, petrichor rising, a path of springy pine needles"


The Seventh:


"I sing to you of the Dark Violet Chamber for SHAPE and Remembering Beautiful Things Seen...

The play-haberdashery shop I created at home, all the cotton reels, coloured threads and ribbons, the black sewing machine with golden decoration.

The low fast cobalt streak of barreling Kingfishers, dipping flight of woodpeckers.

A carved bedhead at Neuschwanstein, contours of Spitz, lake at Hallstadt, island on Königsee, symmetrical patterns of Islamic decoration.

Curve of a clear-water bay under a perfectly blue mediterranean sky.

How I have adored the work of Dulac, Moreau, Doré, Rackham, Jessie King; the trees in Greenwich Park; Dutch Snow Scenes; Georgian Script, the prettiest writing in the world; the D-type Jaguar, Ducklings, Goslings

The librarian's A-line tartan tweed skirt, the supermarket checkout Girl With The Flaxen Hair.

High Tracery, Pleats, Fine Porcelain, small finely-proportioned delicate feet, rock pools, Waterhouse paintings, Crewelwork embroidery, Tortoiseshell fur, Lindt chocolate teddy bears, Asparagus left to run to tall seed, laden apple trees.

Up a steep cobbled path to a room in a Cornish seaside town; I enquire...”What is that you’re wearing?; ”Broiderie Anglaise” she replies, promising, next time, a black velvet Basque..."


The Eighth:


"I sing to you of the Indigo Chamber for Attributes of DISPOSITION, QUALITIES, CHARACTER...

I’m fastidious, meticulous.

I prefer demureness, refinement of speech, delicacy of manner, quietness of step, and,

above all, modesty in behaviour.

I value courage, fearless expression, steadfastness.

I have not always displayed these virtues. I have sometimes been mean-spirited, self- centred.

I try to appreciate myself, be encouraging of myself, forgive what I believe needs to be forgiven, establish some equilibrium, balance, continuity.

I would like more tolerance, patience.

I do not deny my passions, the poetry arising from emotions, but sometimes they held me captive"


The Ninth:


"Finally, I sing to you of the Charcoal Chamber for THOSE THINGS I DO NOT LIKE And So Gladly Leave Behind...

Too much noise and light;
Stupid entertainment shows on TV;
Gross appetites;

All boring magic tricks and puzzles;
Circuses, Zoos.  

A preoccupation with the 'supernatural';

The appalling worlds of Marinetti’s Futurist Manifesto, Huysman’s ‘Against Nature’, 

Milk, Terrible Yoghurt;

Ouspensky, Blavatsky, Gurdjieff, Crowley, all the other ‘esoteric’ nonsense. All those  writers claiming that their country has a mystical and wonderful mission to bestow a unique spiritual / cultural gift to the world. 

Leaders of Cults who tell people how to live, what to eat / wear / think.

Picasso; Braque; all the ugly entwined muscular bodies in Michaelangelo.... thank goodness for the superior Northern Renaissance.

Cold ugly architecture of glass, concrete;
The paucity of ‘Minimalist’ music"


She then made a dedication:


"I dedicate these songs to my heroine Rachel Carson, author of

'Silent Spring' "



Her voice had been mostly high, clear, filling the cellar, mixing with the first scents of autumn. At the end, I clapped; she reddened, but did nod solemnly in acknowledgement.

I’d heard the term ‘performance art’; was this what I had witnessed, been part of? Even when older, having seen much of all sorts, I remained struck by how original-a-thing she had presented.

Afterwards, she made some black instant coffee. We returned to the main house, for a while dangling our feet in their small swimming pool. She didn’t mention her singing further.

Having had tea, our family returned to Dorset. I gazed out of the window, feeling nauseous, a rising horror at the thought of the start of the new school term.

I didn’t see Sulamith again. There was once an invitation to attend an exhibition of her botanical drawings, I didn’t go.

It seems she carried out her declared intention that day to withdraw from things. She became more-or-less a recluse, though apparently devoting much time to rescuing stray dogs.

Sadly, she was taken by meningitis when just 29 years old.


A little later, I set down my memories of the scene, using as many of her words as I could remember

Some twenty-five years passed before I returned to Sandburg. The house was up for sale. I went to help an ageing, very fragile Aunt Jasmine clear out some things.

In the Lodge were the crates, colours gone, contents perished. There too the written notes, much faded; these I took, being pleased to discover that I’d reproduced the texts fairly accurately.

A further 20 years passed. Rummaging in the attic I rediscovered the notes. Guided by these I set the scene to music. This I have presented to you here.


Peter Jennings

East Sussex

July 2023


The music video of this work is at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z8Ag1rLhnM


8.12.22

A Vision

 

The Summons

Such harrowing cries having reached me, of concern, sadness: I shall respond.
Once summoned, oh, I shall come soaring, soaring; I’ll make quite an entrance...

A Goddess?  -Mmm, but neither a Fury nor a Fate. 
An Angel?  -Mmm, but neither Avenging nor Fallen.

I am Aletheia, Spirit of Truth.

It has been a while; time I visited to see the state of things.

Nothing ’divine’, no annunciation, resurrections, 
tablets of stone, burning bushes, scrolls to decipher.

My quest is to re-balance, to assist the fair-minded and the far-sighted.


The Mission

I’ll see whether humans have been good shepherds, proper guardians.

I’ve no interest in traditions, cultures, pantheons, ceremonies, only their effect 
for good or ill on your habitat: your waters / forests / fellow creatures.

I shall observe, make a remedial plan, then, with cleansing sword, purge the worst atrocities.

The despoilers....who damage your natural resources, upset / deplete your home 
and harm the beings living there, will perish.

Those having empathy are appreciated; those not, have had their time. 
Those guilty of arrogance, hubris, will know my displeasure.


The Warnings

Humans eating their fellow creatures will be transported, incarcerated, 
humiliated, tortured, killed. Repeatedly.

Those inflicting cruelty on other species by extracting something from them 
for quack ‘medicines’, will likewise suffer.

Those who terrorise, exploit, ridicule animals in sadistic ‘sports’ or 
obscene ‘entertainments’ will also follow this path.

Drug dealing, arms dealing ceases; along with industrialised farming, factory ships, 
hunting, trapping, skinning, poisoning, the abomination of vivisection.

No flood, conflagration, lengthy court proceedings, arbitration.
I shall dispose of all quietly, efficiently, to see if things may be got back on track.


The Arrival

Drawing near, I see the great forest of Hercynia is no longer.
I’ll start there, then visit rivers, lakes, mountains, woodlands, valleys, deserts, steppe.

All will be noted, justice dispensed.

I am Aletheia, Spirit of Truth. I shall come soaring, soaring.

I will silence the proud and dispose of the wicked.
My quest will reveal the inauthentic and dispatch the malicious to the cliff’s edge.

Though I spill blood all around me, my sword will remain forever clean.


Peter Jennings
East Sussex
December 2022

The Music Video of this work is at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjgmg8BOOrY

6.12.22

Unicorn



I, Isabella (or Beatrice, Eleanor, Catherine...)

An elemental creature
of moated manor house,
at the edge of the forest;
I hold sway.

I parade the crenellations, 
am of the wind, the wood smoke.

Sometimes, through English mist, I see
woodland path and stream of childhood,
my long golden plait, an aspiring trouvèresses, endless sunny days,
the sounds, smells, ways of Court; Baked Pears!




They are away, at the war.

There is always a war: 
-a troublesome province to be subdued,
-a rebellious territory worshipping the wrong god;
-always some crusade, a righting of wrongs, revenge.

With crest, shield emblazoned, symbols of this or that configuration,
they go, bedazzled, befuddled by heroic code,
to join the quest, just cause, triumphal march;
there will be slaughter, torture, the casting of stories.

Men?
They are insubstantial, ornamental, peripheral, untethered, mere butterflies.
I do not see their wounds, do not smell the mire; 
mercifully, I do not hear their grunts and groans.




I am not excluded from these histories,
I am quite above them, mistress in and of my own realm.

Here, we disport ourselves as I direct,
divert with archery and game,
delight or dismay with tale.

I have my unicorn: we walk, sleep, bathe, confide.




I hold firm the domain, call morning gatherings, allot tasks, stock the larders,
instruct some to mend the cartwheels, sweep the chimneys, make repairs to the
battlements...the gate house...the scullery roof;
with wild effort and broken nail I tend to the uneven flagstones, the barricaded doors.

I despatch others to attend to blocked latrines, settle the maid's squabbles,
sharpen the implements for the harvest, inspect the fruit-picking.

I oversee the kitchen garden.
There are vegetables for all our dishes.
I will not look upon blood of pig or lamb, eye of goat or hare,
I countenance neither fish nor fowl at my table.

I look to the pike in the stew pond, destined for the protecting moat;
I prepare cauldrons for pitch, survey our exit tunnels.




In the Great Hall
when wood is gathered in and lit,
we dance before the hearth to psaltery and shawm
(as maker of music we have our own Burgundian);
we have mead from our beehives.

We dip and turn,
on the old rugs from the East, with
such beguiling symmetrical patterns.

Reddened from flame and melismatics,
hair flies, eyes brighten, hearts briefly glow joyous.




In the Chapel
we observe the old rites,
amidst sea of candles,
coloured threads;
we dutifully, solemnly, incant the responses.


But, Oh, the COLD, in the chapel, the walkways, the bedchamber;
it grasps one inside, steals the breath, brings paralysis if one should linger.



I do not believe in god or gods, saints or demons.
I am contemptuous of such nonsense, simple trickery.
Yet, for rhythm of order, to offer hope to some,
we genuflect, intone with gentle risings and fallings,
with reverent downward gaze.


I believe in the dreadful cold, that grips, shocks, quickens, scatters, dictates all;
there's only scurrying from room to room.


But I have my unicorn: we walk, sleep, bathe, confide.


Quietly courageous, sometimes defiant, I shall defend all that is mine.





I have been downcast when
-bliaut torn, kermes faded-
sickness comes, the barrows flounder in mud,
the wood store is frozen, a beloved donkey dies;
when things seem unyielding, people quarrelsome, the ice thick.

Then the will can falter, the stride be arrested.

But there were so many practical things to do.
Keep the fires going, keep the fires going!


The men, horns blaring, are off to another war, under another banner.


And sometimes, through English mist, I remember
woodland path and stream of childhood,
my long golden plait, an aspiring trouvèresses, endless sunny days,
the sounds, smells, ways of Court; Black Cherry Flan! 





I, Isabella, Beatrice, Eleanor, Catherine, here displaced,
an elemental creature, of moated manor house, at the edge of the forest,
the edge of the world...

sometimes sit by the oriel window, gaze on my domain.


I render -with silver stitch and frozen hand- my blessed companion,
who, at my side, sighs gently, steamy breath rising.



This English Work destined not for chasuble or parament,

but -with foliage and fruit- a hanging for my room...

then precious mantle in my burial chamber.



Peter Jennings
East Sussex
December 2022


The music video of this work is at 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmnJVnBwYsk&t=8s