Just as we exit 2019 I have a little something to add.
In connection with the previous post Dreamed lake? Dreamed river?, we now have a live recording of Ve'ulai to listen to. In the unexplained absence of the recording engineer, my friends in Canaria had to make a homemade recording. Not the best sound, but a lot better than a computer demo. The performance itself is expressive, tasteful and lovingly prepared. Thank you, Canarias!
31 December 2019
28 November 2019
Faraway cats, home cats
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In
my remote location – a temporary one, I hasten to add – I find
myself, as I did during my recent stint in Fenham, in frequent interaction with
the local feline population. In this town cats lurk in unexpected places, and
it is almost always they who are sitting there in the place I come to, looking
bored or vexed, as if the wait had been long and as if it had been my fault for
taking so long.
Last
night there were three sitting atop a wall and one down on the pavement. As I
approached the spot, one jumped down from the wall. Naturally I could do no
less than bend down and stroke him. Before I knew, all four were around me. The
only touchy-feely one was the one I was stroking, a tabby who purred and walked
around my leg like a self-appointed spokescat for the rest. The others hovered,
not looking at me but making it clear that this was our meeting.
Eventually
I had to move on. But the cats would have none of it. The spokescat got between
my legs with such persistence that once he got himself kicked by one of my
walking steps. All four were coming with me, some in front, some alongside.
This was flattering, but also worrying, all the more so as I approached an
avenue with heavy traffic. How was I going to stop them crossing with me?
Fortunately
I had been flattering myself. They were only keeping me company as far as their
own place. The last building before the corner was some kind of workshop or
disused car park. It had a metal gate, quite solid, but with a gap underneath,
high enough for cats to pass. One by one my four companions went under the gate
and out of sight. Quite a relief.
This
calls to mind another memorable interaction I experienced with a cohort of four
cats. It was on the eve of the trip to Romania for my honorary doctorate, in
May 2018. For one reason or another, one night I found
myself in the unusual situation of being alone for the night in the riverside enclave.
The
four surviving cats – Tiger had passed away five months earlier – were no
fools. they knew something was afoot. I was not aware of any of them seeing me
pack a suitcase, but somehow they had caught wind of what was happening. They
had more water and more prey to hunt than they could wish for, and the hunting
skills of seasoned predators. But that didn’t mean they liked the prospect of
being left without human company.
When,
late at night, the time came for the Bouvier’s last walk – I was due to drop
him at kennels in the morning, on my way to the airport – an eerie sight
greeted me outside: the moon was out and the four cats were assembled, sitting
in quite solemn postures, all looking at me intently. They cut four totemic
figures, casting long shadows on the grass. I don’t remember them being
particularly upset – they did know how to express concern when they wanted to.
They seemed, how can I put it, serenely reproachful. Disappointed, even. And,
not meaning to shed retrospective light from later events, I think the cats
were showing me an awareness of the fragility of life. We were the closest of
friends, yet there we were, about to say goodbye for an unspecified time. Cats
have no watch and no calendar, and a detailed explanation from me as to everybody's
imminent return would have meant little to them. For them, regardless of any
wordy explanations, an unwonted absence was a threat; something that should not
be happening.
10 October 2019
Dreamed lake? Dreamed river?
And here is the famous Ve’ulai.
It is a poem written by Rachel (1890-1931).
Also known as Rachel Blaustein,
or Rachel Bluwstein, Rachel is often referred to as the national poet of
Israel, even though she was born in Russia and technically she never set foot
in Israel. Although she emigrated to Palestine, she did not live to see the new state's foundation in 1948.
She wrote her early works in
Russian. She grew up speaking Yiddish. The works of her maturity – if one can use this word about somebody who died at forty – are in Hebrew. She knew
hardship, rejection and illness.
Rachel’s poetry records the life
of hard work and idealism of the early Zionists in Palestine. It also deals
with her own sense of displacement, loss and unfulfilled dreams. Although she
deals with some of the deepest questions of life and death, those who know her and
her language tell us that she uses simple, conversational Hebrew.
Lake Kinneret – the Sea of
Galilee – features recurrently in Rachel’s work. She loved it. She asked to be buried
near it – in a poem, as a matter of fact: If fate decrees. Upon her death, her friends
and followers complied with her wishes.
I discovered Rachel before I
turned twenty and fell in love with her poetry, first in Spanish translations.
I set three of her poems for choir in 1976.
Why am I saying all this here and
not, for example, in my composer’s blog? Read on.
I have been keenly aware of Rachel and her work lately. Some aspects of her life make her a sympathetic companion
to think of. In particular, Rachel’s best-known poem, Ve’ulai, has been
haunting me in the context of thinking about my much longed-for Redesdale home.
Although I have not been
assiduous, I have written a fair amount in this blog about life by the Rede. Rachel
uses fewer words, but she expresses better the kind of feeling I have struggled
to convey.
Ve’ulai is not one of the
poems I set in 1976; that would have been redundant, since there was already a beautiful setting of it by Yehuda Sharet. I wrote an arrangement of Sharet's song in 1983 and a reconstruction of that
arrangement this year – just completed. Another humble homage to Rachel, and
another way to say “I love you” to the place and the people I think of so obsessively.
In more than one way, the land of
my memories and (literally) dreams has rejected me. Recent developments suggest
that I may not be setting foot on that place again. My current feelings, therefore, are more turbulent about my old Rede than Rachel's about her Kinneret. But there is no doubting that a piece of me will always stay on Redesdale
Or, as Rachel puts it:
If fate decrees
that I should live far from your space
- I shall return, Kinneret,
to lie in your resting place!
Or, as Rachel puts it:
If fate decrees
that I should live far from your space
- I shall return, Kinneret,
to lie in your resting place!
Ve'ulai (And Maybe)
a poem by Rachel
a poem by Rachel
And maybe these things never happened?
And maybe I never rose at dawn to
the garden
to work it by the sweat of my
brow?
And never on long and blazing
days of harvest
atop a cart full of sheaves
did I raise my voice in song?
Did I never cleanse myself in the
calm azure
and innocence of my Kinneret?
Oh my Kinneret! Did you exist?
Or did I dream a dream?
25 August 2019
Last Sunday of August
Gorgeous, bright, sunny morning. Tomorrow’s bank
holiday adds an extra luxuriance to the sense of here and now. The future can
wait; the present is here.
A tone-poem of colour is playing outside, with
clear pre-echoes of autumn. The birds sing their part in this anthem of
celebration with only a hint of elegy for the departing summer. The morning air,
still crisp, heralds the warmth of the day with the safe certainty that noon
will follow morn. The river, not at its quietest but well down from its recent disquiet,
plays its gentler counterpoint of stony, light-reflecting, life-giving melody. Even the old dog, resigned to his duty to
walk, looks, smells and listens with curiosity at this miraculous symphony of
the season.
Off we go, to meet the day. Everything else can
wait.
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