A Table of Green Fields
Page 15
But Florent was alone with his bags under the oak across from the ostler's house when I came up behind him. He turned when I was near and about to call his name. He walked up to me expressionless and hugged me as tight as he ever had. Forgive me he said so quietly at my ear that I had to think what he had said. Forgive you?
But the stage was rolling to a halt and the guard was sounding his horn. He gathered his bags under his arm and crossed the road. I waved to him as the coach thundered away.
I saw him once afterwards at the university but we did not speak.
Author's Notes
AUGUST BLUE is a painting by Henry Scott Tuke (1858-1929) in the Tate Gallery, London. It was painted in 1893.
Yeshua: Aramaic for Joshua, the Greek for which, Iesous, became the Latin Jesus. The source for this anecdote is an uncanonical Gospel of Thomas (The Apocryphal New Testament, translated by M. R. James, Oxford University Press, 1924, revised 1953). I have supplied a lacuna in the text with a poster from Heimish House (1978) depicting an alef. Its text ("A Yud above, the Creator; a Yud below, the Jewish People; a Vav, Torah & Mitzvos, uniting them") is adapted from the works of Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi.
Sylvester: I am indebted to L. S. Feuer's "America's First Jewish Professor: James Joseph Sylvester at the University of Virginia," American Jewish Archives, vol. 36, no. 2 (1984), and to the California Institute of Technology department of Mathematics.
As we descended westward . . . Ely Minster: This passage is an amalgam of descriptions by Samuel Pepys and Daniel Defoe (A Journey Thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain, 1724-1726) of the Isle of Ely in Cambridgeshire where Ludwig Wittgenstein is buried.
Colonel Lawrence: His visit to Tuke at Falmouth in 1922 is unattested except by Tuke's painting of him as Aircraftsman Ross at Clouds Hill.
BELINDA'S WORLD TOUR
Ronald Hayman records in his Kafka: A Biography (Oxford, 1981) that "One day in the street [Kafka] saw a little girl, crying because she had lost her doll. He explained that the doll, whom he had just met, had to go away but promised to write to her. For weeks afterwards he sent her letters in which the doll described her travel adventures." My story is a conjectural restoration of these presumably lost letters.
GUNNAR AND NIKOLAI
punktum punktum: a rhyme by L. Albeck Larsen in Punktum punktum komma streg, a Carlsen Pixi Pege Bog (Copenhagen, 1981).
Conventional psychology . . . life and sensibility: George Santayana, The Realm of Essence, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937.
AND A papyrus fragment from an early second-century gospel, published in 1933 by Sir Harold Idris Bell and T. C. Skeat, collected in Appendix I to M. R. James's The Apocryphal New Testament, cited above.
THE LAVENDER FIELDS OF APTA JULIA
A photograph by Bernard Faucon shows the family wash hung against a lavender field, making a pun on the Old French lavanderie (laundry) and lavande (lavender). Another of his photographs is of a playhouse in the form of a boxcar made by children of scrap lumber.
THE KITCHEN CHAIR
The sentence is in Home at Grasmere: Extracts from the Journal of Dorothy Wordsworth (written between 1800 and 1803) and from the Poems of William Wordsworth, edited by Colette Clark, Penguin Books, 1960.
THE CONCORD SONATA
Thoreau did not love nature .. . this beautiful parable in Walden: John Burroughs, The Complete Writings: Volume V: Indoor Studies, William H. Wise & Co., New York, 1924.
J have no new proposal . . . desire itself: Stanley Cavell, The Senses of Walden, North Point Press, 1981.
And yet we did unbend . . . that afternoon: Thoreau, A Week on the Concord and Merrimac Rivers, 1849.
Mencius: The passage in Mencius that Thoreau exfoliated into his beautiful paragraph about having lost a hound, a bay horse, and a dove is at Book VI, Chapter XI (in James Legge's The Works of Mencius):
Mencius said: Benevolence is man's mind, and righteousness is man's path.
How lamentable it is to neglect the path and not pursue it, to lose this mind and not know how to seek it again!
When men's fowls and dogs are lost, they know to seek for them again, but they lose their mind, and do not know to seek for it.
The great end of learning is nothing else but to seek for the lost mind.
Thoreau read Mencius in M. G. Pauthier's translation, Les quatre livres de philosophies morale et politique de la Chine, Paris, 1841. For Legge's mind one ought nowadays to read inborn nature.
I remember years ago . . . the birds: Henry D. Thoreau, "The Dispersion of Seeds," in Faith in a Seed: The Dispersion of Seeds and Other Late Natural History Writings, edited by Bradley P. Dean Island Press / Shearwater Books, Washington, D.C. and Covelo, California, 1993.
MELEAGER
The geometry is from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, first edition, 1771.