"All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players."  --William Shakespeare

Monday
Oct142013

If I Were King. Or Queen. An Invitation to the Surrealist Café

Street art (c) 2103 Fred le Chevalier

Okay, time for another gathering at the Surrealist Café. This time we'd like you to invent your own government, with YOU as the leader, and to pick your nickname. E-mail your game entry to us by Friday, October 18, 11:59 p.m., Paris time, and we'll post it on Saturday's Paris Play.  

Here's how this topic evolved: A few weeks ago, my cousin and I were talking about that dashing French king, Henri IV, le Vert-Galant. Hank wondered if there were other names besides his namesake, Henry, that French and English kings had in common. 

I looked up French and English kings and found one other: Charles. And was struck by two things: how many English queens there have been, how few French queens. And that what the French lack in gender equality, they (sort of) make up for in amusing nicknames for kings.

 

Street art (c) 2103 Fred le Chevalier

Kings of France

The Franks:

  • Clodion- the Hairy (c. 400-447)

 The Merovingians:

  • Childeric III the Fainéant (the Do-nothing) (714-743) 

 The Carolingians:

  • Pepin the Short (715-751)
  • Charles I the Great (or) Charlemagne (742-768)
  • Louis I the Debonaire or Pious (778-814)
  • Charles II the Bald (823-840)
  • Louis II the Stammerer (846-879)
  • Charles the Fat (839-888)
  • Charles III the Simple (879-929)

The Capetians:

  • Robert II the Pious (972-1031)
  • Louis VI the Fat (1084-1137)
  • Louis VIII the Lion (1187-1226)
  • Louis IX or Saint Louis (1214-1270)
  • Philippe III the Bold (1245-1285)
  • Philippe IV the Fair (1268-1314)
  • Louis X the Haughty (1289-1316)
  • Jean I the Posthumous (1316-1316)
  • Philip V the Long (1293-1316)
  • Charles IV the Fair (1294-1322) 

The Valois:

  • John II the Good (1319-1364)
  • Charles V the Wise (1338-1380)
  • Charles VI the Mad or Beloved (1368-1422)
  • Charles VII the Victorious (1403-1461)
  • Charles VIII the Affable (1470-1498)
  • Louis XII the Father of the People (1462-1515)

The Bourbons

  • Henri IV Green-Galant (the gay blade) 1553-1610)
  • Louis XIII the Just (1601-1643)
  • Louis XIV the Great (1638-1715)
  • Louis XV the Loved (1710-1774) 

It started sounding to me like a Surrealist game. Just like the governments of so many countries lately. So many of them seem to be tumbling down, or to be, at best, shaky.

 

Street art (c) 2103 Fred le Chevalier

Last week, I read Plato’s The Republic again for a fictional classroom scene. Plato discusses four kinds of government, and how they evolve or devolve into one another:

  • timocracy (the government of the best, of honour);
  • oligarchy (a government in which the rulers are elected for their wealth, in which the rich have power and the poor man is deprived of it);
  • democracy (where freedom and frankness prevail);
  • tyranny (slavery). 

And I wondered, if we gathered together next Saturday right here at the Surrealist Café in Paris Play, what would those of you who join us want to include in your ideal State? Which three things—values, or services, or goods—would you deem most important for a humanitarian kingdom?

 

Street art (c) 2103 Fred le Chevalier

And what would you like your subjects to call you, what nickname that summed up your life as head of state would please you?

 

Street art (c) 2103 Fred le Chevalier. Ravaillac was the assassin of Henri IV.

And, even more telling, what would your detractors call you? We're sure Nixon would have wanted to go down in history as Richard the Diplomat, but probably history will remember him as Dick the Tricky. Then there's Slick Willy, Gerald the Bumbling, and Bling-Bling Sarko. 

Albert Einstein wrote that "Combinatory play seems to be the essential feature in productive thought." In other words, creativity arises from putting unexpected things together. Isn't that the essence of Surrealism?

Einstein knew the power of play. So does every child. Which I suppose means that none of us are ever too “important” or “unimportant” to play.

Maybe we can dream up some more effective government on this planet by playing together. Or at least have some Surrealist fun, the way we did as kids for hours and hours a day. Once again, use this link to E-mail your game entry to us by Friday, October 18, 11:59 p.m., Paris time, and we'll post it on next Saturday's Paris Play.

 

Street art (c) 2103 Fred le Chevalier

 

Tuesday
Oct082013

Le Café des Chats

 

On Saturday, we heard a third mention of Le Café des Chats from yet another friend. 

What else could we do but go there on Sunday?

A café where you can eat, drink and talk to cats: the idea originated in Taiwan in 1998, and quickly spread to Tokyo, where there are now over fifty cat cafés. Weeks ago Le Café des Chats opened in the third arrondissement in Paris.

We walked from Shakespeare and Company where we were compelled to find one or two or eight essential books, then on to 16 rue Michel Le Compte in the Marais.

Standing in front of the window, you could see cats nestled in cat tree nests, and one curled up beside a young woman on a couch.

At the reception desk we were instructed to use an antiseptic lotion, to protect the cats from our germs. But since the cats were adopted, some abandoned, what was protecting us from germs they’d picked up in the streets?

We found one open table at the back of the room, and watched as young felines wandered here and there and down the stairs to the cave below.

 

 

I popped downstairs to see the cat situation there. Two French women sat in a room at the back, one stroking a white kitten with orange and buff splashes, on her lap, and a tortoise shell grooming himself on a third seat at their table.

We chatted. The two women lived in apartments too small for cats, but loved them, bien sûr. They beamed with joy, and the cats looked content. 

A Japanese girl expertly captured the attention of a mature black cat in the top nest of a cat tree with red feathered lure attached to the end of a supple pole. The cat had the head of the Egyptian goddess Bastet.

Back upstairs, Richard and I had a salade italienne and a tarte aux épinards et chèvre avec salade. Good!

A tiger cat wandered over and seemed to be asking for something. I picked her up and felt her heart beating so fast, I quickly put her down. Some of these felines may want to be held, but some might just be looking for food, or escape. This one jumped up on a ledge behind us and gazed longingly out the window. A dense screen stopped her from leaping out.

 

At the next table were three Italian couples from Bari. They spoke no French, but a few knew some English.

We talked a bit about our respective crazy governments. Berlusconi and Boehner—both nuts.

Were they all cat lovers? No, only one of the women who’d brought the other five along. Two of the men and one woman had dogs, one woman had a parrot, and one man, a rabbit. All animal lovers, they respected this woman’s need for a cat hit, even on vacation.

And why were we there? Need you ask? We miss Marley, whose meow we still hear months after his death. After being out in Paris, we come home and listen for his paws padding across the old oak floor, his voice raised in complaint that we had left him, even for a short time, and we can’t quite believe that he is gone.

Judging by the number of people stopping enchanted at the window, and the full tables, we are certain that this café will soon need to move to a larger space.

 

Le café des Chats
Open every day from Noon to 10 p.m.
16 rue Michel Le Compte 75003 Paris
Metro Rambuteau     09 73 53 35 81

 

 

 

 

Saturday
Sep282013

Chartres

Photograph (c) 2013 KK 

 

Great winds of the great goddess

whistle around the cathedral.

 

Inside, the priests have tried to hide

her circuitous path with chairs.

 

We sweep them aside,

wind through the labyrinth.

 

Sister, father, walk the eleven circuits with me,

one gone six weeks, the other seven years.

 

We curve through her four-chambered heart,

drink from the sacred grail at her core.

 

 

(With gratitude to Jeannette Hermann and Lauren Artress)

 

 

 

Wednesday
Sep112013

The Convocation of Animals

 

 

Photo courtesy of Suki Edwards

Some of us gathered at a computer, adding names to the guest list for Jane’s memorial celebration.

 

Some of us had just finished writing her obituary.

 

One of us had arranged on her bed an embroidered gold, red and white kimono with a medicine necklace, both gifts sent to Jane.

 

Some of us felt her death as so strange that our cells would be rearranged.

 

Some of us went to a dumb film and drank too much one night.

 

Some nights some of us dreamed of Jane.

 

Some nights some of us couldn’t sleep.

 

One of us made long lists of things to do.

 

One of us saw images of Jane’s sculptures in cloud shapes.

 

One of us had a massage and the masseuse touched her back above her heart and released the rain.

 

Some of us went to the market and bought Gerber daisies and sunflowers to honor her innocent spirit.

 

Some of us went shopping for candles, and found white lotus blossoms that lit up the moment they touched water.

 

One of us passed an empty frame in the store, and was seized by the knowledge that she was gone.

 

Some of us were soothed by calls and messages from family and friends.

 

Some of us talked one night about how impossible it seemed to write a eulogy, our feelings for her too large to fit into three minutes.

 

One night one of us said, All I want to do is stand up and howl.

 

Photo courtesy of Hank Kitchell

 

One of us said, we could make different animal sounds, and began to hee-haw like a donkey.

 

One of us said, we could find animal masks and perform a chorus of animals to honor her, since many of her sculptures were of animals.

 

One of us laughed and said, But wouldn’t it seem too weird?

 

Some of us went to look for masks, but couldn’t find Owl, Fox, Bear, Cat, Monkey, Donkey.

 

One evening the ceremony was held at the farm of friends, a sweep of lawn sloping down to a lake fringed by tall pines.

 

Some of us who owned the farm lost a brother days before Jane’s memorial, but still wanted to host the event.

 

Some of us came early to set up tables under open tents like sails.

 

Some of us created a slide show of Jane’s life that was shown on a giant screen.

 

Some of us gathered songs she loved, and one of us played them throughout the evening.

 

Some of us opened boxes of candles and placed them on a table at the edge of the lake.

 

Some of us fanned open paper flowers for the tables.

 

One of us gave food from his own bakery.

 

Some of us, the first guests to arrive, were followed down the hill by a hawk.

 

Some of us had travelled many miles across the ocean.

 

One of us bicycled there from Victoria, British Columbia.

 

Some of us had known her since childhood.

 

Some of us had been her husbands, including her first and last.

 

Some of us had been caring for her for years.

 

One of us had moved to Seattle from New Zealand to be by her side the last months of her life.

 

Some of us saw sea gulls and thought of Jane.

 

Some of us saw whales.

 

One of us saw a sparrow hawk flying with another hawk through the desert.

 

One of us saw a turquoise dragonfly dart across the lake.

 

Some of us gave eulogies and some of us wept.

 

One of us heard a wise woman say that in certain African funeral services, hecklers in the back of the room balance the gravitas with irreverence.

 

Photo courtesy of Hank Kitchell

 

Some of us, after the eulogies, put on masks—of Horse, Squirrel, Cardinal, Rat, Pigeon, Chicken, Unicorn and Duck—and danced and called out to Jane through the voices of the animals.

 

Some of us sat with old friends telling stories of Jane all night.

 

Some of us gathered around the campfire at lake’s edge listening to stories about animal visitations after death.

 

Photo courtesy Suki Edwards

 

Some of us wrote messages to Jane on the candles, and floated them on the lake after dark, like fireflies under a three-quarters full moon.

 

One of us wrote, “I’m still in love with you, Jane.”

 

One of us heard the Rodriguez song, “I think of you,” and wept in the darkness.

 

One of us had cold ankles as the night grew deeper, and a white dog named Lily came and sat backwards so that her hind fur warmed those ankles. 

 

Some of us human creatures felt the grief lift because we had joined together to celebrate our love for Jane.

 

Photo courtesy Hank Kitchell

 

 

 

Friday
Aug302013

Jane

 

 

Below the Paris to Seattle sky bus,

a cloud path seems to lead to Shangri-La,

some impossibly beautiful cloud country only spirits can enter.

And I know she is leaving.

 

Over there, icebergs

and shipwrecked ocean liners,

giant frogs posing as princes,

a burning arrow of pink-gold cloud, a peony.

 

     *

 

Were we close?

Only as close as twins

who do not know where one begins

and the other ends.

 

Were we close?

Only as close as two fledgling elf owls,

one a little noisier, finding shade in a saguaro

from the Arizona heat.

 

Were we close?

Only as close as two children of tender natures,

daughters of a Viking mother—

magnificent—but tough.

 

Were we close?

Close as two girls, one who loved playing with dolls,

the other, playing with characters in books,

both knowing early on which would be a mother.

 

Were we close?

Close as two swimmers

in red tank suits, passing the baton

in a relay race.

 

Were we close?

Close as two best friends, 11 and 12,

trying out our first tampons

in the bathroom at midnight.

 

Were we close?

Close as two Nordic girls

who gravitate to the sea,

high school in La Jolla.

 

Were we close?

Close as two astonished virgins

discovering sex the same summer,

one in Zurich, one in Paris.

 

Were we close?

Close as a pair of ears

thrilling to Dylan’s “All Along the Watch Tower”

and “Lay, Lady, Lay.”

 

Were we close?

Close as Betty’s daughters, raving about the best books,

The Wizard of Oz to Mrs. Dalloway,

In Arabian Nights to Duino Elegies.

 

Were we close?

Close as two horses nickering,

galloping, freed, ecstatic

in Berkeley in the '60s.

 

Were we close?

Close as two artists’ models

costumed as the Mad Hatter and the Dormouse

at an art class Tea Party in Kroeber Hall.

 

Were we close?

Close as two Viking daughters

setting sail for adventures in the ‘70s

on trimaran and schooner.

 

Were we close?

When one was in trouble in Ecuador,

she didn’t have to say a thing,

the other leaped to go.

 

Were we close?

Close as two female artists, slowly learning

how to stay devoted to the making, the shaping,

and cheering each other on.

 

Were we close?

Close as two monks

who value simple food

and silence.

 

Were we close?

All our lives when the phone rang,

we knew

when it was the other.

 

Were we close?

Praying for each other to find a worthy mate,

one who’d be there through celebration and suffering,

the failing body, sailing the long distance with us through the end.

 

Were we close?

Close as daughters of a splendid father,

fighting for him to finish his life as he wished,

exulting with our family when he returned as hawk.

 

Were we close?

Close as two art lovers,

speechless at Louise Bourgeois at the Pompidou,

a woman telling deep, difficult truth through her art.

 

Were we close?

Close as two stars

in opposite constellations,

the Centaur and the Twins.

 

Were we close?

Close as a dreamer

dreaming with Jane through the bardos,

through the long journey home.

 

Were we close?

Close as two stars in the same immensity,

connected to each other, and you,

through our shining.

 

     *

 

Out of thick fog,

two points of a star lit with gold,

or the tail of a fish:

Seattle.

 

Pine trees, gold

light and sea.

Serenity over all.

Roar of the plane descending.

 

Race to Swedish Hospital

with Jon and Leatrice. Already there:

Betty, Suki, Ann, Greg,

Bayu, Rachel and Liza.

 

Jane in bed,

eyes closed, struggling for breath,

beautiful as ever. We hold her hands,

stroke her brow. An hour later, she goes.

 

Are we close?

 

Always. 

 

 

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